And kinda awkward because these poor baby barnicles and sea snails are gonna die young. They only got to live hours, days, weeks, or even months; and now they just died.
Its amazing how starfish look innocent and harmless enough, but once you see them slowly, but aggressively pursuing a source of food, all of a sudden they're pretty scary.
It's even more worse seeing them eating a crab, they literally melt the crab into a soft blob all the while the crab is still alive. You'll never see them as innocent and harmless ever again. they're the most terrifying predator on the beach or even the planet, and it doesn't even have a face. Just a bunch of murderous tentacles.
I'm in love with the six jingles whenever the arms are counted! Music's use in immersing the viewer in these short videos is so understated and unappreciated!
I think this is my favorite video of yours! The music and editing are so spot on. The little 6-note riff someone also pointed out, the way the baby sea star makes up the Deep Look icon in the intro, the clever writing, it's all made so thoughtfully! 🥹
I learn something new on Deep Look every time and I'm so proud of it. I never knew there was a 6 limbed starfish that was this adorable and caring! Thanks for sharing 🫶🏾🌻
I had no idea ther were K strategy starfish! Soooo cute! They really do look like snowflakes and look at those bright red eyespots they got! They got their mother's eyes....
Oh, these are adorable, like tiny crocheted doilies! Thank you all so much for your meticulous and charming work. I once wrote a starfish poem - seems like the right gift for you. Le Poisson (Etoile) d’Avril An unwary periwinkle wandered along a tidepool’s edge as the dark of evening fell. A thousand stars began to sparkle round the crescent of the moon; before him, all the sky reflected in the mirror of the water. Suddenly, one star moved toward him and as he watched, bemused, it took him gently in its arms. --MC 4/2019
Fascinating! Now I wonder about male and female starfish. I thought most were hermaphrodites. Very cool. I liked seeing the entire larval stage develop!
What particularly catches my attention is your music. It's very harmonious with the movements in the video, congratulations, you've put a lot of effort into it and you're doing artistic work, I'm your big fan👏🏻
Thank you! We're so happy you enjoyed our video! Seth Samuel creates our original scores. Josh Cassidy produced and filmed this episode, including the chase scene you loved. Josh worked closely with researcher Berenice Baca-Ceballos, at San Francisco State University. I bet you'd also love this video that Josh produced about hermit crabs and how they reuse snails' shells: th-cam.com/video/zCsbTcmtsoA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=DBv6iwUgeeGlnwKq Enjoy!
As do most of their cousins like urchins or sand dollars but then brittle stars said screw that and actually "leap" and swim with their four arms while leading with one as if it were a head. They can even grab prey from above them in the water with those arms, much more active predators.
It's fascinating to learn that these guys *(Echinoderms)* are actually distantly related to us... Just like us, they start off life being _Bilaterally Symmetrical_ (where the left & right sides are mirror images of each other) before starting to grow their head section into a new, _Radially Symmetrical_ (where all body parts radiate out from a central point) body, before reabsorbing their original hind sections. Because they have a rudimentary *Notochord* during the _Bilaterally Symmetrical_ stage of their lives, they are classed as members of the *Phylum Chordata* (just like we are). Most *Echinoderms* do this early in their lives, while they're still free-swimming plankton. That this Six-Armed Starfish broods them underneath their body is downright unique - even for such a weird organism.
You're confusing echinoderms for tunicates with some of those facts it seems. Tunicates (e.g., sea squirts, salps, etc.) are invertebrate chordates belonging to the phylum Chordata just like us vertebrates, and the notochord is one of the synapomorphies (shared traits based on ancestry) that define this group. Echinoderms do not have notochords at any stage during their development, nor did they evolve from any animals that had notochords. They belong to their own phylum, Echinodermata. However, echinoderms and chordates DO both belong to the same superphylum, Deuterostomia, and each is more closely related to each other than either is to any other non-deuterostome animal. Deuterostomes are united by genetic evidence and by similarities during early stages of embryological development. For example, all bilaterians develop a through-gut (two openings connected by a tube-food goes in one hole, waste goes out another). In deuterostomes, the hole that develops first in the embryo is destined to become the anus. In all other bilaterians (i.e., the protostomes), the first hole to develop will eventually become the mouth.
I had watched most of your videos over the past years, but somehow i'm overly excited to watch the deep looks of Gypsy Moth Caterpillar and how the itchy part usually occurs on the human skins. ❤❤
LOOK MUM I GOT A SHOUTOUT IN THE DESCRIPTION 😂 cheers, I’m glad my weird obsession with echinoderms came in handy! Still can’t get over how damn cute baby starfish are, they’re just little bizarre looking popcorns!
