So I wanted to see more footage from "Henry Kaiser" in the artic ocean, and I looked up "Henry Kaiser" and a bunch of guitar videos popped up. I thought "This must be the wrong Henry Kaiser." Turn out no, he's a guitarist AND he does artic diving. Cool guy.
Because of this adaptation if an icefish found itself in warmer waters, it would literally drown, not being able to extract enough oxygen from the water around it.
But so wait, does it still have erythrocytes or is it missing those too? Edit: googled it, they sometimes (but rarely) have erythrocytes (aka red blood cells, but they're not actually red in this case), but they basically don't do anything. And some also don't have myoglobin, or at least not in all of their muscles, which is also crazy
@@officersoulknight6321 I mean the line between not alive and alive is fuzzy enough at the viral end of the debate. I'm sure it applies just as much to complex life missing what should be essential to maintaining life.
Are you sure the lack of haemoglobin isn't an advantage? The elimination of the need to produce red blood cells could have saved them a lot of energy and nutrients that could be used elsewhere.
Presumably they wouldn't have ended up with "super low metabolic rates" (which I assume implies it's lower than the average for antarctic fish) if forgoing haemoglobin was a net energy gain.
@@quitlife9279 even if makinv it is easier the energy required move 4× times the volume of blood aka heart beat and stroke volume would consume energy. So in the end i think ig maybe a bad adaptation or at least neutral.
On a small up side, the coastal areas will become colder and snowier, helping to restore the range of moose on the east coast because more moss will grow in the spring.
@@andresmarrero8666 Unlikely, even if the waters warm up just high enough to melt the ice it'll put them in competition with more red blooded fish and also would render their lack of hemoglobin a huge disadvantage in warmer waters.
I feel bad that I’m too broke to get the pins but I love the content that you guys make! I really needed a shot of curiosity to get me away from... **gestures broadly**
Is that an advantage? Seems like it wouldn’t clot very easily. But does it need to be more slippery in order to squeeze whatever efficiency it can out of the oxygen inside it?
Two questions this doesn't answer: -Why does it swim with it's tail bent sideways? -Isn't it an obvious advantage to not require so much iron/hemoglobin? Iron is hard to get, for humans it may be what pushes us to eat meat, harder to catch than just eating plants. An maybe lack of iron allows lower metabolism? I'm just guessing, but it seems like the discussion in the video isn't addressing these obvious questions.
I also wondered about the tail. As an aquarium keeper it's common knowledge that that exact look means the "fishkeeper" who took the photo in captivity had poor water quality with too high of nitrates over an extended portion of the fish's life and the chemical led to a deformation of the spine.
Hi, thats what I suspect as well. Iron is very rare in the southern ocean, as iron usually comes from terrestrial sources and there are just less landmasses in the southern hemisphere. In the Atlantic a lot of Iron gets blown in with winds from the Sahara. I now that a lot of species of Phytoplankton in the Antartic have very intersting adaptations to low Iron concentrations. As Iron is an essential part of hemoglobin, it would surly save a lot of Iron not toproduce it
one of the PBS Eons I think, had a video about the evolution of blood and brought up other things with non-red blood, I think one was even like a fuschia color or purplish.
Now we need a list of all the Hank Green channels so we can find and watch all of them, though I do quite like the surprise of unexpectedly and spontaneously coming across Hank Green on a new channel every now and then
reminds me of the incident with his presentation on the facade of buildings 😂 Although in this instance I think both "nit-ches" and "neesh-es" are considered correct whereas the same cannot be said for "fak-aad" and "fuh-saad"
I love that it combines two things I love - fish and ice. I just wish it had a cooler name... nvmnd, thought to look up the latin names of specific genera. Cryodraco is there.
Funny how questions that you have turn out to have answers you haven't thought of the questions to. I knew ice fish could stand the cold because of the anti-freeze elements in their blood but I never knew that their clear blood held the secret to their success. Once again you have blown my mind and given me a renewed sense of wonder at evolution's ingenuity. You do this all the time and I can't thank you enough.
Amazing video as always, I'm always looking forward to these every month ! A true treat! Ii was talking to my partner all week about my guesses for this week's topic ! Of course I was wrong but you can't win if you don't play ;) PS: Hank, I love your shirt !
Great video, this was super interesting! The case of the icefish seems perfect for exploring the nuances of evolution, this video does a really good job at doing just that.
