In Mexica mythology, butterflies are associated with fallen warriors because they both "live breif lives of glory and beauty before an untimely death."There is also a goddess called itzpapalotl (obsidian butterfly) a goddess of war associated with the first warrior to die in battle.And finally in mexico there is a butterfly that supposedly announces one's death called mictlanpapalotl (butterfly of the land of the dead), although it is commonly known as the black witch moth.
The teteoh Tezcatlipoca, Chantico, and Coyolxauhqui were also associated with butterflies in some areas, particular the places inhabited by the Chichimecas!
Wasn't Itzpaplotl also associated with Aztec sacrificial knives? I'm pretty sure that someone told me this the last time I was down there visiting my sister, but I could be wrong.
Having been subscribed for over half a year now, I feel like "and that's honestly not even the worst part" is just a line to be expected at this point.
I'm clocked out on my "Of course it gets worse" mentality by this point XD I'm just expecting everything to have something worse in store for me to learn now, lol
There's a reason butterflies are used as imagery in Japanese horror media so often. The butterfly in Japan is often connected to depictions of death and mysticism. I'm not to well studied up on why this is a thing but my guess is they were often spotted doing this messed up shit on all the corpses left behind after huge battles.
I believe Ladcadio Hearn had a paper called Insect studies: Butterflies, that go over the various ghostly myths and ethereal poetry centered around butterflies.
If you, like me, were very disturbed by the Pacarana footage--just know that a researcher said that it does not appear, based on its movements, to be in pain--it's just aware of the fact that it's covered in something it cannot easily remove, and Pacarana hate to be dirty. Their lipid layer--the stuff that's not supposed to be removed with soap--is what helps them stay clean because it helps keep dirt from sticking to their fur and makes them water resistant kind of like duck feathers. Duck feathers have a protective layers, which is why a duck can go swimming without looking like a bag of limp squawking wet feathers afterwards, but a chicken, not so much. To recap: The rat was not in pain, but please, if you ever catch a wild animal--even for benevolent reasons--DO NOT attempt to put human (or even animal safe) chemicals on it without consulting a veterinarian or other qualified animal expert who has identified the creature in question and is able to help you move it to a safe facility / back into the wild. This creature is not a pet, and needed proper care or to be immediately released back into the wild.
Fun fact: I used to be afraid of butterflies when I was 8 because I always thought they could suck your blood. Now knowing that they can, looks my fear has become justified.
I love how many endless stories of sharks being basically giant sea puppies to divers keep popping up all over the world. As long as you don’t confuse them by introducing food to the equation while you are present, loads of sharks are just big curious babies that love pets and snuggles
@@00muinamir search for a case that happened here in Brazil when a boy lost his arm due to a tiger in a zoo ... He was with a chickeb wing in his pocket and teasing the tiger...
@@ja-nk3wm Not just body heat, most animals actually enjoy the sensation of being petted, though that is often overridden by other instincts, such as fear. Sharks particularly seem to enjoy having their snout/front of the head rubbed, and yes if you rub a shark's head, it'll come back for more. The downside is that the oils in our skin can harm their mucus membrane and leave them vulnerable to parasites, use gloves. You can also put sharks in a trance state called tonic immobility by turning them upside down, or head down, tail up, and they also enjoy this, however orcas have been known to turn great whites upside down like this, and then munch on their favorite choice bits of the paralyzed shark.
My man told me the back story of the rat looking thing showering. It apparently has a skin condition and is getting medicated baths. Its probably learned to relate the baths with relief and is now actively smearing the soap around itself to get it in the right spots
This man is putting out insanely high-quality, mini-documentaries by using not much more than TikTok editor. You're kinda nutty man, please keep it up.
While butterflies have been almost universally appreciated for their beauty, it's only since the 18th century that they've been connected in folklore to more "cute" beliefs. In "the rape of the locke" the sylphs, very sweet air sprites, have butterfly wings. This design became very popular over the the next two centuries for any sprite and was eventually the go-to appearance for the most edulcorated faeries. But in old european folklore (and in that of other continents also) butterflies were seen as either ghosts or witches, because of how they frequented corpses and blood. Since some butterflies also try drinking milk and liquid dairy products if they find them, some languages like English saw them as "butter-thieves"
Funny thing is my parents were upset with me for freaking out in a butterfly exhibit at a museum when I was younger. Time to tell them my fears were legit. Edit: First of all, holy crap I’ve never gotten this many likes. Thanks guys. But also, I was in pre school and I had never seen a butterfly before, so I still feel like my reaction was justified. Now I just find them creepy not scary.
It'd be better if he did in a way that doesn't make people feel their hate for certain animals is justified. I see too many people acting like butterflies are terrifying and evil just because they lap at your sweat and dead animals' blood. Chronically indoors/online people syndrome I guess
@@raccoonchild People love to see animals as if they were people, assuming that whatever "scary" things they do are done out of malice as if they were some kind of ruthless villain. When they are just animals, they are not guided by morality, they just do what they must do to live.
I raise butterflies and I have some lepidopteran facts to add to this 1. when butterflies form a pupa, it is their body. they aren’t inside of a pupa, they are the pupa. it’s their final stage of shedding, and they shed their entire head in the process and grow a new one in the pupa. moths make chrysalises, which are protective coverings made out of leaves and often silk formed around the moth’s pupa. “chrysalis” and “pupa” are not interchangeable words 2. there is a type of caterpillar known as the puss moth that looks like a tuft of hair and has a sting so bad it has been compared to the feeling of breaking a bone 3. moths have been around since before flowers existed 4. butterfly “pee” (i’m not sure if this is technically what the secretion is) is red because they don’t process red dye in flowers 5. giant silk moths don’t have digestive systems and dying of natural causes for them just means starving. they live for about a week as moths (usually) with their sole mission being to reproduce 6. studies show butterflies remember being caterpillars since they are able to retain instincts and behaviors they would have learned as caterpillars 7. it has been proven that moths and butterflies have the ability to be trained by methods of pavlovian conditioning, a conditioning method popularized with dogs, meaning moths and butterflies have a capacity to learn in the same way that a dog does 8. the largest lepidopteran on earth is NOT the atlas moth and it can get up to 14 inches in wingspan, which is about the size of a large bat. I was wrong about this one! someone in the replies has informed me that the largest moths are actually the white witch moth (in terms of wingspan) and the hercules moth (in terms of diameter). I recommend googling these guys if you aren’t afraid of moths. they’re very pretty 9. to reference the video, butterflies mud puddle because bodily fluids are very heavy in nutrients and when your lifespan is like a week you gotta do what you gotta do. this is most often recorded in male butterflies and it aids in their reproductive efficiency, which is pretty much the point of a butterfly’s adult life
@@lucidfangirl1030 yeah, they have blood lol. it’s not red like human blood but they do store waste in their body that is red since they don’t process red color
“There’s a species of butterfly in Spain that is literally attracted to the smell of fresh corpses” **chugs that information like alcohol in a writer-specific way**
I go to the beach in NC, and the tiger sharks use the Outer Banks as nurseries for their pups. We usually go after the pups are born, so I'm just swimming in shark-infested water. They usually stay clear of humans, but I did have a 3ft long shark brush against me once. Absolutely wonderful swimming with the sharks for free. Still be careful around sharks, kids. You're in their domain.
That sounds awesome. The closest I can relate to that is when I snorkeled over a shark exhibit and a lemon shark came to check me out. I got to feel its skin. I’ve always wanted to interact with more sharks. I think they’re so cool
I go down the the Outer Banks in Hatteras Village every year, I caught a four foot blacktip few years back, I went there when all of those blacktip attacks happened and I saw a few sharks and it was wild, been going for 50 years or so Edit: family has been going for 50 years, I’m seventeen, I’ve gone since I was 1 years old
I can't tell you how much I love your channel. I grew up in the late 80s and early 90s watching the discovery channel with absolutely brutal documentaries, and it has fueled my love for animals and nature lasting to now, my late 30s. Your coverage of animal facts isn't just accurate, it's HILARIOUS, and honest, and so incredibly fun. I love everything I have ever seen you make. Please never stop. You deserve your own actual show. I hope money starts rolling in for this. I don't have a lot to spare right now but as soon as I do, I am signing up on your patreon.
@@sheriffcharliepanda8613 animal planet was at first a wonderful place where they didn’t interrupt all the great nature documentaries with other subjects. Its glory didn’t last long. 😭
Caterpillars do some pretty crazy things too. There are some that live in ant colonies and feed on ant brood, avoiding being killed by adult ants either by thick leathery skin that makes them impervious to bites or (even more messed up) by mimicking the scent of the ants to escape detection entirely. And then there's the wax moth, a pest of honeybees that sneaks into hives to lay her eggs. If the hatchling caterpillars aren't detected right away, they'll spin a silk cover to keep the bees off them and munch away at the honeycomb underneath.