Do sea stars have predators? I have seen entire sea floors covered with sea stars. I once saw one I brought up to dry over night being eaten by a seagull at the morning. A very thick 16" sea star that the seagull grabbed by the center, and as the sea star went down the hatch, its legs folded outward naturally for the seagull to be able to finish it.
Sea stars are plentiful in the oceans but they do have lots of predators, but they also have many ways to defend themselves. Most can "harden" at will so that if they crawl into a crevice they're "stuck" in there and can't be dragged out or have defensive spikes and such. The Crown of thorns starfish is notorisously hardy, has huge toxic/venomous spines, and are huge themselves and mostly devoid of predators, however if you search on youtube for "How a Crown-of-Thorns starfish reacts to the smell of a Giant Triton" you'll see that even they have hardwired instincts to get out of dodge when they smell giant sea snails.
nope, they don’t have brains or any sort of central nervous system. they have a ring of nerves that run along them, everything a starfish does is preprogrammed in via evolution. They are some of the simplest animals out there.
The baby starfish chasing the baby snail is the cutest predation vid ever...!!!
I was thinking the same thing - made it even funnier that it was so slow paced
@@Toastmaster_5000 know what would be funniest...? Zefrank narrating that scene, lolz...
I thought the same thing. Too stinking cute!😭
And kinda awkward because these poor baby barnicles and sea snails are gonna die young. They only got to live hours, days, weeks, or even months; and now they just died.
@@sorincioara7861Yeah, I agree. They both looked cute, but there was nothing cute about what happened…..😢😢😢
Its amazing how starfish look innocent and harmless enough, but once you see them slowly, but aggressively pursuing a source of food, all of a sudden they're pretty scary.
Yup!
They still look cute to me
@@shardinalwind7696 They are definitely adorable!!!! These ones in particular. They just look so fluffy and tiny. :)
Nothing compared how snails hunt and eat other snails... i wont even say alive... it is self understanding.
It's even more worse seeing them eating a crab, they literally melt the crab into a soft blob all the while the crab is still alive. You'll never see them as innocent and harmless ever again. they're the most terrifying predator on the beach or even the planet, and it doesn't even have a face. Just a bunch of murderous tentacles.
3:58 that snail was RUNNING for its life
In the most snail way possible.
You mean walking for its life?
It doesnt wanna get eaten
But still eaten
The Usain Bolt of snails
Carnivorous little snowflakes that’s how a boomer would describe me as
Hahahha
except... boomers are the ones who've benefitted the most from the carnivorous appetite of capitalism...
They look like they’d be super fluffy 😅 the texture and size of them is so cute, just teeny little stars!
you are confusing boomers with gen x glad i helped during boomer days dat waz a racial slur fo whight folk.
Carnivorous for pills
I'm in love with the six jingles whenever the arms are counted!
Music's use in immersing the viewer in these short videos is so understated and unappreciated!
omg yesss the 6-note motif was so well-used!
come to think of it... this series ALWAYS has great music... very severely underrated imo
They look like baby popcorns!! So cute
We though the same thing! Or goldfish crackers. At any rate, they do look like a yummy snack.
Please don't eat them
you ever see those gerber star puffs lol
C R U N C H
Who's gonna stop me @@aramizcroissant?
The music is always on point but Seth Samuel really knocked it out of the park this time. Putting it in 6/4 was inspired.
Thank you! Did you notice the switch to 5/8 for the five-armed guys? th-cam.com/video/SSTfw1wuP9s/w-d-xo.html
@@sethgsamuel I didn't! That's incredible.
@@sethgsamueli thought it is cool to have notes match up to the counting of the stars' arms
@@tanyeewei thank you!
I think this is my favorite video of yours! The music and editing are so spot on. The little 6-note riff someone also pointed out, the way the baby sea star makes up the Deep Look icon in the intro, the clever writing, it's all made so thoughtfully! 🥹
Wow thanks Tim! Spread the word!
4:11 RUN YOU CUTIE.
Run little guy run 😅
Shoutout to the Deep Look team especially the sound crew. The dings added to the music when counting the arms was a really nice touch 😊
I learn something new on Deep Look every time and I'm so proud of it. I never knew there was a 6 limbed starfish that was this adorable and caring! Thanks for sharing 🫶🏾🌻
Our pleasure!
@@KQEDDeepLookwait…I thought starfish had 5…
Many have 5, but there is actually some variation by species.
@@brianrigsby7900 this is addressed in the video my dude.
I had no idea ther were K strategy starfish! Soooo cute! They really do look like snowflakes and look at those bright red eyespots they got! They got their mother's eyes....
ha so true!
Awww look at those little baby starfish! They're so CUTE
Oh, these are adorable, like tiny crocheted doilies! Thank you all so much for your meticulous and charming work. I once wrote a starfish poem - seems like the right gift for you.
Le Poisson (Etoile) d’Avril
An unwary periwinkle wandered
along a tidepool’s edge
as the dark of evening fell.