Hey Hank, good to see you on yet another pbs digital studios show! Blake at PBS EONS told me to check this out and say "EONS sent me" but im pretty sure you already knew that...
This is such a great channel from a narrative writing standpoint. I can already imagine a race of aliens with these properties and knowing why this fish is this way just immediately gives me ideas of how they might function work and what their drive would be. Really cool channel. Hard to believe how alien life on our own planet already is just from slight differences in mutations and environment.
Hi, isnt the southern ocean also very depleted in iron? Maybe getting rid of hemoglobin is an advantage for the fish, as the production of hemoglobin uses a lot of that precious iron
Would eliminating hemoglobin and reducing the number of erythrocytes in their blood make more room in their blood for the antifreeze proteins they use? Those antifreeze proteins help them survive in cold water, do to the oxygen rich nature of the water, could reducing hyboglobin to make room for more antifreeze be a good trade off?
Here from Eons, loving this channel already. 💖 The fisherman in me, wants to go there and fish for these strange fish. However, that's far too cold for this hemoglobin rich human. 😋
Pretty late to this video but regarding that cold water holding oxygen better fact, is that why hot water from the tap in a cup looks cloudy for a minute from tiny air bubbles whereas cold water from the tap in a cup is almost immediately clear?
So, educator with a question: have you guys ever considered making any sort of companion to these videos, like a Kahoot, Quizzez, etc?I was considering making my own, to draw a bit more of it out of my students, but I figured I would ask.
These fish delicately fit into very specific ocean conditions. The warming water, drop in dissolved oxygen, and ocean acidification caused by Climate Change will likely be devastating for these fish.
Good question. If I had to guess, that one fish was probably in some kind of distress. They get stiff when in distress. They are very anxious in general.....In some of the other footage you can see their mouthes stuck wide open. That's the same kind of stress reaction.
Quite a few fish curl like that to make themselves "wider" and harder to swallow for a predator (or to put particularly pointy fins as pointy as possible in all directions), so yeah, it's a defensive posture!
Hemoglobin or the genes needed to create it also affects the shape of blood cells. I wouldn't be surprised to find out that the shape of heme-less blood cells are ideal for their cold environment.
When you have a low metabolism already and have to sometimes survive extreme scarcity, not needing to produce haemoglobin would probably be a net benefit. Especially in the Antarctic where bio-available iron is very limited.
Please do a pin on the mantis shrimp and just how crazy it is with punches that have the same force as a .22 bullet. Its crazy eyes and dress code, as well as its can do attitude
So I wanted to see more footage from "Henry Kaiser" in the artic ocean, and I looked up "Henry Kaiser" and a bunch of guitar videos popped up. I thought "This must be the wrong Henry Kaiser." Turn out no, he's a guitarist AND he does artic diving. Cool guy.
sounds like something Henry Kaiser himself would say, Mr. KrazyKAISER 🧐
Please tell me the username is just a coincidence....
Great comment.
Nice shirt!😍
Hell yeah, he shreds and treads (arctic water)
I'm a big fan of Hank's shirt and this strange fish
My thoughts exactly 😁
Evolution is real > all races are equal.
@@ElectricalExistence what
@@Her_Viscera think about it normie.
Electrical Existence English please
Because of this adaptation if an icefish found itself in warmer waters, it would literally drown, not being able to extract enough oxygen from the water around it.
But so wait, does it still have erythrocytes or is it missing those too?
Edit: googled it, they sometimes (but rarely) have erythrocytes (aka red blood cells, but they're not actually red in this case), but they basically don't do anything. And some also don't have myoglobin, or at least not in all of their muscles, which is also crazy
lmfao
‘How are you still alive?’
‘I honestly don’t know’
Thank you for the knowledge sharing.
Sincerely,
Too lazy to Google
they would taste really weird.
@@officersoulknight6321 I mean the line between not alive and alive is fuzzy enough at the viral end of the debate. I'm sure it applies just as much to complex life missing what should be essential to maintaining life.
Are you sure the lack of haemoglobin isn't an advantage? The elimination of the need to produce red blood cells could have saved them a lot of energy and nutrients that could be used elsewhere.
It probably evens out since they need 4x more blood
@@devinnall2284 blood without haemoglobin is probably not much more than water, and it's a fish...