Also there’s some caterpillars that basically brainwash ants to fight for them and protect them from birds?? ( Ants are bitter and birds do not like that.). Pheromones or something for one I think, something like sugar for the other one? I know this bc I once was making a fantasy country (still am tbh) off butterflies and wanted to make it pretty metal- to push myself to be even more creative by making symbols of beauty and innocence something very twisted. Literally wrote it self. Butterflies are so metal. There’s literally types of butterfly called demon so yknow, that exists. Moths might be a bit worse though. Edit: Also with the mimicking scent one, if I remember correctly, the caterpillar straight up MIMICS THE QUEEN TO BE ABLE TO EAT THE ENTIRE COLONY.
@@gardenofeden682 I recall watching a documentary that had one of those destroy a colony by making the ants go mad with their pheromones and fight eachother to the death. The insect world is really wild. Another scary insect are assassin bugs which basically are the insect world equivalent of Leatherface. They will kill insects and then attach their body to theirs to use them as ''camouflage''. Some assassin bugs will look like a walking pile of inseect bodes
If you want to have an idea of how metamorphosis actually would feel, look up the Mega Evolution entries for Pokemon X and Y (as in the entries specifically written for those forms.) Most of them have the lovely emotional baggage of saying that the process is incredibly painful, to the point that a good portion of the Pokemon who can Mega Evolve are in so much pain that they go insane in rage, so if you are not INCREDIBLY in-tune with your Pokemon, so you know you have their consent to do this, it is literally animal abuse. But I also imagine that's why bugs that have a metamorphic stage either turn into angry fucking machines or wait for that fate and then go die somewhere the process can restart.
I am actually Hmong myself and I was not expecting to see the Hmong dog but I very glad to see one in your vids tho. I had always wanted one myself as a kid.
🐕 🐾 I hope people know their breed and provide space and job for them. Too many working breed dogs end up in the pet trade... It's not good for the dogs that should get space to run and work for their mind and body. 🐕🐾
I was so confused when I read this comment. I forgot about hmong by that point so I was like is it a place and they meant that they are in Hmong or from there? Then I remembered that hmong is a dog breed so I was like did they mean that they have a hmong? Then I read the username.
@@RobinParravel Hmong are a peoples, though. "I am Hmong" is like saying "I am Maori". Hmong peoples don't have their own nation, so it's not a place, but you find them throughout China, Vietnam, Laos, across SEA and in rare migrant communities. I imagine its not great being part of a govt-designated "ethnic sub-group" when you're in modern China under Xi. I had the opposite problem to you, I had no idea there was a namesake dog breed >.
As an Albertan, when I first travelled to Boston with my classmates(all of us never travelled outside of Alberta before)we all had a collective spook when we saw the rats near the docks. Imagine a bunch of highschoolers looking in awe and excitedly pointing out rats because we never seen them before.
I'm not surprised about the shark. There's a similar story except the shark is a freaking Tiger Shark called Emily. She fell in love with a guy off the coast of South Africa and he's helped her get 3 fish hooks out of her mouth in all the years he's known her. She also brings her freinds over when they need help with hooks too. She recognises the guys boat and though they couldn't see each other during the pandemic, as soon as he was able to he hopped back in the water to see his girl who was very happy to see him again.
@@Hiarren because in some countries the stay at home orders were strictly enforced? If memory serves aside from essential errands (like grocery shopping, Dr/Dentist visits) nothing else was allowed.
As someone from Vietnam, I can very much confirm that the dog "Dúi" in the vid is really a big fluff that everyone should try to cuddle with at least one, their fur is fluffy, soft and thick so ppl here usually hug 'em all the time
My pre-k classes laughed at me when I wouldn’t go in the butterfly zone at the botanical gardens. This cements the fact that I was right, and I knew better without knowing why I knew better lol.
There was a rat 'infestation' (less than 100 rats) in the city of Medicine Hat AB in 2014 and they basically locked down the city for a few weeks while they killed them. Every vehicle that came in or left the city got searched, they also search every load of trash going to the landfill since that's where they were found initially. Good times.
@@ventexovakon2178 Every time I mention Medicine Hat to someone who isn’t from Alberta I get the same response. As an Albertan, I never really thought about the name
Fun fact: the bird with the blue feet that he didn’t want to say is called the “Blue footed Booby” Yes, that’s actually the name and as you can see, the vampire fidge was drinking the blood from one.
This video just validated my 30yrs of “crazy talk” & “irrational” dislike/fear of butterflies 😩🙌🏾. When I was about 7, I went to a sand pool on a super hot day and was followed by a butterfly trying to suck on me. I’m talking about this thing was hovering over the water and following me to the point I had to jump out the water, wrap in a towel & hide in the bathroom. I’ve stood strong in my stance since day one & still run from butterflies to this day 🙃😂😂
i grew a load of plants, caterpillars destroyed a lot of them, also while they were drying i kept finding caterpillars EVERYWHERE hated them every since, also moths a disgusting and dusty and seem to always wait until your trying to sleep to come fuck with you. bleh im glad someone else dislikes them xD
I've never really liked being near butterflies either. Nothing scares me, its just butterflies in particular never sat right with me. Then again, I've loved horrorfics & films since I was a toddler and I often saw lots of butterflies & moths in them lol.. But I love moths 0.o-
I remember having my picture taken at preschool when I was three, and screaming in terror when a butterfly landed on my shoulder. All the grown-ups laughed and thought it was adorable. Knowing the twisted stuff butterflies do makes my past toddler self feel _vindicated._
Exactly, literally nothing he said about butterflies is actually scary. "Oh no, they lick you and like your sweat". Better run from your pet dog then too.
My housemate found an injured rainbow lorikeet (native to Australia) on the ground and multiple birds were drinking its blood when she found it. Luckily she rescued it and is nursing it back to health.
Oh wow, it's survival of the fittest, the birds have to be annoyed that their prey was stolen, I know I would. The birds probably put your housemate in their hit list,
I grew up terrified of butterflies, especially after that one SpongeBob episode. I just never liked them, always keep my distance, but this takes it for me! I could never again with them
I volunteer at a zoo's butterfly room and I always love explaining to guests that the reason a butterfly landed on their sweaty palm is the same reason they like lays potato chips: delicious salt.
@@Kitschune24 It really is! I mean, all the butterflies are imported from butterfly farms in Costa Rica so you are in a greenhouse that is 100% humidity at 30C for a few hours which isn't the best. However, it is really fun to learn and teach adults and kids about butterflies and all the cool adaptations they have.
I watched hunterxhunter, and on the first season, there were these butterflies that would either be around a dead person, or follow someone who was injured, turns out butterflies like that are real
The sick thing is I already knew about the butterfly thing. For two reasons really, the second one being less innocent than the other. The first one was when I saw a bunch of butterflies feeding on a rotting fish washed up on a riverbank at summer camp. The second being from a trashy borderline torture-porn of an anime movie with terrible CGI and the plot of a trashy horror movie (I think it was called Island of Giant Insects; it references butterflies feasting on human fluids, wasp larvae devouring captured people with a venom that numbs the pain to the point of ecstasy which looks even more gory in the manga apparently from what I heard, ticks so big they can overwhelm people, and a parasitic worm that drives the host to madness, pops out of the host eyes, and makes them act as bait for a giant flying predatory insect; these are all apparently based on real insects); it was bad, the CGI was bad, I'm not denying any of that, but I kind of want to see where it goes because apparently there's a plot and it ends on a cliffhanger.
@Lazy~Ollie me too. It was interesting to actually learn about different species. But the gorn was really unsettling at times. Which I know was the point, but it was really creepy.
I’ve been telling people that there is little difference between mosquitoes and butterflies, but people keep getting fooled by the pretty colors Lawyers dress nice too,but they are still blood suckers smh
The biggest difference is they'll drink blood from dead things and drink tears and sweat from living things. Mosquitoes drink blood from living and dead things, leaving a painful piece of evidence behind.
@@wedontagelikemilktho.6633 I kill all of them? Insects and spiders. I love insects and spiders, dont get me wrong. They are cool af and theyre almost machines... remember: theyre animals! Nature is awesome. But not in my house though. Spiders make webs which imo are disgusting (inside houses) because it accumulates dust. Insects are just pests. If you dont kill them they will infest inside your house.😐
@@gone9820 I like to call this the "only smart bugs live to pass on good evolutionary skills" rule. If they were smart, I wouldn't catch them. No stupid in the gene pool.
Blue-footed booby birds are the “unexplainable” birds mentioned in this video. They got the name “booby” because they look stupid(and apparently booby had a slightly different meaning when it was first discovered) Also a flock of the birds are called boobies😏
Just like the word "dick". Turns out it's the shortened version of Richard because that was just a common male name back in the day, especially during times where names were handwritten. They had to shorten longer names for writing's sake so Richard became Rich/Rick/Hick which would then become Dick. Still at a slight loss on how "dick" started being referred to the penis, i assume it was from phrases like "Little Johnny" or "Dick Jr." or "Here's my little friend".
@@sundalosketch4769 The penis used to have a few common-name nicknames (dicknames) - not just Dick or John, but Peter, Thomas, and of course Willy. John became more associated with the back-end business and toilets, and Dick and Willy were largely winning the dickname contest for a while, until Dick became the champion.
