2:07 the knowledge that Darwin referred to a beetle he was holding between his teeth (which I mean can you blame the dude he had no more hands) as “the little inconsiderate beast” just made my life a little bit happier today, as I too have called wild animals I’m holding little inconsiderate beasts
"Whatcha watching?" "Something about bugs with acid sharts, fish that shoot water, and mushroom cannons." "Bro, are you high?" "That's not the point. This is awesome. Check it out." "Whoa."
Imagine the amount of computation in an archerfish's brain trying to aim in ebbing, murky water and taking account of light refraction from water to air, not to mention gravitational pull on the water stream
its impresssive for the size of the fishes brain but not too impressive. Most of it is basic pattern recognition, something brains are very good at anyway.
It really doesn't require much computation at all. However, finding the right computation to do is not easy. Evolution is well suited to find efficient good-enough solutions to such problems.
It's fascinating to take a closer look at this topic! Our crew managed to shoot some sort of ant war, in which, in order to protect their territory, they used chemical formic acid. They sport acid from the tips of their abdomens, targetting their enemy. And after that, it's crazy and fascinating to see how the whole conflict gets even more intense.
"The zone of repugnance" that's funny...and appropriate. God I love this channel. Again, the clarity and articulation of her voice is oh so impressive....not to mention the content.
I dont how to say this in a non-insulting way but I fall asleep within a minute of putting your videos on... i have no idea why but as a person who struggles sleeping (its 3am ive been awake 20hrs) its a real lifeline. I watch them in the day sometimes too for entertainment but primary consumption is bedtime. I'm going to put this on now and go to sleep. Thank you for this weird gift! Your content is so wonderful and interesting and just peak relaxation for me. Thanks again xx
2:00 inconsiderate beast?? Mr. Darwin, did you not realise that beetle was terrified, it thought you were going to eat it, of course it did all it could to get you to stop XD
@@archlectoryarvi2873 Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Op. 8, RV 315, "L'estate" (Summer) - movement 3: presto from The Four Seasons Here is a good concert recording of it (Presto starts at 8:11): th-cam.com/video/g65oWFMSoK0/w-d-xo.html
Oecophylla Smaragdina Weaver ants - formic acid spraying - are also impressive. It's a beautiful creature, too. And Colobopsis Saurdausi "kamikaze" ant has worker castes with a gland of acid that runs the length of its body, which it can rupture in battle, spewing a sticky acid everywhere, dying in the process.
I used to work at a pet store in the fish room and had a pair of archers at home. When I'd walk past the tank I'd feel water hitting my ear, and one time I was on the phone and was standing next to the tank looking down at them through the open top. They were side by side looking up at me, and I swear i watched the water coming straight up at my right eye. It hit, and i sputtered and wiped my face and as soon as i took my hand away the one on the left fired (watered?) and hit my other eye.
One of my favorite armed and dangerous creatures is the pistol, whom, using its specially designed claw can fire bubbles at its prey. The bubble is useful at stunning, and sometimes frying the prey, that it hunts. It is capable of being shot at over 82 feet a second, generating over 216 decibels of sound, and generating over 4,000°c in heat from the exploding bubbles. It is an absolutely insane creature!
Normally I don't worry about these sort of nitpicks too much, but the word 'shrimp' (I'm guessing that's what's being discussed here) is really important for this comment.
Extremely disappointed pistol/Mantis shrimp weren't mentioned, as they use implosions that reach thousands of degrees, through cavitation bubbles, either knocking out their crustacean prey, or shattering their shell. Scientists are theorizing it's a quantum event, and creates an entangled pair of particles. Absolute dissatisfaction that they weren't included
No it's definitely intelligence. It was even mentioned in the video how the archer fish could learn abilities from other fish. Instinct isn't taught. It's an inherent impulse to do something. It requires intelligence to observe and learn from others.
Manta Rays have the biggest brains of all fish as far as I know, and have shown signs of self-recognition in mirrors. Although there are studies of other fish species having supposedly passed the mirror test, so who knows?
I like how the mantis got shot, rocked, and a bit dazed, but didn't fall off. Then it looks like it just stared back at the fish as if to say "hey that wasn't nice".
The squirting cucumber (Ecballium elaterium) is another interesting projectile flinger in nature. The fruit uses fluid pressure to squirt its seeds out
Have always been fascinated by bombardier beetles, was pleasantly surprised to find the are quite common in my parents backyard was great fun showing their tricks to my kids !
