I became a fan of yours, as I think a lot of people did, when you were dealing with the flat earth crowd. I have been pleasantly surprised at your ability to communicate science topics with such deftness. This series is wonderful. It’s so great to hear you pronounce these words so precisely and with such ease. It really does communicate a mastery of the subject matter which gives me confidence that you are supremely qualified. Thanks again.
I find Cnidaria fascinating. In the long haul between single cell organisms (which are incredible in themselves) to the post-Cambrian world, animals had to evolve muscles and nerves, and Cnidaria have both. Some even have rudimentary sight. I suspect that, at one point in Earth’s development, Cnidaria were the apex predators. They don’t have the fan club of the T-Rex, but some of us like them a lot.
Whilst Cnidarian fossils "only" go back 580my, cladistics place the development of their cnidocyte stinging cells much further back, closer to 700my, in creatures not unlike the modern Hydra that are too tiny and squishy bodied to fossilize. By the Ediacaran, Cnidarians had already diversified into myriad forms.
Hey Dave, I've been enjoying the lonely wild. I see no reason why you guys didn't take off, it has to be just bad luck. Those melancholy chord changes are to die for
Fun fact: a study from 2007 (DOI: 10.1007/s00427-007-0165-0) has shown, that Hydra magnapapillata apparently has an aboral pore, that is maintained by a constant degredation of the extracellular matrix and is present independent on the form of reproduction. Would be interesting if that pore could be confirmed in other polyps as well
Proffessor Dave, this channel needs more subs. I’m being fr like all other crap youtube channels gain millions in days…. There’s no place for real knowledge in millennials. I’m a 17year old myself but I am a part of science community (in future)
@@bright.light.sights933 That's typical with educational content. Views accumulate over time. Some of his older science tutorials have one or two million views
The amount of views don't matter as much as the fact that these video series exist and are available in the first place. Which means that the people who are willing to learn are able to do so.
while vertebrates are cool and all, I feel a lot of people underestimate the sheer variety and abundance of invertebrates and overestimate that of vertebrates.
I hope this hasn't been asked ad nauseam already, but *what's the key difference between symbiosis and mutualism?* I never quite got a straight answer on that, so maybe you're the right guy!
Mutualism is one type of symbiosis. The other types are commensalism and parasitism. Commensalism is when one organism is benefited and the other is not effected. The examples often given are cattle egret eating bugs scattered by cattle and barnacles hitching a ride on a whale.
Hey Professor Dave, currently I'm watching your "Learn math start to finish" playlist, I took Calc 2 last semester and dropped, I was having difficulty with even the simplest things, but I feel so much more confident after watching some of your videos, even though I haven't gotten to far into the course. Turns out I didn't even have a strong grasp of Algebra, I feel like for the first time ever I actually somewhat understand math. I always wanted to be good with my left brain, physics math and computer science just the analytics, now I don't think I'll be able to conquer the world of physics, but Cs I feel is something I might be able to get a grasp on, were you ever planning on making a playlist on CS or programming to be more precise.
Yes I will get to that! I have to do all areas of engineering first, then computer science, then coding/programming, so it will take me several years to get through all of that.
@@ProfessorDaveExplains No worries! I'm looking forward to it! Always wanted to learn Mech Eng, never knew where to begin super excited. Thank you for providing these videos can't tell you how much I appreciate them!
Hello professor Dave, not related to this video, but do you maybe know of the experiment a guy made I then hundert years ago or so maybe 80 ago, he measured the earth curve on a beetch with a physical divice he engendered, like a 2 or 3 Meter long construction with a very accurate steel plate he connected many of those, i thought this is so interesting and such great craftsmanship, but I can't find it no matter how I search for it
When I see the name cindaria, i think of a similar (non-real) creature in a game called ARK: Survival Evolved. The base game has different dinosaurs and prehistoric animals from different times, that are biologically and functionally changed (some changes are high, while some are small), so they don't actually exist. They are super electric and can destroy a lot of things if you don't pay attention to them. Well, it's s survival-type game that evolves into fighting massive monsters in the end, which is awesome. There's loads of lore and such. I suggest checking it out.
Quick question what are the Vanallen bets ? What material did we use to get through them and finnaly how did we Achieve escape velocity with all that extra mass on board . Thank you for your time and consideration. E Z that's M E . he he
There's nothing to "get through". It's just radiation. We also don't need to achieve escape velocity. That's for projectiles, not rockets with boosters continually firing.
The Van Allen Belts are not a material; they're radiation belts, primarily alpha and beta particles. Alpha particles are helium-4 nuclei with no electrons; beta particles are high-speed electrons that were ejected from the nucleus of some radionuclide. Both of these are charged particles, which means that technology where a single stray electron can mess up the entire system, namely *modern, digital* technology, has to be extensively shielded via some sort of Faraday cage so as to protect the technology onboard. Older technology, such as the magnetic-loop computers in the Saturn V, were vastly more resistant, but were also larger and far less powerful than today's tech.