In the last 30 years or so, i swear people used to call others boobs for doing the absolute stupidest things, so i knew boob as an insult meaning idiot before i knew the word as for bodily anatomy. I really can't say when i stopped hearing it, though, and if my exposure to the word was from books or old tv rather than people talking bad about others
I've been an exterminator in Alberta (Edmonton) for 8 years, I've never seen a rat in all that time. A few exterminators that I talk to have seen rats, but that's it. If you see signs of rats here, you have to report it to a government hotline immediately. It's honestly impressive that we've managed to keep this province rat free so successfully
Do you know why rats are so strictly controlled but mice aren't? Aren't the basically the same thing when acting as pests, asides from mice being less likely to bite?
@@raerohan4241 feral rats are more aggressive and likely to bite humans, which means they spread more diseases ig. Plus rat infestations are apparently more difficult to get rid of.
@@raerohan4241 To add onto what error said. Rats (Specifically the Norway rat) is also invasive here, well everywhere except asia, while all mice, voles, shrews etc (except the house mouse) naturally occur here. Introducing rat populations here could harm Alberta's environment, agg economy and frankly day to day life quite severely.
Its hard for me to still think Butterflies are all that bad, even if they are basically pretty insect vultures that occasionally like to speed-up the process... but with no killing. It is hilarious to think that they'll irritate you to get your tears like "Cry Bitch! I just need a sample!!"
Yea butterflies are basically just vultures, they wont HURT you or anything, but there is a species of moth (i think in europe?) that drinks blood like a mosquito and has been known to drink human blood
@@seymourbones Considering Vultures are some of the chillest and loving birds out there while playing a huge role in nature and not being anywhere near as annoying or potentially harmful as flies or mosquitoes, i'm gonna say Butterflies are still pogchamp.
@@vi0let831 Ahahahaa yeah, only calyptra moths drink blood, and they mostly live in asia and china and usually dont bother people, but personally i like most moths and butterflies. Moths you usually see are chill cos theyll just land and not move, butterflies make me nervous because im always worried ill hurt them since they fly so chaotically
The rat deal in Alberta is real, they literally eradicated rats…they have a massive farming culture and rats would flourish there. You can drive for hours in the province and see nothing but farm fields. If you go north though, northwest, you’ll find the mountains and forests. Far south you’ll get the badlands.
@@Hands_Up_Flamable The average person doesn't realize how important this type of research is to the human race. One keystone species gets eliminated and the dominoes will begin to fall! My biggest beef with the scientific/medical research industry is that in this day and age, most of the live animal testing facilities could easily accomplish the same tests with an A.I. program. There's really no need for animals to be tortured by having makeup put into their eyes and forcing them to breath toxic gasses .
Bro yours is one of TWO nature channels on YT i actually enjoy. Your entirely casual manner and straight-faced humor is what truly makes the fun. I could spend hours watching you man
Yeah this is pretty tame. Plus it’s a good thing if they don’t let dead bodies go to waste. I know that he keeps trying to say that butterflies only see you as a sweat pack, or that butterflies don’t care about you, but I think it’s safe to say that just about every single insect ever doesn’t care about humans, unless it’s for food, so butterflies aren’t really special in that regard at all, so even if I didn’t know this beforehand, it’s not that surprising.
Yah, I don’t know. I’ve had to pick up deer carcasses, and I can tell you the first time I saw a butterfly on a deer that had miscarriaged.. I don’t know. I definitely see them more like houseflies now though very pretty from a distance. I’d like them at a distance.
as someone who grew up in Alberta I was surprised to know that we seem to be the only with with no rats, I already knew about the rat war but I thought that there may have been at least one other place that did it as well.
5:17 This is a surprise to me. I'm part of the ethic minority known as the Hmong(in our language it spelled Hmoob, and produced with a long o, rather than a short o), and this is the first time I've ever seen or heard about this breed. Most hmoob videos I've seen, whether or be a live video from a hmoob village or a hmoob video series sold for vhs tapes, I've never seen this breed. Really interesting to me to learn that my race had bred this breed.
I had no clue Hmong even had their own dog species. Out of ever video my grandparents used to watch on some sort of player, I never saw a Hmong dog in anyone of them.
I grew up in Alberta but moved to BC a few years ago. The first time I saw a rat scurry behind a dumpster, I froze and it occured to me that I had never actually seen a physical rat in person before. I was shook 😂
Lol I'm from Alberta too, but I moved to England and we had at the time, a rabbit and a guinea pig out in the back yard. My husband (English) came to me one afternoon and said there was a mouse eating bunny and piggy's food, so I go to look out the kitchen window, and what did I see? A huge RAT, with its paws through the hutch cage, helping itself to the seeds and veggies. I started to laugh and hubby was asking me why. I said dude, that's not a mouse. That's a rat. And he went absolutely ballistic. Starts screaming (which made me laugh even more) and our neighbour (this big, buff, ex-military guy!) comes around, gingerly hands me this package of rat poison, and asks me to please put it out back to get rid of the rats, and scuttles away. I still find it mind-boggling that a guy who grew up IN THE COUNTRY, in a country with a massive rat problem, didn't know what a rat was, where I grew up in a city in a rat-free (theoretically) province, and had never seen a rat in person before, but I knew right away what it was.
@@JohnRuina ur just lucky. I had a coworker from the Caribbean. He saw a raccoon for the first time, freaked him out trying to explain to use what he saw. We told him they're common enough, if u see 1 stop and back away slowly and let it do its thing. If it looks mange and scruffed up with a foaming mouth. Get to saftey and call pest control. It more or less rabid.
Rats in BC are mostly found in the coastal cities like Vancouver and White Rock. Richmond also has a Rat thing with loads of farmland. Abbotsford too apparently, but nobody lives (or should live) there@@JohnRuina
I never understood the obsession people have with butterflies. Anyone who has seen them under microscope understands how horrifyingly scary they truly are
As an Albertan-Yeah, any pet owners caught with rats is in for a hefty ass fine. I was told as a child its because Alberta is a grain province! (We’re also a beef province)
I thought that was Saskatchewan. I always thought of Alberta as the oil province (basically Canadian Texas). Beef sounds about right, though, being where Calgary is 'n' all.
I think the Pacarana is fine, or at least it isn't feeling any pain or irritation, because it's performing the same movements it does normally when cleaning itself, if it were irritated it would likely be more frantically trying to remove the soap from its body, but it seems to be chilling and doing what it normally does.
@@Melo-Sama you're a fool to challenge me Well you see there have been reports of sharks getting so attached to humans that they want to breed with them some sharks succeeded mostly the female ones but the best way to check this out is on Google in a animated format
Yes, brush-tailed possums do break into houses in Australia. I once found one in my laundry and believe me you do NOT want to get into a fight with one of them. Alberta, Canada needs to teach New South Wales (Australia) how to eradicate rats but so they can apply that knowledge to mice. A mouse plague has literally made news twice now, in the middle of the pandemic, because of just how bad the situation is. They're eating grain and crops, contaminating grain and causing a lot of damage.
theres a funny tumblr post from a while ago about a cockatoo coming into a girls bedroom window and ripping up her keyboard! no one could believe the beautiful bird was wild because everyone associates the type with pets haha
A butterfly layer it’s eggs on my sister’s now fiancé when we went to a “Mariposario” aka Butterfly Conservatory. It was an Ojo de Búho he was holding and it just started laying. They took the eggs off his finger, but let’s just say he’s a proud daddy of 8 butterflies 😆
@@bennypatrick6535 different types of butterflies have different looking eggs. They could either look like pearls like that other person said, or they could look like beans or olives or even star anise.
I was a citizen scientist for a couple of years, and when we were trained to study butterfly populations in the wild, the researchers would show us a clip someone sent in of a butterfly crawling around one of those wooden fences at one of our parks. The fence was on a popular hiking trail, and had gotten visibly wet from someone sweating all over it, so the researcher explained that the butterfly was trying to sip up all that sweaty, salty goodness 😭 she also said some butterflies would do the same with animal feces. I've kept my distance ever since
On the brush tail possum, we’ve had them in our walls for over a decade now (we got used to them after a while) and a month or so ago it actually broke through the wall, and we could see it’s fur through the hole (thankfully the hole wasn’t big enough for it to get out of, we covered it so our dog doesn’t make it worse, and we’ve got someone in to get the possum out)
Watched a series once. Group of young astronauts got pulled through a wormhole into a weird part of space. They went exploring other planets with life and one had humungous insects. They were terrified of the bees/wasps and ran like hell, but were not afraid afraid of the butterflies. Until said butterflies decided they were lunch and those bee/wasps actually saved them.
All i can think about is starkid's starship video, which i *know* you're not referencing, but now i suddenly realize i don't think they had any flying insect characters. Huh
As someone who lives in Alberta, my class had to buy rats from a science centre for a dissection. WE HAD TO BUY RATS, my garage had mice but no rats. My friend in Saskatchewan went rat hunting and found 20 something in a few days.
Also had a friend who did the same with stray dogs although it wasn't considered legal where he lived it still made the place much safer as dogs can do and have done ALLOT more damage to people than rats and they tend to get pretty hungry without owners. Luckily though they breed way less often so it was a pretty easy fix.