Every science textbook I encountered have just said “bombardier beetle” as if there is only one species, never knew there were 400+ versions. The question I’d like to see answered: how do they manufacture the hydrogen peroxide and store it without damaging themselves?
I suggest you look it up, it’s easier than getting it explained to you. There’s a complicated evolutionary path but basically it’s chemicals that weren’t volatile or dangerous inside the beetle, but the chemicals had some benefits, and the benefits improved progressively
It doesn't just happen with those chemicals alone: like many reactions, you need a catalyst to get a practically useful rate at an acceptable temperature. And the enzyme shape/concentration can be varied gradually, providing the necessary evolutionary ramp - so creationists using the beetles as an example of 'irreducible complexity' that would explode while half-formed are sunk again, though they never admit it.
Hello, ... By the way, there's a creature that lurks at the bottom of our oceans. A creature that possesses a punch so deadly, and so lightening fast, that divers don't dare to get a really close look at it, for fear that this creature will smash open their scuba eyewear. Having them to scurry to the surface for air! ... It's called the MANTIS SHRIMP!
3:04 how do they produce this acid ? It can finish in there bodies and how does it heat the mixture ? Can we make this mixture in the lab ? I would love to see how this mixture behaves
I wonder how long it'll be until some of the bombardier beetles develop this into a propulsion mechanism, or maybe theres something like that undiscovered. They have all the basic parts of a hypergolic rocket motor anyway.
TierZoo has a great video about this. It's not just intelligence that makes humans so dominant. It's also our long-distance stamina thanks to sweating, reach thanks to projectiles, vision thanks to standing upright and very versatile stomachs thanks to symbiotic micro-organisms. Without high intelligence, which allows complex tool use and teaching, we wouldn't completely take over the planet of course but humans could still dominate regionally.
﴿ وَمِنۡ ءَايَٰتِهِۦ خَلۡقُ ٱلسَّمَٰوَٰتِ وَٱلۡأَرۡضِ وَمَا بَثَّ فِيهِمَا مِن دَآبَّةٖۚ وَهُوَ عَلَىٰ جَمۡعِهِمۡ إِذَا يَشَآءُ قَدِيرٞ ﴾ [ الشورى: 29] And of His signs is the creation of the heavens and earth and what He has dispersed throughout them of creatures. And He, for gathering them when He wills, is competent
2:24 Neither millipedes nor 'daddy long legs' are insects. Your resource cites opilionids ('daddy long legs', which are closer related to scorpions than spiders), but you show some pholcids ('cellar spiders', which are true spiders). It's like mentioning mice and showing a rabit.
The only objection I would make is that 'daddy longlegs' *is* a legitimate name for the cellar spider, too; it just depends on the regional dialect of English you use (I believe 'cellar spider' is more usual in the UK and 'daddy longlegs' is more common in the US, but I'm not sure). 'Daddy longlegs' can also mean a cranefly in the UK, while the meaning 'harvestman' is found in the US, Canada and Australia. The person who collected the images to fit the script was clearly confused by the different possible meanings of the name in English.
Love when scientists air their frustrations. "[Archerfish] shot at ... noses and eyes of experimenters" read: Punk-ass fish shot at us when we just mirin!
Its so odd how time has changed entertainment. I remember learning about this fish on Animal Planet's "The Most Extreme", now all Animal Planet has is junk reality tv shows with faked scenarios. Now its the TH-camrs that are putting these bits out. Miss the old Animal Planet/History Channel.
the image of charles darwin biting a beetle with his hands full and getting shot by it just seems utterly hilarious
Seems like he should have had a container close by if he was hunting beetles.
No plastics were invented yet during his time
He said “container” did not mention plastic
Darwin was definitely dedicated to learning and he definitely got his lesson that day.
With curiosity clearly well above that of the average cat, I'm surprised he wasn't killed by it
2:07 the knowledge that Darwin referred to a beetle he was holding between his teeth (which I mean can you blame the dude he had no more hands) as “the little inconsiderate beast” just made my life a little bit happier today, as I too have called wild animals I’m holding little inconsiderate beasts
That butterfly flying upside down after evading death by the archer fish was incredible.
Well, yes, but it can't have been true because according to this video the archer fish has 100% accuracy, which is to say it never misses.
Well, it didn't miss. It just wasn't a kill.
@@rogerstone3068 that was in lab conditions, not irl.
@@rogerstone3068it didn't miss, the butterfly just shook off the hit.
@@rogerstone3068 Do you know what "missing" means?
"Whatcha watching?"
"Something about bugs with acid sharts, fish that shoot water, and mushroom cannons."