Dear Dave, please make a video on the stupidity of Helium3, or educate me on this. People I know think this is real and I just can't understand it. Please help on this so I can debunk stupidity if it exists near me.
I tend to pronounce the name with the C. So while you say it as 'Nidaria', I like to say it as 'Knidaria', with the emphasis of the sound the C would make.
Clear, consise, no background music or other distractions. Thank you🙏
Dear Professor Dave: thank you for this series on taxonomy. I am loving it!
Thanks you so much dear professor ❤❤❤❤❤
I became a fan of yours, as I think a lot of people did, when you were dealing with the flat earth crowd. I have been pleasantly surprised at your ability to communicate science topics with such deftness. This series is wonderful. It’s so great to hear you pronounce these words so precisely and with such ease. It really does communicate a mastery of the subject matter which gives me confidence that you are supremely qualified. Thanks again.
That is fascinating. I never thought I’d be honored to have been stung by a jellyfish.
I find Cnidaria fascinating. In the long haul between single cell organisms (which are incredible in themselves) to the post-Cambrian world, animals had to evolve muscles and nerves, and Cnidaria have both. Some even have rudimentary sight. I suspect that, at one point in Earth’s development, Cnidaria were the apex predators. They don’t have the fan club of the T-Rex, but some of us like them a lot.
Thank God you are coming towards Biology as well. Keep on uploading Sir! 👍👋
Whilst Cnidarian fossils "only" go back 580my, cladistics place the development of their cnidocyte stinging cells much further back, closer to 700my, in creatures not unlike the modern Hydra that are too tiny and squishy bodied to fossilize. By the Ediacaran, Cnidarians had already diversified into myriad forms.
i love these creatures, they always look so fun
Various Parts of Finding Nemo make so much sense now
This was the phylum I did my high school final project on about 8 years ago. Nice!
my teacher just announced that i got the highest score out of the whole class on my recent bio quiz, all thanks to you man :D
Hey Dave, I've been enjoying the lonely wild. I see no reason why you guys didn't take off, it has to be just bad luck. Those melancholy chord changes are to die for
Just the algorithm. Do the craziest shit to get the most clicks. YT doesn't care about anything but business
Thank you for this. Cnidarians are one of my absolute favourite groups of animals.
Cnidarians - "We got one hole that does it all!"
Interesting facts. Good rythm. Insane video as always.
Keep it up Dave !
Fun fact: a study from 2007 (DOI: 10.1007/s00427-007-0165-0) has shown, that Hydra magnapapillata apparently has an aboral pore, that is maintained by a constant degredation of the extracellular matrix and is present independent on the form of reproduction. Would be interesting if that pore could be confirmed in other polyps as well
Prof Dave, can you tell us about the Snowball Earth and the Great Unconformity before the Cambrian Explosion?
That will be covered in the geology series which starts very soon!
@@ProfessorDaveExplains I'm so sad every time I think about all those fossils lost...
Amazing video👏 this helped me a lot!!
yay, i'm already loving this! biology is rad
Thanks professor, you are the best! 🤗
What a task you've taken upon yourself. I am here for it, waiting with bated breath lol
Proffessor Dave, this channel needs more subs. I’m being fr like all other crap youtube channels gain millions in days…. There’s no place for real knowledge in millennials. I’m a 17year old myself but I am a part of science community (in future)
@@bright.light.sights933 That's typical with educational content. Views accumulate over time. Some of his older science tutorials have one or two million views
@@backstreetfan2887 yeah but other garbage content breaks 2M in like a day
@@mrbloxcraft5611 Yeah, I know. I feel sorry for the people that watch useless junk. It is so much more satisfying to learn about the world.
The amount of views don't matter as much as the fact that these video series exist and are available in the first place. Which means that the people who are willing to learn are able to do so.
I love Jellyfishes. They are the pinnacle of creation.
What’s a zooid? Also, aren’t sponges also Diploblasts?
Genius channel. Helping me through my Conservation Biology’s invertebrate zoology class
Oh man, this video was...tubular! 😎
Prof Dave Adding to my regents Bio I loved and aced in HS...
This is so good
I just got blasted with high quality info :)
Do one on Boquila trifoliolata, the one plant that appears to both have vision, and some sort of learning capacity.
while vertebrates are cool and all, I feel a lot of people underestimate the sheer variety and abundance of invertebrates and overestimate that of vertebrates.
very true
are sperms and eggs not digested in the gastrovascular cavity?
No, they are expelled from it. Like a vagina, if that makes sense.
I hope this hasn't been asked ad nauseam already, but *what's the key difference between symbiosis and mutualism?* I never quite got a straight answer on that, so maybe you're the right guy!
Mutualism is one type of symbiosis. The other types are commensalism and parasitism. Commensalism is when one organism is benefited and the other is not effected. The examples often given are cattle egret eating bugs scattered by cattle and barnacles hitching a ride on a whale.