Thanks for making my freakouts about butterflies justified, especially the bigger ones. And yeah, I'm slowly believing most sharks can be kinder than dolphins. But really, I'm so glad I stumbled upon you. Whenever I want to make someone laugh, I put on your video about cheetah sounds and I just wheeeze. It's just too funny. And they're always super impressed with the orca and moose fact.
Well, it is reasonable. It's a leftover thing from the prehistoric times when our ancestors were still very much part of the food chain. Same reason fear of spiders and snakes exist.
Yeah and I hate it when the definition of Arachnophobia is "an irrational fear of spiders" like what do you mean "irrational" like Many spiders can literally kill you with its bite and you also expect me to look at a spider and not be terrified of it (peacock spiders are an exception tho) like I'm an American but I still hope that Australia has a different definition of the phobia. (Sorry just had to rant there)
Haha, I was just explaining to my daughter last week about how and why we have no rats in Alberta, I'm sure she would have appreciated your story telling more than mine though XD
Every time I go to a butterfly garden, all the butterflies land on my head and in my hair. For some reason, they really seem to enjoy how my hair tastes.
As a native Albertan, yeah I’ve never actually seen a rat there, I finally saw my first rat in British Columbia. The province right next door
I live in alberta and Visiting my uncle in B.C. well he made me kill it I was 7
Grew up in nunavut so never seen one too
@@itiipau granted I think it’s a tad too cold up there for rats haha
Hhhiiiiii. British Columbian here!
The sun never sets on the rat empire, but the empire knows where it can't go 😂
"Why Butterflies are NOT your Friend"
Sounds like something a Moth would say
@K A E L Y N 💋 no
@K A E L Y N 💋 u dont have friends don't you
@@zoogie2454 That's a bot. Replying makes it more active.
Casual geographic is a Moth confirmed!?!?!
@K A E L Y N 💋 fatherless. get a job.
For those who didn’t know, the bird he said guidelines won’t allow him to say the name of is called a Blue Footed Boobie
Pleaz shou tits ann boobies
Thanks
man youtube really fucked up if you cant say the name of a bird XDD
Thank you! I had to scroll down farther than I thought I'd need to in order to actually find the answer to that.
@@KonDragon008 same
In Mexica mythology, butterflies are associated with fallen warriors because they both "live breif lives of glory and beauty before an untimely death."There is also a goddess called itzpapalotl (obsidian butterfly) a goddess of war associated with the first warrior to die in battle.And finally in mexico there is a butterfly that supposedly announces one's death called mictlanpapalotl (butterfly of the land of the dead), although it is commonly known as the black witch moth.
Very interesting butterfly mythology
The teteoh Tezcatlipoca, Chantico, and Coyolxauhqui were also associated with butterflies in some areas, particular the places inhabited by the Chichimecas!
Wasn't Itzpaplotl also associated with Aztec sacrificial knives?
I'm pretty sure that someone told me this the last time I was down there visiting my sister, but I could be wrong.
Having been subscribed for over half a year now, I feel like "and that's honestly not even the worst part" is just a line to be expected at this point.
I'm clocked out on my "Of course it gets worse" mentality by this point XD I'm just expecting everything to have something worse in store for me to learn now, lol
I'd totally wear a t shirt with ".. and that's honestly not even the worst part " on it. Lol
bro there's 3 bots in here already
please mark 'em as spam and move on
What about: "But don't worry, It gets worse"
@@amyhatfield5389 OMG YES!!!!
There's a reason butterflies are used as imagery in Japanese horror media so often.
The butterfly in Japan is often connected to depictions of death and mysticism. I'm not to well studied up on why this is a thing but my guess is they were often spotted doing this messed up shit on all the corpses left behind after huge battles.
Oh. Wow, and AFAIK Japan likes to preserve Butterflys, so them going to
Post-battlefields makes sense, lotta "minerals" there.
Is this a pigeon?
@@kevintrang3007 ... what?
@@blakebrouwer3266 it's an anime meme
I believe Ladcadio Hearn had a paper called Insect studies: Butterflies, that go over the various ghostly myths and ethereal poetry centered around butterflies.
SpongeBob and Patrick were right to be afraid of the butterfly then
You did not just do that 😭
@@SeinIshamiado He did. XD The absolute madlad.
Yes
oh lord
Stephen was just that good at being a biologist writer
If you, like me, were very disturbed by the Pacarana footage--just know that a researcher said that it does not appear, based on its movements, to be in pain--it's just aware of the fact that it's covered in something it cannot easily remove, and Pacarana hate to be dirty. Their lipid layer--the stuff that's not supposed to be removed with soap--is what helps them stay clean because it helps keep dirt from sticking to their fur and makes them water resistant kind of like duck feathers. Duck feathers have a protective layers, which is why a duck can go swimming without looking like a bag of limp squawking wet feathers afterwards, but a chicken, not so much.
To recap: The rat was not in pain, but please, if you ever catch a wild animal--even for benevolent reasons--DO NOT attempt to put human (or even animal safe) chemicals on it without consulting a veterinarian or other qualified animal expert who has identified the creature in question and is able to help you move it to a safe facility / back into the wild. This creature is not a pet, and needed proper care or to be immediately released back into the wild.
Fun fact: I used to be afraid of butterflies when I was 8 because I always thought they could suck your blood. Now knowing that they can, looks my fear has become justified.
So you're just gonna ignore how he said you need to be dead first for that to happen?
@@raccoonchild 🦋🔪
@@insertobject4002 don't worry, butterflies can't hold knives
@@metal_pipe9764 thats government propaganda butterflies can absolutely hold a knife
@@insertobject4002 its standard science that they can not wtf r u smoking thinking they can hold knives wtf
As an Australian, you should NEVER let your guard down when coming here.
NEVER
@@kermit5954 never EVER.
ah yes, the detroit of the continents
Yes
Noted.
I love how many endless stories of sharks being basically giant sea puppies to divers keep popping up all over the world. As long as you don’t confuse them by introducing food to the equation while you are present, loads of sharks are just big curious babies that love pets and snuggles
"Don't introduce food into the equation" is one of the most under-appreciated rules for interacting with wildlife generally.
@@00muinamir I wouldn't said "under-apreciated" is more like "The most common and important rule that no mf follows"
@@00muinamir search for a case that happened here in Brazil when a boy lost his arm due to a tiger in a zoo ... He was with a chickeb wing in his pocket and teasing the tiger...
Chicken*
@@4uartaOnda welp
Kinda deserved ngl
6:01 As a Vietnamese, I feel so proud of Dúi to make it. He is indeed a pure one, and thank you for mentioning him!
I hope Vietnam will stop eating dogs. They even steal household dogs to eat. Please, try to aware Vietnamese about it
That shark sorry is actually really heartwarming, cool hearing about it
Its just body heat. And that shark has sucker mouth eats clams and crustaceans. Not a threat
@@ja-nk3wm Not just body heat, most animals actually enjoy the sensation of being petted, though that is often overridden by other instincts, such as fear. Sharks particularly seem to enjoy having their snout/front of the head rubbed, and yes if you rub a shark's head, it'll come back for more. The downside is that the oils in our skin can harm their mucus membrane and leave them vulnerable to parasites, use gloves. You can also put sharks in a trance state called tonic immobility by turning them upside down, or head down, tail up, and they also enjoy this, however orcas have been known to turn great whites upside down like this, and then munch on their favorite choice bits of the paralyzed shark.
@@OnlyKaerius you had me in the first half Ngl
@@DeonVisions It's all true. Do a quick search on "orca tonic immobility", "balancing shark", and similar terms here and you'll find video proof.
@@OnlyKaerius No, I just saying that because of how dark the info got, I was intrigued until I seen the parts about the orcas 😂
My man told me the back story of the rat looking thing showering. It apparently has a skin condition and is getting medicated baths. Its probably learned to relate the baths with relief and is now actively smearing the soap around itself to get it in the right spots
I'm so glad it's this and not actually horrible treatment of animals
Deserves a pin. Ty for the good info.
Ty
Oh thank three flavors of fuck.
Ty
This man is putting out insanely high-quality, mini-documentaries by using not much more than TikTok editor. You're kinda nutty man, please keep it up.
best comment✅
Nutty. Betosky huh ? XD
YOU AGAIN?
Ong dude.. this kinda stuff is underrated
While butterflies have been almost universally appreciated for their beauty, it's only since the 18th century that they've been connected in folklore to more "cute" beliefs. In "the rape of the locke" the sylphs, very sweet air sprites, have butterfly wings. This design became very popular over the the next two centuries for any sprite and was eventually the go-to appearance for the most edulcorated faeries. But in old european folklore (and in that of other continents also) butterflies were seen as either ghosts or witches, because of how they frequented corpses and blood. Since some butterflies also try drinking milk and liquid dairy products if they find them, some languages like English saw them as "butter-thieves"
I finally know why they’re called butterflies!
Funny thing is my parents were upset with me for freaking out in a butterfly exhibit at a museum when I was younger. Time to tell them my fears were legit.
Edit: First of all, holy crap I’ve never gotten this many likes. Thanks guys.
But also, I was in pre school and I had never seen a butterfly before, so I still feel like my reaction was justified. Now I just find them creepy not scary.
Hey, good to know I wasn’t the only one terrified of butterflies as a kid
Butterfly world in Florida was the worst experience of my entire life!