"Bro, are you high?"
"That's not the point. This is awesome. Check it out."
"Whoa."
Imagine the amount of computation in an archerfish's brain trying to aim in ebbing, murky water and taking account of light refraction from water to air, not to mention gravitational pull on the water stream
its impresssive for the size of the fishes brain but not too impressive. Most of it is basic pattern recognition, something brains are very good at anyway.
It really doesn't require much computation at all. However, finding the right computation to do is not easy. Evolution is well suited to find efficient good-enough solutions to such problems.
It’s not that complicated
Breaking surface tension too
It's fascinating to take a closer look at this topic! Our crew managed to shoot some sort of ant war, in which, in order to protect their territory, they used chemical formic acid. They sport acid from the tips of their abdomens, targetting their enemy. And after that, it's crazy and fascinating to see how the whole conflict gets even more intense.
"The zone of repugnance" that's funny...and appropriate. God I love this channel. Again, the clarity and articulation of her voice is oh so impressive....not to mention the content.
I dont how to say this in a non-insulting way but I fall asleep within a minute of putting your videos on... i have no idea why but as a person who struggles sleeping (its 3am ive been awake 20hrs) its a real lifeline. I watch them in the day sometimes too for entertainment but primary consumption is bedtime.
I'm going to put this on now and go to sleep. Thank you for this weird gift! Your content is so wonderful and interesting and just peak relaxation for me. Thanks again xx
Worked like a treat 😌
You’re not alone there. Her voice is angelic
Your video has truly made my weekend, it's the highlight of it! Keep up the amazing content.
2:00 inconsiderate beast?? Mr. Darwin, did you not realise that beetle was terrified, it thought you were going to eat it, of course it did all it could to get you to stop XD
6:07 "The mechanics of their water darts are relatively *straightforward* "
I saw what you did there
This wsa very well done. Better intro than most, great examples, good narrative, and a more engaging delivery style than most TH-camrs.
Vivaldi playing in the background makes this so much more intense. Absolutely brilliant and terrifying
What's the name of the music that starts at 2:31?
IKR. That gave me portrait of a lady on fire flashbacks.
@@archlectoryarvi2873 Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Op. 8, RV 315, "L'estate" (Summer) - movement 3: presto from The Four Seasons
Here is a good concert recording of it (Presto starts at 8:11):
th-cam.com/video/g65oWFMSoK0/w-d-xo.html
She coulda gone with "Ride of the Valkyries". But then, that mighta been a bit over the top. 😅
Oecophylla Smaragdina Weaver ants - formic acid spraying - are also impressive. It's a beautiful creature, too. And Colobopsis Saurdausi "kamikaze" ant has worker castes with a gland of acid that runs the length of its body, which it can rupture in battle, spewing a sticky acid everywhere, dying in the process.
I used to work at a pet store in the fish room and had a pair of archers at home. When I'd walk past the tank I'd feel water hitting my ear, and one time I was on the phone and was standing next to the tank looking down at them through the open top. They were side by side looking up at me, and I swear i watched the water coming straight up at my right eye. It hit, and i sputtered and wiped my face and as soon as i took my hand away the one on the left fired (watered?) and hit my other eye.
Damn, bro, what did you do to those fish? lmao
@@DinnerForkTongue maybe they were playing? I heard they do that.
One of my favorite armed and dangerous creatures is the pistol, whom, using its specially designed claw can fire bubbles at its prey.
The bubble is useful at stunning, and sometimes frying the prey, that it hunts.
It is capable of being shot at over 82 feet a second, generating over 216 decibels of sound, and generating over 4,000°c in heat from the exploding bubbles.
It is an absolutely insane creature!
Normally I don't worry about these sort of nitpicks too much, but the word 'shrimp' (I'm guessing that's what's being discussed here) is really important for this comment.
Extremely disappointed pistol/Mantis shrimp weren't mentioned, as they use implosions that reach thousands of degrees, through cavitation bubbles, either knocking out their crustacean prey, or shattering their shell. Scientists are theorizing it's a quantum event, and creates an entangled pair of particles. Absolute dissatisfaction that they weren't included
I could watch stuff like this all day. And I do.
Animal Avatars!
I love Nature. Science and Space is the most facinating stuff ever. I'm so glad it exists at all. It's amazing.
9:39 one in four prey items being standard is huge for the archer fish
I wonder what the smartest fish is if it isn't an archerfish.
Also I like this kind of video focusing on multiple creatures instead of just one!
i dont think its an intelligents thing. its more like a instinctual thing like beavers building a dam.