Presumably they wouldn't have ended up with "super low metabolic rates" (which I assume implies it's lower than the average for antarctic fish) if forgoing haemoglobin was a net energy gain.
@@asdu4412 forgoing the production of hemoglobin might be a way to reduce metabolism even more.
@@quitlife9279 even if makinv it is easier the energy required move 4× times the volume of blood aka heart beat and stroke volume would consume energy. So in the end i think ig maybe a bad adaptation or at least neutral.
Ah bummers, so rising ocean temps will definitely affect these very unique critters very negatively.
f in the chat for the icefish
On a small up side, the coastal areas will become colder and snowier, helping to restore the range of moose on the east coast because more moss will grow in the spring.
😞
It is not going to be happening that fast. They are still in one of the coldest places in the planet so they probably would be able to adapt.
@@andresmarrero8666 Unlikely, even if the waters warm up just high enough to melt the ice it'll put them in competition with more red blooded fish and also would render their lack of hemoglobin a huge disadvantage in warmer waters.
I feel bad that I’m too broke to get the pins but I love the content that you guys make! I really needed a shot of curiosity to get me away from... **gestures broadly**
+
Broadly?
lmaoa so true love the gesture
@@xploration1437 yes, gestures broadly at everything in their vicinity, and then some.
Essentially, Calgon take me away, escapism.
In my intro college biology class, we learned that the icefish had the advantage of lower blood viscosity because it lacked hemoglobin.
Is that an advantage? Seems like it wouldn’t clot very easily. But does it need to be more slippery in order to squeeze whatever efficiency it can out of the oxygen inside it?
@@emilysmith2965A lower blood viscosity makes it easier for the heart to pump. This increases blood flow(at least in humans)
Maybe they don't have -platelets- thrombocytes, either? In their niche, it's be alive or be lunch, with not much in between.
They would require less iron as well.
Two questions this doesn't answer:
-Why does it swim with it's tail bent sideways?
-Isn't it an obvious advantage to not require so much iron/hemoglobin? Iron is hard to get, for humans it may be what pushes us to eat meat, harder to catch than just eating plants. An maybe lack of iron allows lower metabolism?
I'm just guessing, but it seems like the discussion in the video isn't addressing these obvious questions.
I also wondered about the tail. As an aquarium keeper it's common knowledge that that exact look means the "fishkeeper" who took the photo in captivity had poor water quality with too high of nitrates over an extended portion of the fish's life and the chemical led to a deformation of the spine.
Hi, thats what I suspect as well. Iron is very rare in the southern ocean, as iron usually comes from terrestrial sources and there are just less landmasses in the southern hemisphere. In the Atlantic a lot of Iron gets blown in with winds from the Sahara. I now that a lot of species of Phytoplankton in the Antartic have very intersting adaptations to low Iron concentrations. As Iron is an essential part of hemoglobin, it would surly save a lot of Iron not toproduce it
I will have to watch this again. I was just staring at Hank's shirt the whole time... So good (both the shirt and the video).
Clear blood? Oh now that is cool!
one of the PBS Eons I think, had a video about the evolution of blood and brought up other things with non-red blood, I think one was even like a fuschia color or purplish.
Invisiblood
I like the physical background. It feels much more "authentic" than the greenscreen
Always a good day when one discovers *another* Hank Green channel!
Now we need a list of all the Hank Green channels so we can find and watch all of them, though I do quite like the surprise of unexpectedly and spontaneously coming across Hank Green on a new channel every now and then
@@Manj_J it's like finding another subreddit for cats.
So what you’re saying is it has ghost blood
That's gonna be the name of my band
@@troublewakingup I'll take 1% royalties for the idea :P
It's a Water/Ghost type Pokemon.
@@Gatorade69 Ice/ghost
@@briannelson3830 Ice/Dragon - check out some of those names. Cryodraco Antarticus? Christ, what glorious nerd named that one?
When you find out Hank says “nit-ches” instead of “neesh-es”.
Well, nobody's perfect xD
reminds me of the incident with his presentation on the facade of buildings 😂
Although in this instance I think both "nit-ches" and "neesh-es" are considered correct whereas the same cannot be said for "fak-aad" and "fuh-saad"
@@emmao6578 I think in the US “nitches” is a common pronunciation
@@emmao6578 it's still saad 😆
Like it matters
I love that it combines two things I love - fish and ice. I just wish it had a cooler name... nvmnd, thought to look up the latin names of specific genera. Cryodraco is there.