@@Gorypaladin346 you both should be ashamed
Jk
Same here
Love how he actually cares about animals and their health even though he just talks about them and really doesn't have to. Shows true character.
A lot of people with admiration for nature are like that. Fascinated with it, including its harsh aspects, but also very empathetic to living things.
Sister ramen…lol
It'd be better if he did in a way that doesn't make people feel their hate for certain animals is justified. I see too many people acting like butterflies are terrifying and evil just because they lap at your sweat and dead animals' blood. Chronically indoors/online people syndrome I guess
@@raccoonchild People love to see animals as if they were people, assuming that whatever "scary" things they do are done out of malice as if they were some kind of ruthless villain. When they are just animals, they are not guided by morality, they just do what they must do to live.
I raise butterflies and I have some lepidopteran facts to add to this
1. when butterflies form a pupa, it is their body. they aren’t inside of a pupa, they are the pupa. it’s their final stage of shedding, and they shed their entire head in the process and grow a new one in the pupa. moths make chrysalises, which are protective coverings made out of leaves and often silk formed around the moth’s pupa. “chrysalis” and “pupa” are not interchangeable words
2. there is a type of caterpillar known as the puss moth that looks like a tuft of hair and has a sting so bad it has been compared to the feeling of breaking a bone
3. moths have been around since before flowers existed
4. butterfly “pee” (i’m not sure if this is technically what the secretion is) is red because they don’t process red dye in flowers
5. giant silk moths don’t have digestive systems and dying of natural causes for them just means starving. they live for about a week as moths (usually) with their sole mission being to reproduce
6. studies show butterflies remember being caterpillars since they are able to retain instincts and behaviors they would have learned as caterpillars
7. it has been proven that moths and butterflies have the ability to be trained by methods of pavlovian conditioning, a conditioning method popularized with dogs, meaning moths and butterflies have a capacity to learn in the same way that a dog does
8. the largest lepidopteran on earth is NOT the atlas moth and it can get up to 14 inches in wingspan, which is about the size of a large bat. I was wrong about this one! someone in the replies has informed me that the largest moths are actually the white witch moth (in terms of wingspan) and the hercules moth (in terms of diameter). I recommend googling these guys if you aren’t afraid of moths. they’re very pretty
9. to reference the video, butterflies mud puddle because bodily fluids are very heavy in nutrients and when your lifespan is like a week you gotta do what you gotta do. this is most often recorded in male butterflies and it aids in their reproductive efficiency, which is pretty much the point of a butterfly’s adult life
butterflies have blood, too though? One time a kid killed a butterfly and it had red coming out of it
@@lucidfangirl1030 yeah, they have blood lol. it’s not red like human blood but they do store waste in their body that is red since they don’t process red color
That's really cool. Thanks for sharing
So you're saying the cocoon is them?
silk moths got screwed by nature wow
“There’s a species of butterfly in Spain that is literally attracted to the smell of fresh corpses” **chugs that information like alcohol in a writer-specific way**
"chugs in writer-specific way" -relatable
As an Albertan, it’s great to hear that people actually know about our war on rats
Do you usually hear jokes about rats?
@@getbetternobs7665 We never joke about rats.
@@getbetternobs7665 rats are serious stuff there
@@getbetternobs7665 Only people questioning how we actually pulled it off.
I'm assuming a shit ton of poison.
I go to the beach in NC, and the tiger sharks use the Outer Banks as nurseries for their pups. We usually go after the pups are born, so I'm just swimming in shark-infested water. They usually stay clear of humans, but I did have a 3ft long shark brush against me once. Absolutely wonderful swimming with the sharks for free. Still be careful around sharks, kids. You're in their domain.
That sounds awesome. The closest I can relate to that is when I snorkeled over a shark exhibit and a lemon shark came to check me out. I got to feel its skin. I’ve always wanted to interact with more sharks. I think they’re so cool
@@paytonallen1027 lemon sharks are very interested in people. they're so cute!
Most actual shark attacks are mistakes and they back off with the first bite. But that one bite is disastrous, can be fatal.
I go down the the Outer Banks in Hatteras Village every year, I caught a four foot blacktip few years back,
I went there when all of those blacktip attacks happened and I saw a few sharks and it was wild, been going for 50 years or so
Edit: family has been going for 50 years, I’m seventeen, I’ve gone since I was 1 years old
you still have all your hands, shoulders, knees and toes, knees and toes?
I can't tell you how much I love your channel. I grew up in the late 80s and early 90s watching the discovery channel with absolutely brutal documentaries, and it has fueled my love for animals and nature lasting to now, my late 30s. Your coverage of animal facts isn't just accurate, it's HILARIOUS, and honest, and so incredibly fun. I love everything I have ever seen you make. Please never stop. You deserve your own actual show. I hope money starts rolling in for this. I don't have a lot to spare right now but as soon as I do, I am signing up on your patreon.
As I was born in 1984 I feel this comment to my core.
@@sheriffcharliepanda8613 animal planet was at first a wonderful place where they didn’t interrupt all the great nature documentaries with other subjects. Its glory didn’t last long. 😭
You're lucky. The nature documentaries from that era are my favourite too
I consider him my new david Attenborough. ‘70’s child here
@@Dash101 man I used to watch live surgery with my dad on the learning channel it's why to this day I can see anything as long as it isn't me lol
You're by far the best channel for wildlife. You're just so original & you're the king with a tiny microphone
Caterpillars do some pretty crazy things too. There are some that live in ant colonies and feed on ant brood, avoiding being killed by adult ants either by thick leathery skin that makes them impervious to bites or (even more messed up) by mimicking the scent of the ants to escape detection entirely.
And then there's the wax moth, a pest of honeybees that sneaks into hives to lay her eggs. If the hatchling caterpillars aren't detected right away, they'll spin a silk cover to keep the bees off them and munch away at the honeycomb underneath.
Also there’s some caterpillars that basically brainwash ants to fight for them and protect them from birds?? ( Ants are bitter and birds do not like that.). Pheromones or something for one I think, something like sugar for the other one?
I know this bc I once was making a fantasy country (still am tbh) off butterflies and wanted to make it pretty metal- to push myself to be even more creative by making symbols of beauty and innocence something very twisted. Literally wrote it self. Butterflies are so metal. There’s literally types of butterfly called demon so yknow, that exists. Moths might be a bit worse though.
Edit: Also with the mimicking scent one, if I remember correctly, the caterpillar straight up MIMICS THE QUEEN TO BE ABLE TO EAT THE ENTIRE COLONY.
@Zucchini Tzatziki uhhh when was there ever a caterpillar in Tokyo ghoul?
I know someone from where I live who's family does beekeeping. He hates butterflies for this same reason.
@@childishsadbino I think they meant centipedes *shivers*
@@gardenofeden682 I recall watching a documentary that had one of those destroy a colony by making the ants go mad with their pheromones and fight eachother to the death. The insect world is really wild.
Another scary insect are assassin bugs which basically are the insect world equivalent of Leatherface. They will kill insects and then attach their body to theirs to use them as ''camouflage''. Some assassin bugs will look like a walking pile of inseect bodes
Fun fact, The Pokemon Beautifly has pokedex entries that also say it drinks blood of enemies. I learned a lot about real life animals through Pokemon.
I remember from the Pokémon Black and White and B&W 2 that the Japanese name is Agehunto. A good vicious sounding name tbh
It's always the pretty ones. Gorebyss would suck the blood out of other fish till they die.
@@nunyabiznes33 Gorebyss it's actually more terrifying than huntail to me.
If you want to have an idea of how metamorphosis actually would feel, look up the Mega Evolution entries for Pokemon X and Y (as in the entries specifically written for those forms.) Most of them have the lovely emotional baggage of saying that the process is incredibly painful, to the point that a good portion of the Pokemon who can Mega Evolve are in so much pain that they go insane in rage, so if you are not INCREDIBLY in-tune with your Pokemon, so you know you have their consent to do this, it is literally animal abuse. But I also imagine that's why bugs that have a metamorphic stage either turn into angry fucking machines or wait for that fate and then go die somewhere the process can restart.
@@greenpiersystem Ah yes, Glailie's mild inconvenience of a broken jaw that prevent's it from eating.
I am actually Hmong myself and I was not expecting to see the Hmong dog but I very glad to see one in your vids tho. I had always wanted one myself as a kid.
🐕 🐾 I hope people know their breed and provide space and job for them. Too many working breed dogs end up in the pet trade... It's not good for the dogs that should get space to run and work for their mind and body. 🐕🐾
the fact he said he'd commit "1st Degree" for this puppy. 🤣🤣🤣😂 "LWOP"
I am a fellow hmong too!
I was so confused when I read this comment. I forgot about hmong by that point so I was like is it a place and they meant that they are in Hmong or from there? Then I remembered that hmong is a dog breed so I was like did they mean that they have a hmong?
Then I read the username.
@@RobinParravel Hmong are a peoples, though. "I am Hmong" is like saying "I am Maori". Hmong peoples don't have their own nation, so it's not a place, but you find them throughout China, Vietnam, Laos, across SEA and in rare migrant communities. I imagine its not great being part of a govt-designated "ethnic sub-group" when you're in modern China under Xi.