Snakeheads are quite intelligent
No it's definitely intelligence. It was even mentioned in the video how the archer fish could learn abilities from other fish. Instinct isn't taught. It's an inherent impulse to do something. It requires intelligence to observe and learn from others.
@@theflyingdutchguy9870 Beavers building dams isn't t 100% instinct either.
Manta Rays have the biggest brains of all fish as far as I know, and have shown signs of self-recognition in mirrors. Although there are studies of other fish species having supposedly passed the mirror test, so who knows?
I like how the mantis got shot, rocked, and a bit dazed, but didn't fall off. Then it looks like it just stared back at the fish as if to say "hey that wasn't nice".
The squirting cucumber (Ecballium elaterium) is another interesting projectile flinger in nature. The fruit uses fluid pressure to squirt its seeds out
Great video "exploding" full of interesting amazing animal facts! Extremely well written and narrated as all your videos are! Thanks you!
Have always been fascinated by bombardier beetles, was pleasantly surprised to find the are quite common in my parents backyard was great fun showing their tricks to my kids !
Every science textbook I encountered have just said “bombardier beetle” as if there is only one species, never knew there were 400+ versions. The question I’d like to see answered: how do they manufacture the hydrogen peroxide and store it without damaging themselves?
Pretty similar to the way your body produces hydrochloric acid.
Lol putting a beetle in your mouth... that's some real survival of the fittest shit right there
Your voice is so soothing I play it with headphones on at night to fall asleep ❤️
was just watching another one of your videos, happy to have another one to watch now :)
It'd be interesting to hear your take on how you think the bombardier beetle evolved without blowing itself up...,???
I'd assume the ones who couldn't got "selected out of the breeding pool" across whatever log they were climbing on.
@@burntbreadbits that is obvious but it is more interesting to know how exactly they do that biologically
I suggest you look it up, it’s easier than getting it explained to you. There’s a complicated evolutionary path but basically it’s chemicals that weren’t volatile or dangerous inside the beetle, but the chemicals had some benefits, and the benefits improved progressively
It doesn't just happen with those chemicals alone: like many reactions, you need a catalyst to get a practically useful rate at an acceptable temperature. And the enzyme shape/concentration can be varied gradually, providing the necessary evolutionary ramp - so creationists using the beetles as an example of 'irreducible complexity' that would explode while half-formed are sunk again, though they never admit it.
So, this isn't "oh wow, other creatures can do this too" so much as "hey look, we're just one of many"
I feel like a "a combustible caboose" was a missed joke opportunity this video
7:18 Mantis: "is that all you got?" 😆
This is a really good one. Well done!
i love the archerfish, it's like they're so bored in the water they started playing with it
I like how nature is even crazier than I could imagine. a tool using fish takes the cake today
Narrator trying not to laugh at 8:50 while explaining fish shooting water at certain people’s faces.
Hello, ... By the way, there's a creature that lurks at the bottom of our oceans. A creature that possesses a punch so deadly, and so lightening fast, that divers don't dare to get a really close look at it, for fear that this creature will smash open their scuba eyewear. Having them to scurry to the surface for air! ... It's called the MANTIS SHRIMP!
I love your Formats.
They are very unique
Going in a very big topic
But very close and deep in the examples
Where did you learn archery?
The school of archer fish taught me all I know...!
0:57 Who does this? Some spider?
It is an insect called the Ant Lion, it is neither an ant nor a lion but it mainly eats ants so that is why it has the name it has
3:04 how do they produce this acid ? It can finish in there bodies and how does it heat the mixture ? Can we make this mixture in the lab ? I would love to see how this mixture behaves
The transition to the sponsor advertisement was incredibly smooth!
I fully expected the Horned Lizard to be in this video, as it shoots blood from it's eyes as a defensive weapon. What's wilder than that?
Saw a cedar tree eject it's pollen once. It's like it sneezed
I wonder how long it'll be until some of the bombardier beetles develop this into a propulsion mechanism, or maybe theres something like that undiscovered. They have all the basic parts of a hypergolic rocket motor anyway.
I gotta say, this video was very pleasant to watch. The sharpshooter fish are so cool. :D
I still can’t believe we as the weakest physically speaking, we are the most capable and dominating species due to our intelligence
strong do good on own
smart do good in group
bald monki millions stronk- weak n dumb no problem
we aren't the weakest or slowest biologically, It is just that we have a very sedentary lifestyle.
