The Cookiecutter Shark almost started a war between USA and USSR back in the day. US submarines submerged with little holes in the rubber that was used to close ports and hatches. Of course the USSR was blamed for taking underwater samples of their product to seal their subs with. After an extensive search they found the Cookiecutter Shark was nibbling on their rubber seals. Crisis averted..
I adore this story, because the USSR was also having the same issue, and both sides were FREAKING OUT thinking the other had some kind of new secret super weapon that was damaging their radar and other systems, only to find out it was one confused, silly little guy.
Thank you for mentioning squalane. When my children were growing up, I refused to allow then to buy or wear make-up made using shark oil and I explained why. I think it's important to teach children about how their choices in what products and services they buy and what companies they support affect the world around them. Excellent video.
Lantern Sharks look like they are having a horrible day, but doing their best to smile through it. I would say, "hang in there little shark, it will get better," but I've seen where y'all live.
I didn't know squalene could come from sharks!! I had to quickly search the squalene products I use and I'm happy to say they are all plant based. Phew! Thank you Bee for making me aware 😊
The theory of why sharks do these “yo-yo” dives reminds me of how vultures and other large birds migrate. For larger birds, flying using locomotion from their wings uses a lot of energy, so to move long distances they ride hot air going up, a behavior known as “kettle-ing” (spelling might be wrong lol) then glide from the higher distance. I don’t know much about water currents, but could sharks be doing a similar action?
Have an almost 7 decades of "Shark Awareness", living close to New Smyrna Beach and surfing those waters IT PAID to listen to guys and gals like you! THANK YOU FOR GREAT INFO and Loving these, unfortunately, Frightening Creatures.. it's really easy to say what you would do if you encounter a shark but, it's NOTHING but Primal Fear when you realize that you are NOT the Top of the Food Chain.. literally, stomach turning!
The fact that Ben had to address the Megalodon rumors is depressing. How do people actually think Megalodon is still alive. We already got through this, and then TikTok revived that stupid idea.
People think the earth is flat too. Misinformation, lack of education and an inability to understand and use critical thinking skills is showing up more and more.
Yo, you don't know what's put there. That documentary, Meg is so powerful. The deepstate doesn't want us to know they're real because that proves Bigfoot is real too!
This was one of my favorite videos of yours ever! I learnt so many new things and was introduced to a lot of new concepts, like the 200m/deep sea and squalene/cosmetic trade. Megamouth shark was also the first animal I had a fascination with as a kid so that probably helped. I'll definitely be checking out beelovesthesea and very muchly enjoyed her shark outfit at the start. Thanks so much guys, I really love your channel.
Megalodon the Giant White Coloured deep sea sleeper sharks most certainly ARE still alive. Known to the Indigenous pacific peoples as the "King of the Deeps". And misidentified by science as an extinct relative of Great Whites. They had their population crashed by the recent 99.9% kill off of the large deep diving whales and marine mammals that are their main food source. Megalodon is most certainly most closely a relative of Greenland and Pacific and Atlantic sleeper sharks.
Tbf I think in like 2017 discovery released a fake documentary with actors pretending to be scientists claiming the meg could still be around. It was realistic enough that if you didn't know enough about sharks, you could be fooled pretty easily
I've always loved Deep Sea documentaries, I used to watch the Blue Planet 'The Deep' episode and others like it over and over and now I love watching the Nautilus streams on YT! Fascinating!
As kids, we used to climb around the sand cliffs ~ 10 miles inland from the ocean, scaling 50 feet up looking for big shark teeth :) I wish I knew what happened to those I found, along with obsidian arrowheads found in surrounding mountains :)
I understand the frilled shark is the closest living relative of Orthacanthus the apex predator of Permian swamps. (Some large amphibians would challenge that). I wonder if it killed in a similar way to a snake as well. Unusual dental wear seems to run in that family.
Eee Blunt-nose Six gills getting some mentions, but also Megamouths!!! My favorites!!! They’re such amazing, beautiful animals. I hate that so many of them are at risk. I’m glad to know it’s at least trying to be protected now, and I’m super glad that you mentioned the human impact, too.