Guess I shouldn't complain that my blood made my face red due to the nip in the air on the way to get the mail this morning.
Rosy cheeks is a sign of good health, which is why rouge makeup exists.
evolution is just nature saying "I CAN BE WEIRDER THAN YOU!"
*+*
I've heard of red blood, and I was stumped by blue blood, and I NEVER EVER heard of different colors of blood. There's always something to learn.
There is a great book, "The Making of the Fittest" by Sean B. Carrol, that has a chapter on the ice fish. If highly recommend it.
Funny how questions that you have turn out to have answers you haven't thought of the questions to. I knew ice fish could stand the cold because of the anti-freeze elements in their blood but I never knew that their clear blood held the secret to their success. Once again you have blown my mind and given me a renewed sense of wonder at evolution's ingenuity. You do this all the time and I can't thank you enough.
This just kept blowing my mind every time you stated a new fact.
They're just built different 🌟💕🧚♀️✨❤🌌
Amazing video as always, I'm always looking forward to these every month ! A true treat! Ii was talking to my partner all week about my guesses for this week's topic ! Of course I was wrong but you can't win if you don't play ;)
PS: Hank, I love your shirt !
Once upon a time,
It was the end of Eons,
A great link happened,
And now I am here.
-Jake
TH-cam does not like this channel. I have notifications on, and still didn't get a notice for this.
Great video, this was super interesting! The case of the icefish seems perfect for exploring the nuances of evolution, this video does a really good job at doing just that.
Having antifreeze in your blood sounds like a cool superpower.
Hey Hank, good to see you on yet another pbs digital studios show! Blake at PBS EONS told me to check this out and say "EONS sent me" but im pretty sure you already knew that...
(TBH, and i have no idea why, for like 2 months since i started watching EONS I thought you were John Green........)
Why does their tail curl like that when they swim?
Thanks for the tiktok blurb. I now have another neat sciencey channel go binge
This is such a great channel from a narrative writing standpoint. I can already imagine a race of aliens with these properties and knowing why this fish is this way just immediately gives me ideas of how they might function work and what their drive would be. Really cool channel. Hard to believe how alien life on our own planet already is just from slight differences in mutations and environment.
Joining my compatriots in the desire to let Hank know that I LOVE YOUR AWESOME SHIRT, MAN!!! the fish is cool too
this was fascinating but also reminded me that im viscerally terrified of being underwater
Rewatching this... And still got fascinated
Hi, isnt the southern ocean also very depleted in iron? Maybe getting rid of hemoglobin is an advantage for the fish, as the production of hemoglobin uses a lot of that precious iron
Very interesting to see why red blood is so prominent in animals.
What's this?!?! I know that voice!!!! ..... I KNEW IT, that's Hank!!!! How am I just now finding out this channel is a thing?!
Amazing videos ! Love it ! I am always excited for new monthly videos .
I really love these videos so much! Very interesting indeed!
You had me at "naked" 😂😂😂
We need some Hank-inspired merch, I WANT THAT SHIRT!
Would eliminating hemoglobin and reducing the number of erythrocytes in their blood make more room in their blood for the antifreeze proteins they use? Those antifreeze proteins help them survive in cold water, do to the oxygen rich nature of the water, could reducing hyboglobin to make room for more antifreeze be a good trade off?
"They have really big hearts for fish their size" *casual footage of a vivisection* I wasn't entirely ready for that lmao
Do you guys know much about the siphonophore? It seems like an interesting creature to talk about
*"That's Tynamo!"* was the first thing I yelled to myself when I saw the video preview
I hope y’all still do this when I graduate college and have salary so I can get things like bizarre beast pins (nearly done)
Evolution is all about being “good enough” and working with whatever is at hand.
I didn't know I needed this channel in my life.
I wonder if Pikes are offshoots of these things? Looks very similar.
Here from Eons, loving this channel already. 💖 The fisherman in me, wants to go there and fish for these strange fish. However, that's far too cold for this hemoglobin rich human. 😋
Leave animals alone
Someone tell that fish he is not swimming right.
They have clear blood, who are you to tell them they're "swimming wrong"?