I had the opposite problem to you, I had no idea there was a namesake dog breed >.
That story about the guy in the shark it's literally the cutest.
As an Albertan, when I first travelled to Boston with my classmates(all of us never travelled outside of Alberta before)we all had a collective spook when we saw the rats near the docks. Imagine a bunch of highschoolers looking in awe and excitedly pointing out rats because we never seen them before.
Honestly I probably would’ve killed them out of pure instinct
L
someone should airdrop a ton of rats into alberta
Your county is fucking retarded
I mean, rats aren't that common in other places. Most school children have probably never seen a rat.
I'm not surprised about the shark. There's a similar story except the shark is a freaking Tiger Shark called Emily. She fell in love with a guy off the coast of South Africa and he's helped her get 3 fish hooks out of her mouth in all the years he's known her. She also brings her freinds over when they need help with hooks too. She recognises the guys boat and though they couldn't see each other during the pandemic, as soon as he was able to he hopped back in the water to see his girl who was very happy to see him again.
I remember this story 😊 it really just validates my love for sharks 🦈
...Why the hell would the Big Coof prevent -diving-?
Aww, so cute❤🥺
@@Hiarren because in some countries the stay at home orders were strictly enforced? If memory serves aside from essential errands (like grocery shopping, Dr/Dentist visits) nothing else was allowed.
@@Hiarren Tyrannical rules for no real reason.
As someone from Vietnam, I can very much confirm that the dog "Dúi" in the vid is really a big fluff that everyone should try to cuddle with at least one, their fur is fluffy, soft and thick so ppl here usually hug 'em all the time
But but,
Then it's bred with a rodent then???
Còn chưa nhìn thấy con này thật bao giờ :’)
My pre-k classes laughed at me when I wouldn’t go in the butterfly zone at the botanical gardens. This cements the fact that I was right, and I knew better without knowing why I knew better lol.
I wonder how you "knew" ? And I wonder how they know that most of a butterflies taste buds are on it's feet?
@@jessikatkins1173 With microscopes you can recognize how a taste bud look like. Or with some other scientific methods. 😆
@@tovarishchfeixiao
Lmao.... I don't recall writing that 🤣 thx for explanation tho.
There was a rat 'infestation' (less than 100 rats) in the city of Medicine Hat AB in 2014 and they basically locked down the city for a few weeks while they killed them. Every vehicle that came in or left the city got searched, they also search every load of trash going to the landfill since that's where they were found initially. Good times.
I didn't know that, and i lived in medicine hat in 2014
Everything is labeled as good times these days
I was today years old when I learned of a place called "Medicine Hat."
@@ventexovakon2178 Every time I mention Medicine Hat to someone who isn’t from Alberta I get the same response. As an Albertan, I never really thought about the name
@@ventexovakon2178 Same here. Love learning new things every day
Fun fact: the bird with the blue feet that he didn’t want to say is called the “Blue footed Booby”
Yes, that’s actually the name and as you can see, the vampire fidge was drinking the blood from one.
Yea I figured that's what it was
Thanks for saving me time on a Google search
When birds eat chicken breast:
The fidget wanted to breast feed
i only know the french name and it's also very self explanatory : "fou à pieds bleus"
This video just validated my 30yrs of “crazy talk” & “irrational” dislike/fear of butterflies 😩🙌🏾. When I was about 7, I went to a sand pool on a super hot day and was followed by a butterfly trying to suck on me. I’m talking about this thing was hovering over the water and following me to the point I had to jump out the water, wrap in a towel & hide in the bathroom. I’ve stood strong in my stance since day one & still run from butterflies to this day 🙃😂😂
i grew a load of plants, caterpillars destroyed a lot of them, also while they were drying i kept finding caterpillars EVERYWHERE hated them every since, also moths a disgusting and dusty and seem to always wait until your trying to sleep to come fuck with you. bleh im glad someone else dislikes them xD
I've never really liked being near butterflies either. Nothing scares me, its just butterflies in particular never sat right with me. Then again, I've loved horrorfics & films since I was a toddler and I often saw lots of butterflies & moths in them lol.. But I love moths 0.o-
Awww hahah 😳😢🤭🤣😭😭😭😅
@@charlieward7606 yeah but who likes moths anyways
@@illford i do.
I remember having my picture taken at preschool when I was three, and screaming in terror when a butterfly landed on my shoulder. All the grown-ups laughed and thought it was adorable.
Knowing the twisted stuff butterflies do makes my past toddler self feel _vindicated._
Hes like a free tutor and his content is hella amazing
Well now I find butterflies even cooler
hell yeah! butterflies are epic
also northflowo! thats cool
Same here. The perfect balance between immaculate creatures and death eaters 👌
Exactly, literally nothing he said about butterflies is actually scary. "Oh no, they lick you and like your sweat". Better run from your pet dog then too.
i would keep a bunch of them in my home and any time theres an intruder id shoot the intruder and let the butterflies out
Its kinda spookpy to think about it now
._.
My housemate found an injured rainbow lorikeet (native to Australia) on the ground and multiple birds were drinking its blood when she found it. Luckily she rescued it and is nursing it back to health.
💀 birds aren’t cute anymore
Oh wow, it's survival of the fittest, the birds have to be annoyed that their prey was stolen, I know I would. The birds probably put your housemate in their hit list,
I grew up terrified of butterflies, especially after that one SpongeBob episode. I just never liked them, always keep my distance, but this takes it for me! I could never again with them
That was a horsefly close-up, though...
I volunteer at a zoo's butterfly room and I always love explaining to guests that the reason a butterfly landed on their sweaty palm is the same reason they like lays potato chips: delicious salt.
Humans. You can't just eat one. YEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!
That sounds like a fun volunteer job
@@Kitschune24 It really is! I mean, all the butterflies are imported from butterfly farms in Costa Rica so you are in a greenhouse that is 100% humidity at 30C for a few hours which isn't the best. However, it is really fun to learn and teach adults and kids about butterflies and all the cool adaptations they have.
@@yvainestelmack7196 Awesome!
I watched hunterxhunter, and on the first season, there were these butterflies that would either be around a dead person, or follow someone who was injured, turns out butterflies like that are real
I was lucky I guess to know something like that was real before I saw hunterxHunter. Lol
Still didn't stop me from feeling weird about them though
@@amanda54923 lol I feel ya mate
SAME thing I Thought Of
@@mysterprolyfic3319 yeah I never would have thought there were butterflies like that
The sick thing is I already knew about the butterfly thing. For two reasons really, the second one being less innocent than the other. The first one was when I saw a bunch of butterflies feeding on a rotting fish washed up on a riverbank at summer camp. The second being from a trashy borderline torture-porn of an anime movie with terrible CGI and the plot of a trashy horror movie (I think it was called Island of Giant Insects; it references butterflies feasting on human fluids, wasp larvae devouring captured people with a venom that numbs the pain to the point of ecstasy which looks even more gory in the manga apparently from what I heard, ticks so big they can overwhelm people, and a parasitic worm that drives the host to madness, pops out of the host eyes, and makes them act as bait for a giant flying predatory insect; these are all apparently based on real insects); it was bad, the CGI was bad, I'm not denying any of that, but I kind of want to see where it goes because apparently there's a plot and it ends on a cliffhanger.
Oh that motherfucking anime, and here I thought I finally managed to forget abotu that shit.
@@dragonace119 lmao
Yeah, thanks for reminding us. Urgh. And here I thought Beautifly's Pokedex entry was an elaborate lie. Boy was I wrong.
Lol that shitty movie gave me a phobia of ticks.
@Lazy~Ollie me too. It was interesting to actually learn about different species. But the gorn was really unsettling at times. Which I know was the point, but it was really creepy.
As a Kirby fan, I’ve known to be afraid of butterflies for 5ish years already
I just love that it cleans itself, eats and can be dressed like a little person
Its ridiculously cute
Sounds Stuart kinda Little familiar
I’ve been telling people that there is little difference between mosquitoes and butterflies, but people keep getting fooled by the pretty colors
Lawyers dress nice too,but they are still blood suckers smh
I don't think the butterflies spread disease though.
Most butterflies won't pierce my skin to drink my blood. Most mosquitos will.
The biggest difference is they'll drink blood from dead things and drink tears and sweat from living things.
Mosquitoes drink blood from living and dead things, leaving a painful piece of evidence behind.
Butterflies won't drink your blood while you're still alive so they're still better than mosquitoes
Knowing the reason butterflies kept flying towards me was because they were trying drink my sweat makes my skepticism much more justified
@Sista Rahman only for sad people
@@Tetopettenson1 Thank you for your service
RIGHT
1:06 BOBBIES! I LOVE THEM! they're so cute!
I respect butterflies, but I HELLA respect sharks because of all the flack they get. Same with snakes! ❤️❤️
Same here! I feel like sharks and snakes get so much crap and it's unfair, tbh.
Spiders are fascinating but arachnophobes keep killing them and then they complain about flies and mosquitos.🤦🏾♂️
@@wedontagelikemilktho.6633 I kill all of them? Insects and spiders.