I think it's amazing how sharks have unique organs that can sense the Slightest electrical impulses around them. How their skin is basically a ton of tiny teeth. How salmon Sharks have a unique ability to maintain a higher body temperature then the cold waters that they live in. Allowing salmon Sharks to be much more active then their prey that gets slower in colder temperatures. There's a lot more. Point is They are awesome.
Really enjoyed your video! I did my doctoral research back in the 1970s around Hawaiian waters, so it's good to hear some up-to-date research findings from Ben and Bee. I'd like to take exception, though, to your statements about oxygen in the deep sea. Most abyssal and hadal waters are well oxygenated. Oxygen gets dissolved in sea water through two sources, both at or near the sea surface: either dissolved oxygen from the air through the sea surface, or by photosynthesis by marine plants or phytoplankton in the epipelagic zone. That water can sink to the bottom of the ocean in the polar regions, mostly in the waters around Antarctica. Cold water holds more dissolved oxygen than warm water, so the polar water sinking around Antarctica (and also off Greenland) is high in oxygen. Once below the surface, oxygen is used up through biological mechanisms, such as the breakdown of organic matter through bacterial action, as dead plankton or larger critters fall slowly through the water column. This results in an oxygen minimum layer at around 1000 meters depth, at least in the Eastern Tropical Pacific and most other areas I've read about. The depths you give for the various depth zones are figures you'll find in most reference sources. Note though that they vary somewhat from place to place. I did my research in the waters around the Hawaiian Islands, in an area of very low biological productivity (and hence very clear water). In Hawaiian waters the epipelagic zone extends down to around 400 meters, and the mesopelagic zone extends to 1200 meters. This represents probably an extreme case, although similar light values would apply to much of the open ocean, as opposed to, say, the higher-productivity waters off California or Japan. Interestingly, we found it useful to consider an upper and a lower mesopelagic zone, with distinct communities in the two regions, with a boundary around 650 meters during the daytime.
Incrediblly informative as usual, but Bee's contributions added to this. Her information and footage gave me a new favorite shark, the megamouth. Thank you, Ben and Team! 💙🦈🌏
Three Scottish sisters were in a rowing boat in a large sea loch when they saw a huge shark swimming towards them. It wasn't in a hurry but the girls rowed as hard as they could to get back to shore. They were still schoolchildren and this was in the closing decade of the 19th century. They all survived into the last quarter of the 20th century although one of them lost an eye in a child's game. Basking Sharks were often found in these waters in that season of the year but they hadn't learned that yet.
I thoroughly enjoyed your intelligent and informative video.👍😎 It's was nice to see a sensible video about sharks👍😉. Well worth a sub,best wishes from jolly old England👍😎 Pete 🤓
Nice vid, my knowledge of sharks and deep sea has increased by orders of magnitude. Still minuscule. As an angler in central Minnesota, I thought I’d seen some bizarre things come out of the water before today. Silly me. I live a couple miles from the most productive walleye lake for many miles. It reaches depths of a staggering 9 feet or so, which is still about 4 feet more than it generally takes to drown. Scary.
Deep sea sharks! I've loved them and other strange and wonderful denizens of the twilight and abyssal oceans since I was a boy, drawn to their alien lifestyles and body plans. Still adore them! Fine work, mate 💙🦈.
Benthic foraminifera are frequently, maybe most commonly, used to determine paleobathymetry in marine deposits. They show a very distinct change in assemblage make-up at the shelf-slope break. Many genera and species are found only on the shelf or in the bathyal zone or deeper. This distinguishes neritic, or shelfal assemblages, from bathyal or abyssal assemblages. Though the swimmers and floaters may not show much difference the critters living on the bottom definitely do.
26:04 That’s like saying that because I found a Mammoth Tusk dated to 8,000 years ago instead of 20,000 that means they still exist. No, just means they died later than we thought even if it were true.
Idk why ppl want Megalodon back so much when we basically are Megalodon. As mentioned, the trophic effect would be insane. It might even be equivalent to us. So yeah we're p much Megalodon.