A thousand stars began to sparkle
round the crescent of the moon;
before him, all the sky reflected
in the mirror of the water.
Suddenly, one star moved toward him
and as he watched, bemused,
it took him gently in its arms.
--MC 4/2019
Fantastic!
bro made a poem
i can't believe they have 6 armsss
6 arms is nothing. Look at other seastar
Sunflower sea star 😁😁
Crown of Thorns Sea Star: Errrm, uuuh, about that…
Leptasterias!!! I help study these thru the Cohen lab at SFSU. I’ve been waiting for this episode
That's awesome!
Shoutout to the composer, he went hard for this episode
Fascinating! Now I wonder about male and female starfish. I thought most were hermaphrodites. Very cool.
I liked seeing the entire larval stage develop!
Just beautifully written, shot, narrated and scored! Perfect!
Wow thanks!
Amazing job on the music on this one!!! so good
Glad you enjoy it! That's the music of Seth G. Samuel. He composes the score for all of our episodes. :-)
the music and editing in this episode was amazing!
Kia Simon does our fine cut editing and motion graphics - she's a wiz!
@@KQEDDeepLook my compliments to the chef!
Oh my goodness the little baby starfish! They're so sweet!
Right?!
The way she says "Digested alive"!
The sound design is so good in this! The sfx for the 6 arms matches the music!
I always thought the prepopped popcorn always tasted funny 🤣
👺
What a great title
Thanks!
2:46 Hah lil popcorns. Cute.
I'm just obsessed with deep look!
What particularly catches my attention is your music. It's very harmonious with the movements in the video, congratulations, you've put a lot of effort into it and you're doing artistic work, I'm your big fan👏🏻
3:57 the slowest chase ever
I never knew there was a species of sea star that actually takes care of its young, guess you learn something new everyday.
Loving the intro music and generally how whimsical the music sounds throughout the video, really fitting and such a good job!
Thank you very much!
This video is (like all of your other videos) a true work of art! Thanks a lot!
Thank you! 🎨
That one 'Aww' stole the show ❤
The music is so well done in this episode. Bravo!
Bravo to the composer. Great accompaniment!
4:06 okay but the way the baby snail "walks" is so cute
The babies are so cute
This was an especially stellar episode! Loved the music and the adorably deadly chase scene. Awesome work to the entire team
Thank you! We're so happy you enjoyed our video! Seth Samuel creates our original scores. Josh Cassidy produced and filmed this episode, including the chase scene you loved. Josh worked closely with researcher Berenice Baca-Ceballos, at San Francisco State University.
I bet you'd also love this video that Josh produced about hermit crabs and how they reuse snails' shells: th-cam.com/video/zCsbTcmtsoA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=DBv6iwUgeeGlnwKq Enjoy!
Best footage & best narration ever👍🏼🥰 Thank you for this amazing vid
Wow, thank you!
@@KQEDDeepLook Thank you!! You are all Amazing, did I mention the music?👍🏼🎶 Also perfect🥰
Love the music in this 😍.. I could listen to it on end..
It’s so wild how these are researched and observed. I always wished I could do stuff like this.
I love how they walk with tiny little poles on their arms instead of actually using the arms
As do most of their cousins like urchins or sand dollars but then brittle stars said screw that and actually "leap" and swim with their four arms while leading with one as if it were a head. They can even grab prey from above them in the water with those arms, much more active predators.
man this was awesome! Had to watch the whole thing! well done ❤
- 4:14 Awe how *CUTEEEE !!*
They really did hit us with the hardest intro ever
The writing and editing is always on point!
✍
I really enjoy casting this onto my Smart TV. Cute little babies ❣️
Patrick Star's long lost relative never looked so mean!
Sea star's gotta eat.
Awww they look like baby puff cereal
This is the cutest video yet
👶
It's fascinating to learn that these guys *(Echinoderms)* are actually distantly related to us...
Just like us, they start off life being _Bilaterally Symmetrical_ (where the left & right sides are mirror images of each other) before starting to grow their head section into a new, _Radially Symmetrical_ (where all body parts radiate out from a central point) body, before reabsorbing their original hind sections. Because they have a rudimentary *Notochord* during the _Bilaterally Symmetrical_ stage of their lives, they are classed as members of the *Phylum Chordata* (just like we are).
Most *Echinoderms* do this early in their lives, while they're still free-swimming plankton. That this Six-Armed Starfish broods them underneath their body is downright unique - even for such a weird organism.
You're confusing echinoderms for tunicates with some of those facts it seems. Tunicates (e.g., sea squirts, salps, etc.) are invertebrate chordates belonging to the phylum Chordata just like us vertebrates, and the notochord is one of the synapomorphies (shared traits based on ancestry) that define this group.