I love insects and spiders, dont get me wrong. They are cool af and theyre almost machines... remember: theyre animals! Nature is awesome. But not in my house though. Spiders make webs which imo are disgusting (inside houses) because it accumulates dust. Insects are just pests. If you dont kill them they will infest inside your house.😐
Watch the video from Eons about snakes, everything will make sense
@@gone9820 I like to call this the "only smart bugs live to pass on good evolutionary skills" rule. If they were smart, I wouldn't catch them. No stupid in the gene pool.
the pacarana cleaning itself is both uncanny in how it moves and cute at the same time.
It's like a real-life furry! :3
The wise old sage pacarana at the end though
Blue-footed booby birds are the “unexplainable” birds mentioned in this video. They got the name “booby” because they look stupid(and apparently booby had a slightly different meaning when it was first discovered) Also a flock of the birds are called boobies😏
Just like the word "dick". Turns out it's the shortened version of Richard because that was just a common male name back in the day, especially during times where names were handwritten. They had to shorten longer names for writing's sake so Richard became Rich/Rick/Hick which would then become Dick. Still at a slight loss on how "dick" started being referred to the penis, i assume it was from phrases like "Little Johnny" or "Dick Jr." or "Here's my little friend".
That’s messed up😔😔
@@sundalosketch4769 The penis used to have a few common-name nicknames (dicknames) - not just Dick or John, but Peter, Thomas, and of course Willy. John became more associated with the back-end business and toilets, and Dick and Willy were largely winning the dickname contest for a while, until Dick became the champion.
Gotta love scientific slander
In the last 30 years or so, i swear people used to call others boobs for doing the absolute stupidest things, so i knew boob as an insult meaning idiot before i knew the word as for bodily anatomy.
I really can't say when i stopped hearing it, though, and if my exposure to the word was from books or old tv rather than people talking bad about others
@2:30 "They're super clean and will spend hours washing themselves every single day. Which is... Way better than some people" 🥳🎉👏
The water pup literally smiles and that’s so cute to me
I've been an exterminator in Alberta (Edmonton) for 8 years, I've never seen a rat in all that time. A few exterminators that I talk to have seen rats, but that's it. If you see signs of rats here, you have to report it to a government hotline immediately. It's honestly impressive that we've managed to keep this province rat free so successfully
Do you know why rats are so strictly controlled but mice aren't? Aren't the basically the same thing when acting as pests, asides from mice being less likely to bite?
@@raerohan4241 feral rats are more aggressive and likely to bite humans, which means they spread more diseases ig. Plus rat infestations are apparently more difficult to get rid of.
I live in Calgary:the same province!
But I am moving to Victoria in under a week
@@raerohan4241 To add onto what error said. Rats (Specifically the Norway rat) is also invasive here, well everywhere except asia, while all mice, voles, shrews etc (except the house mouse) naturally occur here. Introducing rat populations here could harm Alberta's environment, agg economy and frankly day to day life quite severely.
What happens if they find out that you saw one and didn’t report it?
I always love hearing how cuddly sharks are
After what nine bees said?... Okay.
i love how sharks are basically the puppy dogs of the sea yet i still fear most of them
Its hard for me to still think Butterflies are all that bad, even if they are basically pretty insect vultures that occasionally like to speed-up the process... but with no killing. It is hilarious to think that they'll irritate you to get your tears like "Cry Bitch! I just need a sample!!"
"Cry Bitch! I just need a sample!!" < that image killed me. 😂
Yea butterflies are basically just vultures, they wont HURT you or anything, but there is a species of moth (i think in europe?) that drinks blood like a mosquito and has been known to drink human blood
@@seymourbones Considering Vultures are some of the chillest and loving birds out there while playing a huge role in nature and not being anywhere near as annoying or potentially harmful as flies or mosquitoes, i'm gonna say Butterflies are still pogchamp.
@@seymourbones
Oh HELL NO, this is why I like butterflies but hate moths 💀
@@vi0let831 Ahahahaa yeah, only calyptra moths drink blood, and they mostly live in asia and china and usually dont bother people, but personally i like most moths and butterflies. Moths you usually see are chill cos theyll just land and not move, butterflies make me nervous because im always worried ill hurt them since they fly so chaotically
The rat deal in Alberta is real, they literally eradicated rats…they have a massive farming culture and rats would flourish there. You can drive for hours in the province and see nothing but farm fields. If you go north though, northwest, you’ll find the mountains and forests. Far south you’ll get the badlands.
Sounds beautiful
Wait...what ARE the badlands?
@@Hands_Up_Flamable The average person doesn't realize how important this type of research is to the human race. One keystone species gets eliminated and the dominoes will begin to fall!
My biggest beef with the scientific/medical research industry is that in this day and age, most of the live animal testing facilities could easily accomplish the same tests with an A.I. program. There's really no need for animals to be tortured by having makeup put into their eyes and forcing them to breath toxic gasses .
@@giboi03 they sound cooler than they are, more or less prairie
@@giboi03 most of it is ancient stone from the beginning of the earth, lotta fossils in that area
Bro yours is one of TWO nature channels on YT i actually enjoy. Your entirely casual manner and straight-faced humor is what truly makes the fun. I could spend hours watching you man
Whats the other channel also I love this guys channel
is the other channel tierzoo 😂
Makes me love butterflies even more
The butterfly fact didnt really bother me. They need their energy from something after all. There are more disturbing things other bugs do anyway.
Yeah this is pretty tame. Plus it’s a good thing if they don’t let dead bodies go to waste. I know that he keeps trying to say that butterflies only see you as a sweat pack, or that butterflies don’t care about you, but I think it’s safe to say that just about every single insect ever doesn’t care about humans, unless it’s for food, so butterflies aren’t really special in that regard at all, so even if I didn’t know this beforehand, it’s not that surprising.
Like traumatic insemination.
Yah, I don’t know. I’ve had to pick up deer carcasses, and I can tell you the first time I saw a butterfly on a deer that had miscarriaged.. I don’t know. I definitely see them more like houseflies now though very pretty from a distance. I’d like them at a distance.
@@SuperJillbean well it is a bug. Just cause it’s “pretty” doesn’t make it any different from other bugs.
Like what
"...drink the _tears_ of other animals..."
That's disconcertingly schadenfreude & goth af for such dainty little flutterbutts...
Who else randomly found this channel one day and now can't stop watching his videos!
Same
Yes 🙌🏻
Yup
Yes
That's how it all starts
A pacaran(?) diligently scrubbing it's little armpits like a human was definitely the purest thing I saw today.
as someone who grew up in Alberta I was surprised to know that we seem to be the only with with no rats, I already knew about the rat war but I thought that there may have been at least one other place that did it as well.
Yeah it’s only us.
Ain't nobody got time fo dat
@@Hands_Up_Flamable does that really count thou?
@@Hands_Up_Flamablethat title is the very definition of cringe
Bro the U.S need to set a war against rats 🐀 mainly in Brooklyn and New York
5:17
This is a surprise to me. I'm part of the ethic minority known as the Hmong(in our language it spelled Hmoob, and produced with a long o, rather than a short o), and this is the first time I've ever seen or heard about this breed. Most hmoob videos I've seen, whether or be a live video from a hmoob village or a hmoob video series sold for vhs tapes, I've never seen this breed. Really interesting to me to learn that my race had bred this breed.
Also pretty interesting since I'm Vietnamese and I have never heard or seen anything about this dog breed before. It's quite fascinating
YESSIR HMONG
I had no clue Hmong even had their own dog species. Out of ever video my grandparents used to watch on some sort of player, I never saw a Hmong dog in anyone of them.
I grew up in Alberta but moved to BC a few years ago. The first time I saw a rat scurry behind a dumpster, I froze and it occured to me that I had never actually seen a physical rat in person before. I was shook 😂
Lol I'm from Alberta too, but I moved to England and we had at the time, a rabbit and a guinea pig out in the back yard. My husband (English) came to me one afternoon and said there was a mouse eating bunny and piggy's food, so I go to look out the kitchen window, and what did I see? A huge RAT, with its paws through the hutch cage, helping itself to the seeds and veggies. I started to laugh and hubby was asking me why. I said dude, that's not a mouse. That's a rat. And he went absolutely ballistic. Starts screaming (which made me laugh even more) and our neighbour (this big, buff, ex-military guy!) comes around, gingerly hands me this package of rat poison, and asks me to please put it out back to get rid of the rats, and scuttles away. I still find it mind-boggling that a guy who grew up IN THE COUNTRY, in a country with a massive rat problem, didn't know what a rat was, where I grew up in a city in a rat-free (theoretically) province, and had never seen a rat in person before, but I knew right away what it was.
Wait there's rats in BC? never seen any, maybe I'm just lucky
@@JohnRuina ur just lucky. I had a coworker from the Caribbean. He saw a raccoon for the first time, freaked him out trying to explain to use what he saw. We told him they're common enough, if u see 1 stop and back away slowly and let it do its thing. If it looks mange and scruffed up with a foaming mouth. Get to saftey and call pest control. It more or less rabid.