Sleeper sharks (Greenland sharks specifically) are my favorite kind of shark. With cookiecutters (I was obsessed with them growing up, possibly a hyperfixation) and frilled sharks coming in a close second.
Bea, scrap all those other platforms, join the dark side, and come to TH-cam. Anyway, on the subject of yoyo dives in Whites. I recently read a post that when an Orca killed a Great White near California all the whites in the area scarpered and that one with a tracker was noted to go really deep and swim all the way to Hawaii. This could of course been anecdotal but it got me wondering whether yoyo diving was an anti predator behaviour, I'm thinking in terms of wartime submarine behaviour (and ships zig-zagging to avoid torpedoes). But I'm guessing that yoyo diving would take a shark through varying thermal layers which may help evade echo-location from angry mammals. Plus a creature with gills could outlast an airbreathing predator by going deeper, when it probably couldn't outrun them in the shallows.
Good video on shark habitat focalities. Updated terminology there fore mapping things that will or can be a guide to underwater natures and dietary that might play a role in bioluminescence. Cookie cutter hybrids? With whale shark potentials? We will see?
I hope bee appears in future ocean adventure on the ben g Thomas channel. Everyone on the ben g thomas crue has soothing voices and bee fits that also.
31:00 "Something a bit fishy is going on with our paradigms" Well, at least we know who wrote the outro! Puns aside, I did have a question, albeit one from someone with no background in zoology- do we have any indication of why so many sharks ended up with 5 gills? I know the 6-gills live in less oxygenated waters, but honestly I'd have thought that more oxygen absorption capability would be useful, especially in an active predator. Maybe more gills are trouble, but then why have 5 gills instead of 4? Is the answer simply that 5 is the sweet spot for the widest range of habitats? Am I over or under-thinking this?
the Mariana trench is roughly 7 mils deep, which is also the cruising altitude for most planes, so next time you see a plane way up high stop and imagine you're looking down at it, enjoy the horror
The Cookiecutter Shark almost started a war between USA and USSR back in the day.
US submarines submerged with little holes in the rubber that was used to close ports and hatches. Of course the USSR was blamed for taking underwater samples of their product to seal their subs with.
After an extensive search they found the Cookiecutter Shark was nibbling on their rubber seals. Crisis averted..
thats a neat bit of info, thanks
Clearly, the sharks were trying to start WW3 so we'd no longer be a threat to them.
Was this the inspiration for a Star Trek episode? (metal parasites)
I adore this story, because the USSR was also having the same issue, and both sides were FREAKING OUT thinking the other had some kind of new secret super weapon that was damaging their radar and other systems, only to find out it was one confused, silly little guy.
I'd say ballsy little guy rather than silly
Today I learned sharks can't dive too deep cause they store their pee in their skin.
Humans: pee is stored in the balls
Sharks: pee is stored in the skin
@@Nmethyltransferase in the balls?
So many people failed you
@@NmethyltransferaseI hope to God this isn't satire!
😅
And that's why for most shark we don't eat there flesh only there fin
Thank you for mentioning squalane. When my children were growing up, I refused to allow then to buy or wear make-up made using shark oil and I explained why. I think it's important to teach children about how their choices in what products and services they buy and what companies they support affect the world around them. Excellent video.
well done! where we spend our money can make a difference
Thankfully vegetable squalane can be made from olives!
@@pastelroswell And tastes better.
Lantern Sharks look like they are having a horrible day, but doing their best to smile through it.
I would say, "hang in there little shark, it will get better," but I've seen where y'all live.
2 sharks swimming:
"Yo Kyle, i double dare you try and reach the bottom of the ocean!"
"Fine bro, but only if you do it with me"
I’ll do you one better why is Kyle?
youtube comments are so unfunny
I liked it. @@dofthej8279
What (for lack of a better term) an honor to be able to swim alongside such a venerable ocean survivor as the megamouth shark.