Cnidarians are my favorite great video.
Ms. Odinet loves u❤
Good explanation
Thank you so much for these videos they are amazing for studying (I'm doing marine science) and I will be recommending these to other students ( :
delightful video, thanks
I love those biology lessons
Biology is so interesting tbh
Why u've said "UNLIKELY porifera, cnidarians are diploblast", if porifera is diploblast, as same ar ctenophora is? thnks in advance.
Hey Professor Dave, currently I'm watching your "Learn math start to finish" playlist, I took Calc 2 last semester and dropped, I was having difficulty with even the simplest things, but I feel so much more confident after watching some of your videos, even though I haven't gotten to far into the course. Turns out I didn't even have a strong grasp of Algebra, I feel like for the first time ever I actually somewhat understand math. I always wanted to be good with my left brain, physics math and computer science just the analytics, now I don't think I'll be able to conquer the world of physics, but Cs I feel is something I might be able to get a grasp on, were you ever planning on making a playlist on CS or programming to be more precise.
Yes I will get to that! I have to do all areas of engineering first, then computer science, then coding/programming, so it will take me several years to get through all of that.
@@ProfessorDaveExplains Oh Damn haha No worries. Which field of Engineering are you planning on doing first?
General concepts, then mechanical, civil, electrical, aerospace. None of it is even written yet, it's going to take a while.
@@ProfessorDaveExplains No worries! I'm looking forward to it! Always wanted to learn Mech Eng, never knew where to begin super excited. Thank you for providing these videos can't tell you how much I appreciate them!
Thanks 🙏
Hello professor Dave, not related to this video, but do you maybe know of the experiment a guy made I then hundert years ago or so maybe 80 ago, he measured the earth curve on a beetch with a physical divice he engendered, like a 2 or 3 Meter long construction with a very accurate steel plate he connected many of those, i thought this is so interesting and such great craftsmanship, but I can't find it no matter how I search for it
Someone please explain the silent C. Why was it included?
The quirks of the Latin language
@@jeffreynowak8866 Pretty dumb imo, but oh well.
Absolutely great 👍
Love this stuff! Thanks! :)
Where to get the playlist of this...
Check the description.
When I see the name cindaria, i think of a similar (non-real) creature in a game called ARK: Survival Evolved. The base game has different dinosaurs and prehistoric animals from different times, that are biologically and functionally changed (some changes are high, while some are small), so they don't actually exist. They are super electric and can destroy a lot of things if you don't pay attention to them. Well, it's s survival-type game that evolves into fighting massive monsters in the end, which is awesome. There's loads of lore and such. I suggest checking it out.
You looked great with the longer hair.
Quick question what are the Vanallen bets ? What material did we use to get through them and finnaly how did we Achieve escape velocity with all that extra mass on board .
Thank you for your time and consideration.
E Z that's M E . he he
There's nothing to "get through". It's just radiation. We also don't need to achieve escape velocity. That's for projectiles, not rockets with boosters continually firing.
The Van Allen Belts are not a material; they're radiation belts, primarily alpha and beta particles. Alpha particles are helium-4 nuclei with no electrons; beta particles are high-speed electrons that were ejected from the nucleus of some radionuclide. Both of these are charged particles, which means that technology where a single stray electron can mess up the entire system, namely *modern, digital* technology, has to be extensively shielded via some sort of Faraday cage so as to protect the technology onboard. Older technology, such as the magnetic-loop computers in the Saturn V, were vastly more resistant, but were also larger and far less powerful than today's tech.
You are cool professor Dave.
The most famous cnidarians are, of course, the sarlaccs of of Tattooine.
And so we do have a phylum that found immortality!!!!
Awesome
Nature is beautiful but also horrifying.
zoology, hooray!
Good video :)
Love it
Please speak on nihilism
Are you skipping Ctenophora?
Nope I will come back.
How the hell did this crazy stuff evolve
I wonder why the Ctenophora and Placozoa isn't covered?
They will be.
Dear Dave, please make a video on the stupidity of Helium3, or educate me on this. People I know think this is real and I just can't understand it. Please help on this so I can debunk stupidity if it exists near me.
Helium-3 is an isotope of helium. I don't know what you're talking about.
DuBuque Fall
Yay!
Earth isn't flat
Earth isn't a combination of both, its and egg shape
Hey
Singwentay sais COMMENTO ™©®
👍👏
First
Snorkel bender
🏆
Can u do videos about dinosaurs
We will get there eventually. This will be a very long series.
I tend to pronounce the name with the C. So while you say it as 'Nidaria', I like to say it as 'Knidaria', with the emphasis of the sound the C would make.
he's saying it the way my teachers always said it
Good jop dear teacher
Earth isn't round
Thank God you are coming towards Biology as well. Keep on uploading Sir! 👍👋
Good jop dear teacher