Kill Alberta
Rats in BC are mostly found in the coastal cities like Vancouver and White Rock. Richmond also has a Rat thing with loads of farmland. Abbotsford too apparently, but nobody lives (or should live) there@@JohnRuina
I never understood the obsession people have with butterflies.
Anyone who has seen them under microscope understands how horrifyingly scary they truly are
Can’t we all just appreciate how these videos keep us entertained every day!
it took me 3 minutes to realize your name was kurger bing and not burger king
OK, but he doesn't upload every day so eventually it might be not every day
Pss off bot
I’m not a bot
@@Lactose_Tolerator not you one of the replies is a bot
As an Albertan-Yeah, any pet owners caught with rats is in for a hefty ass fine. I was told as a child its because Alberta is a grain province!
(We’re also a beef province)
I'm also from Alberta, and I never thought it had a reason other than "rat diseases suck ass"
ya learn somethin' new every day I guess lmao
Actually, from what I've read, pet rats get get culled. They're very strict in the "NO RATS" policy.
@Andrei Salvaleon Apparently, pet mice are allowed.
@@Tokuijin yep mice are aloud, ive seen many at pet stores! And in the wild (cat)
I thought that was Saskatchewan. I always thought of Alberta as the oil province (basically Canadian Texas).
Beef sounds about right, though, being where Calgary is 'n' all.
I think the Pacarana is fine, or at least it isn't feeling any pain or irritation, because it's performing the same movements it does normally when cleaning itself, if it were irritated it would likely be more frantically trying to remove the soap from its body, but it seems to be chilling and doing what it normally does.
Probably some special soap
I'm watching this Pacarana with great empathy. I can't reach around to those parts of my back to scratch either.
this specific one has a skin condition so the soap is soothing for him and required
Sharks can even get a bit too friendly and try to Netflix and chill with you
What?
@@MrSecretweapon174 yes
@@xenonxan184 elaborate if you dare
@@Melo-Sama you're a fool to challenge me
Well you see there have been reports of sharks getting so attached to humans that they want to breed with them some sharks succeeded mostly the female ones but the best way to check this out is on Google in a animated format
so will my cat lol, my leg's never been the same
Yes, brush-tailed possums do break into houses in Australia. I once found one in my laundry and believe me you do NOT want to get into a fight with one of them.
Alberta, Canada needs to teach New South Wales (Australia) how to eradicate rats but so they can apply that knowledge to mice. A mouse plague has literally made news twice now, in the middle of the pandemic, because of just how bad the situation is. They're eating grain and crops, contaminating grain and causing a lot of damage.
theres a funny tumblr post from a while ago about a cockatoo coming into a girls bedroom window and ripping up her keyboard! no one could believe the beautiful bird was wild because everyone associates the type with pets haha
@@AshKetchum442 omg i remember that post
they failed to do it themselves
Don't Australia have snakes and stuff? Is there nothing there to eat the mice?
"NOW THATS ALOT OF DAMAGE" XD
A butterfly layer it’s eggs on my sister’s now fiancé when we went to a “Mariposario” aka Butterfly Conservatory. It was an Ojo de Búho he was holding and it just started laying. They took the eggs off his finger, but let’s just say he’s a proud daddy of 8 butterflies 😆
Not as much a daddy as a food field.
I don't know what butterfly eggs look like
@@bennypatrick6535 They look like very small pearls
@@YukaiRyujin ok
@@bennypatrick6535 different types of butterflies have different looking eggs. They could either look like pearls like that other person said, or they could look like beans or olives or even star anise.
ive always been afraid of butterflies, glad my fear is finally justified
same here
Same
Like that episode of spongebob
Same dude
@K A E L Y N 💋 no one wants robot bussy, fuck outta here.
I was always afraid of butterflies, but i never knew why. Now it makes a lot of sense. I never trusted those things.
I was a citizen scientist for a couple of years, and when we were trained to study butterfly populations in the wild, the researchers would show us a clip someone sent in of a butterfly crawling around one of those wooden fences at one of our parks. The fence was on a popular hiking trail, and had gotten visibly wet from someone sweating all over it, so the researcher explained that the butterfly was trying to sip up all that sweaty, salty goodness 😭 she also said some butterflies would do the same with animal feces. I've kept my distance ever since
Oh my god I did NOT need to hear/imagine that 🤮🤮
Thank God butterflies never touched me 😂
Who the fuck was that sweaty?
I remember being absolutely terrified of butterflies and my family thought I was insane for a bit, but now I’ll show ‘em
He shows more emotions in the comments than he does in real life
@Bin It ain't him, it'd youtube that is allowing these mfs to stay
@Bin there's a chrome extension called youtube channel blocker that I use to block anyone with bot-like comments
@Bin you can also get a free TH-cam ad blocker. I haven't got a single ad when watching on my computer since I downloaded it.
On the brush tail possum, we’ve had them in our walls for over a decade now (we got used to them after a while) and a month or so ago it actually broke through the wall, and we could see it’s fur through the hole (thankfully the hole wasn’t big enough for it to get out of, we covered it so our dog doesn’t make it worse, and we’ve got someone in to get the possum out)
I know they can be destructive but they are oh so cute! So much better than our grungy American possums.
Also I am glad you got someone to relocate it so it won’t damage your house!
So they really are kinda like scary monsters....Why does Spongebob KEEP GETTING IT RIGHT?!
Because it was written by a biologist
WHEN WILL YOU BOOTY CALL BOTS BEAT IT TF OUTTA HERE? Scat. Shoo. Skedaddle.
Watched a series once. Group of young astronauts got pulled through a wormhole into a weird part of space. They went exploring other planets with life and one had humungous insects. They were terrified of the bees/wasps and ran like hell, but were not afraid afraid of the butterflies. Until said butterflies decided they were lunch and those bee/wasps actually saved them.
Whats it called
@@Eto-Ezio I'm not sure, Through the wormhole maybe? It's pretty old.
Meinst du vielleicht die Serie Sliders?
@@harrytopfer1147 It does sound familiar.
All i can think about is starkid's starship video, which i *know* you're not referencing, but now i suddenly realize i don't think they had any flying insect characters. Huh
the only youtuber who reveals the dark side of nature
I have learned so much! I love how you narrate everything. You got yourself a sub sir! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽😘
That cat dog reference got me humming the theme song without having to have heard it in years!
Rat: everything the light touches is our kingdom
Son: what about that shadowy place(Alberta)
Rat: never go to that place ever
This man always dishing out good content
Butterfly absorbing sweat from turtle: what ya gonna go huh, what ya gonna do
As someone who lives in Alberta, my class had to buy rats from a science centre for a dissection. WE HAD TO BUY RATS, my garage had mice but no rats. My friend in Saskatchewan went rat hunting and found 20 something in a few days.
Was it the UofA?
If it wasent that long ago maybe my dad had to do paperwork on it
@@Hands_Up_Flamable no it was from a Saskatchewan guy that caught some. He may have been a farmer or something along those lines
Also had a friend who did the same with stray dogs although it wasn't considered legal where he lived it still made the place much safer as dogs can do and have done ALLOT more damage to people than rats and they tend to get pretty hungry without owners. Luckily though they breed way less often so it was a pretty easy fix.
Never thought i’d be this excited for a video about butterflies and sharks 😂
I love butterflies and moths, they have a special place in my heart. This video hasn’t changed that lol
Same😊💜
@@lilpretzel5629 💜💜
"Even tho they look like the product of a really questionnable one night stand" MNDIAYE - 2022
“Because butterfly’s are just fuckboys with wings” 😂😂 that’s the best thing I’ve heard all day! Thank you for making all our days 10 times better!
*F*ckboys
@@SaheeliRai *Fuckboys
@donut ninja american women*
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thanks for making my freakouts about butterflies justified, especially the bigger ones. And yeah, I'm slowly believing most sharks can be kinder than dolphins. But really, I'm so glad I stumbled upon you. Whenever I want to make someone laugh, I put on your video about cheetah sounds and I just wheeeze. It's just too funny. And they're always super impressed with the orca and moose fact.
Finally people can notice my fear of bugs and insects is reasonable. Especially the one for butterflies. Thanks!
No
I used to laugh at my son for being scared of butterflies after watching this I'm a horrible person 😂🤣🤣
No
Well, it is reasonable. It's a leftover thing from the prehistoric times when our ancestors were still very much part of the food chain. Same reason fear of spiders and snakes exist.
Yeah and I hate it when the definition of Arachnophobia is "an irrational fear of spiders" like what do you mean "irrational" like Many spiders can literally kill you with its bite and you also expect me to look at a spider and not be terrified of it (peacock spiders are an exception tho) like I'm an American but I still hope that Australia has a different definition of the phobia.
(Sorry just had to rant there)
*Yall butterflies was attracted to me as a kid and i been running since i was little, kids got that sense.*
Haha, I was just explaining to my daughter last week about how and why we have no rats in Alberta, I'm sure she would have appreciated your story telling more than mine though XD
I love your channel so much you help me learn way more about animals! And make me hate butterflies even more than I already do!
Vampire birds? God, if 2022 couldn't get any worse, at least there is some wholesome content.
Every time I go to a butterfly garden, all the butterflies land on my head and in my hair. For some reason, they really seem to enjoy how my hair tastes.