TierZoo has a great video about this. It's not just intelligence that makes humans so dominant. It's also our long-distance stamina thanks to sweating, reach thanks to projectiles, vision thanks to standing upright and very versatile stomachs thanks to symbiotic micro-organisms. Without high intelligence, which allows complex tool use and teaching, we wouldn't completely take over the planet of course but humans could still dominate regionally.
If you're weak, maybe you should consider going to the gym.
Kudos to whoever thought “winter” was a good fit in the video. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Can you do the eveloution of rats I think there ability to adapt to poisonous 1 substances so unique thanks
Wow, I never knew beetles and archer fish were so cool!
That transition was smooth.
0:25 *elephants have entered the chat*
Saw this masterpiece here first. Now I have to see it on Nebula too. Fantastic work on your Nebula only series!
When the beetle feels threatened, it becomes a professor
Bombardier beetles spend too much time at taco bell
If i slap myself on the forehead I've got "100% accuracy"
This video is so good thankyou
If Darwin had seen the Panda 🐼 🐼…I wonder what he will think 😂😂😂
“What in gods name did evolution make the panda for???”
thank you so much for ur videos!!!
They have schools of archer fish! What a strange place. Why?
Great narrator
😆
Love this video 😊
Very cool video but how do we turn them into weapons of war?
love this channel
Is this the beetle that inspired the beetle in starship trooper?
Probably
Hello, thanks for the interesting and beautiful video, great channel! Good luck!!👌
When i hear this voice-over it's an instant 👍🏻
As usual, very interesting and well documented video RS! Another little known fact about Darwin was that he hated barnacles. 🤔🤔
I'm haunted by the possibility of tiny bullets of fungi shooting from excrement directly to my mouth 😥
﴿ وَمِنۡ ءَايَٰتِهِۦ خَلۡقُ ٱلسَّمَٰوَٰتِ وَٱلۡأَرۡضِ وَمَا بَثَّ فِيهِمَا مِن دَآبَّةٖۚ وَهُوَ عَلَىٰ جَمۡعِهِمۡ إِذَا يَشَآءُ قَدِيرٞ ﴾
[ الشورى: 29]
And of His signs is the creation of the heavens and earth and what He has dispersed throughout them of creatures. And He, for gathering them when He wills, is competent
Great work Thank you
makes one wonder how projectile weapons evolved in these animals... modification on other chemical glands?
جزاكم الله خير
Animal kingdom is always so interesting
0:20 humans are not animals
Stargazers are incredibly OP. Like why would you need to envenomate AND taze!
The squirting beetle aka squirtle
Thanks big dog, that was great.
You should do the praying mantis
Bionic sphincter
Sensational content.
Nice.
2:07 I litterly laughed for a good while
I bet Steve Irwin would have something to say about animal projectiles... too soon?
This video was a blast, Stephanie! (See what I did there? 😅)
Amazing ❤❤
This video is like straight outta Tremors
You know, we are all archer fish at sometime in our life
Subscribed 😍
Spray nozzle? That's a butt cannon!
I still dont understand why it requires soooo much deadly venom, considering the number and size of predators.
Seems excessive for the current meta
Beatles shootin' loads
You can't just say "they do make a popping sound" and not showing it. I'm missing some satisfaction 😂
2:24 Neither millipedes nor 'daddy long legs' are insects. Your resource cites opilionids ('daddy long legs', which are closer related to scorpions than spiders), but you show some pholcids ('cellar spiders', which are true spiders). It's like mentioning mice and showing a rabit.
The only objection I would make is that 'daddy longlegs' *is* a legitimate name for the cellar spider, too; it just depends on the regional dialect of English you use (I believe 'cellar spider' is more usual in the UK and 'daddy longlegs' is more common in the US, but I'm not sure). 'Daddy longlegs' can also mean a cranefly in the UK, while the meaning 'harvestman' is found in the US, Canada and Australia. The person who collected the images to fit the script was clearly confused by the different possible meanings of the name in English.
Love when scientists air their frustrations. "[Archerfish] shot at ... noses and eyes of experimenters" read: Punk-ass fish shot at us when we just mirin!
I wanna hear the popping funghi so bad
The midjourney photo is great at 1:44, almost looks like him
Its so odd how time has changed entertainment. I remember learning about this fish on Animal Planet's "The Most Extreme", now all Animal Planet has is junk reality tv shows with faked scenarios. Now its the TH-camrs that are putting these bits out. Miss the old Animal Planet/History Channel.
Oo I want a video about the fish that shoots prey out of the air!
Edit: I spoke too soon.