Echinoderms do not have notochords at any stage during their development, nor did they evolve from any animals that had notochords. They belong to their own phylum, Echinodermata. However, echinoderms and chordates DO both belong to the same superphylum, Deuterostomia, and each is more closely related to each other than either is to any other non-deuterostome animal. Deuterostomes are united by genetic evidence and by similarities during early stages of embryological development. For example, all bilaterians develop a through-gut (two openings connected by a tube-food goes in one hole, waste goes out another). In deuterostomes, the hole that develops first in the embryo is destined to become the anus. In all other bilaterians (i.e., the protostomes), the first hole to develop will eventually become the mouth.
Thanks for the shoutout guys!! My bad for that mistake though, these stars have 6 arms, not 5. I really hope your channel continues to grow!❤❤⭐⭐⭐
No worries!
I loved the graphic outline of the bottle cap tilting to match the starfish's orientation. Cute little add and great attention to detail!
Glad you liked it!
Kinda reminds me of a pin cushion 😅and cute too
RAAAAH I LOVE WEIRD BABY ECHINODERMS BROTHERRRRRRRRRR
She's a great mom.
i really like startfish, i dont know i just see them as a cute and wholesome creature :)
3:58 and 4:08 is definitely a Mother and Daughter moment
They're so cute. I never seen these starfishes before
Deep Look music is always great. Is it custom made for each episode?
Yep!
Do you have a composer making the music for each individual video? It matches so perfectly! :)
Yep! Seth G. Samuel is our composer. :-)
The forbidden snack
They look like baby popcorns So cute!
I had watched most of your videos over the past years, but somehow i'm overly excited to watch the deep looks of Gypsy Moth Caterpillar and how the itchy part usually occurs on the human skins. ❤❤
Adorable!
Love your videos about sea-creatures like starfish or shrimps or alike
I didnt know this species existed ♡ so cute
Indeed!
LOOK MUM I GOT A SHOUTOUT IN THE DESCRIPTION 😂 cheers, I’m glad my weird obsession with echinoderms came in handy! Still can’t get over how damn cute baby starfish are, they’re just little bizarre looking popcorns!
I love watching these videos, it’s so fascinating!
this and the aedes aegypti egg spawning behaviour sound design are top notch
Thanks! 🔊
Fantastic visuals and footage, as always!
Thank you! Cheers!
It's so cute❤!!!!!!!!!
Marvelous little creatures!
Beautiful voice
So cute 🥰!!!
Agree!
Baby starfish doo doo doo
Doesn't too much water enter the mouth while removing the stomach for digestion?
Mom's a star ✨⭐
4:18 Lol, that was the same thing I was thinking! 😂
4:18 "It's a baby-eat-baby world out here" - Deep Look
Animal and Insect worlds are freakin horror movies on steroids!
Great another video. Thank you and gg for your work.
Thank you too!
so adorable omg🥹the baby stars remind me of konpeito candy which was a childhood snack of mine haha
Neat!
I will always love this channel
This is so freakin cute!!! ❤❤❤
Do sea stars have predators? I have seen entire sea floors covered with sea stars.
I once saw one I brought up to dry over night being eaten by a seagull at the morning. A very thick 16" sea star that the seagull grabbed by the center, and as the sea star went down the hatch, its legs folded outward naturally for the seagull to be able to finish it.
good question, I always thought they were easy prey due to how slow and useless they are.
Sea stars are plentiful in the oceans but they do have lots of predators, but they also have many ways to defend themselves. Most can "harden" at will so that if they crawl into a crevice they're "stuck" in there and can't be dragged out or have defensive spikes and such. The Crown of thorns starfish is notorisously hardy, has huge toxic/venomous spines, and are huge themselves and mostly devoid of predators, however if you search on youtube for "How a Crown-of-Thorns starfish reacts to the smell of a Giant Triton" you'll see that even they have hardwired instincts to get out of dodge when they smell giant sea snails.
Awesome~👍
Thank you for sharing this video!
Thanks for visiting.
Sweet baby loves!!!! omg!!!!
Fascinating
Thanks D L ❤
Patrick be taking notes rn
I loved this video so much, thank you 🥹
You are so welcome!
Incredible creatures!
starfish by peter watts forever
I wonder if these starfish have actual brains because they seem to have some sort of consciousness of tending to their young.
nope, they don’t have brains or any sort of central nervous system. they have a ring of nerves that run along them, everything a starfish does is preprogrammed in via evolution. They are some of the simplest animals out there.
And here we are with 4 measly limbs, like some kinda chumps!
We are inadequate
10 limbs if you count each finger
All I can see is pop corn 😂😂
So that’s where they got the goldfish chip shapes from.
Starfish eggs.
Great video!
Glad you enjoyed it!
New subscriber ❤