Pretty late to this video but regarding that cold water holding oxygen better fact, is that why hot water from the tap in a cup looks cloudy for a minute from tiny air bubbles whereas cold water from the tap in a cup is almost immediately clear?
So, educator with a question: have you guys ever considered making any sort of companion to these videos, like a Kahoot, Quizzez, etc?I was considering making my own, to draw a bit more of it out of my students, but I figured I would ask.
I love this channel.
I click on an interesting-looking vid from a new channel and...
Hank is here, too. Dude--do you sleep?
Do we have an idea how climate change is going to affect this species?
These fish delicately fit into very specific ocean conditions. The warming water, drop in dissolved oxygen, and ocean acidification caused by Climate Change will likely be devastating for these fish.
This is the first vid I’ve seen of this channel and the moment I saw Hank I subbed
omg i learned about this in biology gonna send this to my teacher
What is this channel and why have i only just now discovered it? SHAME ON YOU TH-cam ALGORITHM, YOU KNOW NOTHING OF MY TASTES!!!!!!!
informative and well presented.
5:21 would love to know more about why this fish is swimming with its tail tightly curved like that rather than using it to aid propulsion.
Oh, so this is why Hank disappeared from the Eons channel. This new channel is great, didn’t know about it until I saw it on the new Eons video hahaha
Emia - presence in blood
Makes me wonder, if this fish had died out before we came along and we only had fossils to go on, would we be able to deduce that it had clear blood?
Why does it keep its tail fin in that weird position....?
Good question. If I had to guess, that one fish was probably in some kind of distress. They get stiff when in distress. They are very anxious in general.....In some of the other footage you can see their mouthes stuck wide open. That's the same kind of stress reaction.
Quite a few fish curl like that to make themselves "wider" and harder to swallow for a predator (or to put particularly pointy fins as pointy as possible in all directions), so yeah, it's a defensive posture!
Hemoglobin or the genes needed to create it also affects the shape of blood cells. I wouldn't be surprised to find out that the shape of heme-less blood cells are ideal for their cold environment.
frenetic as always, Hank. Please calm down.
When you have a low metabolism already and have to sometimes survive extreme scarcity, not needing to produce haemoglobin would probably be a net benefit. Especially in the Antarctic where bio-available iron is very limited.
Must have been "ugly shirt day" at the office !!
You should do Sea Spiders in a video! Just learned about them in my bio lecture and those little guys are very funky
Hey this is awesome! Thank you for such a cool channel!
I prefer when you do the videos, Hank! I know you’re busy though so no pressure.
I'm totally the other way. I find Suta absolutely intriguing.
Jeez man, does this channel have an unlimited shirt budget or something? That is yet again a very cool shirt
I like how he says 500 million years ago everything had red blood, as though anybody knows that as a fact. Can he tell that from the fossils?
Thanks for the talk. Does the genome of the ICE fish show some kind of globin or hémoglobin pseudogene ?
How many channels will I continue to stumble upon just to be shaken by this familiar voice?!
Ah, that's why cold soda keeps its fizz longer.
I’m so happy to have clicked the video and BOOM Hank Green!
LOVE the pins!
Please do a pin on the mantis shrimp and just how crazy it is with punches that have the same force as a .22 bullet. Its crazy eyes and dress code, as well as its can do attitude
That ice fish pin looks like a Monster Hunter design, I really like it.
Funny how Hank did this one as well as the history of Blood as well on PBS Eons.
Thanks for the neat video!
Anyone else love Hank so much? 😭
All these science videos are interesting in general but when he's the host i just get so haply lmao
This is such a weird fish, I love this channel!!
Amazing shirt, Hank!
What is with the curled sideways tail.
another fantastic hank green channel yes please thanks eons
Wow, that eye on the pin is not exaggerated at all
Funny that so much of the *Ice*fish is white or clear, even the blood.
This one has almost identical head to pike, now wonder it is such a cold blooded fish.
So if we added hemoglobin to them now, they’d be OP as heck.
How long do those fish live?
Hank green is just the new bill nye, AM I WRONG.
Evolution is mostly survival of the fittest but sometimes it's survival of the luckiest
Eons sent me and now I’m subscribed to another wonderful channel! 😋
So if I catch one and cut it up to eat it , is it going to look like water is all over my cutting board ?
Interesting, but how do they taste?
Do ice fish swim around thinking, damn I'm cold?