😢🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉w😢🎉😢🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉😢😢😢😢😢😢🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉what/////::::: 0:17 :🤷🏽♂️😅👀🤷🏼♂️
Hearing a fish hold their breath to dive sounds funny to me😂
At my level of freakiness, those shark are pretty normal
To me, crazy frog is just a normal frog
I heard drinking bleach helps
All remind me of locals in my pub
How are you trying to make this video about deep sea sharks, about yourself? Jesus the narcissism.
@@stephensmith4025theyre making a joke, chill out stephen
I didn't know squalene could come from sharks!! I had to quickly search the squalene products I use and I'm happy to say they are all plant based. Phew! Thank you Bee for making me aware 😊
9:05 The Greenland Shark, later that night with their buddies: "I was choking and had to be helped by hairless monkeys. 😭"
Basically a friendly alien abduction 😂
I definitely wonder if that shark still thinks about the odd events of that day. 😂
@@Statsy10 I wondered too, esp since the Greenlands are so long lived, like hundreds of years old. Do they remember? Good on the helpers, too.
I doubt that the sharks even know what monkeys are 😭
Ah... Shorks 🙏🩵
Deep sea shōrks!
Indeed 😔💕
The theory of why sharks do these “yo-yo” dives reminds me of how vultures and other large birds migrate. For larger birds, flying using locomotion from their wings uses a lot of energy, so to move long distances they ride hot air going up, a behavior known as “kettle-ing” (spelling might be wrong lol) then glide from the higher distance. I don’t know much about water currents, but could sharks be doing a similar action?
It's entirely possible :) that's a cool theory 😎
They also mentioned it in the video that sharks could follow specific zones or currents with hot air to dive deeper
Have an almost 7 decades of "Shark Awareness", living close to New Smyrna Beach and surfing those waters IT PAID to listen to guys and gals like you! THANK YOU FOR GREAT INFO and Loving these, unfortunately, Frightening Creatures.. it's really easy to say what you would do if you encounter a shark but, it's NOTHING but Primal Fear when you realize that you are NOT the Top of the Food Chain.. literally, stomach turning!
Even if a shark could eat a person, people can dispose of the population of sharks.
That's how we live and work.
Wow the videos of Bee diving with the megamouth sharks at night are absolutely amazing.
Woah! Seeing Megamouths alive has to be amazing!
The fact that Ben had to address the Megalodon rumors is depressing. How do people actually think Megalodon is still alive. We already got through this, and then TikTok revived that stupid idea.
People think the earth is flat too. Misinformation, lack of education and an inability to understand and use critical thinking skills is showing up more and more.
We live in the misinformation age. Ignorance is something to be proud of these days.
I think the shark week by Discovery pre-dated TikTok.
@@oberonpanopticontrue and so sad. I love to learn anything! Any piece of information I can add to what I know is greatly appreciated!
Yo, you don't know what's put there. That documentary, Meg is so powerful. The deepstate doesn't want us to know they're real because that proves Bigfoot is real too!
This was one of my favorite videos of yours ever! I learnt so many new things and was introduced to a lot of new concepts, like the 200m/deep sea and squalene/cosmetic trade. Megamouth shark was also the first animal I had a fascination with as a kid so that probably helped. I'll definitely be checking out beelovesthesea and very muchly enjoyed her shark outfit at the start.
Thanks so much guys, I really love your channel.
Yes, in school i was just taught that at the end of the continental shelf there is an abrupt steeper descent. From about 600 feet.
Yeah i find it funny people think meg is alive still. Then again ppl think the earth is flat n all kinds of bizarre things.
Megalodon the Giant White Coloured deep sea sleeper sharks most certainly ARE still alive.
Known to the Indigenous pacific peoples as the "King of the Deeps".
And misidentified by science as an extinct relative of Great Whites.
They had their population crashed by the recent 99.9% kill off of the large deep diving whales and marine mammals that are their main food source. Megalodon is most certainly most closely a relative of Greenland and Pacific and Atlantic sleeper sharks.
Look up hollow earth, that's a wild ride
Tbf I think in like 2017 discovery released a fake documentary with actors pretending to be scientists claiming the meg could still be around. It was realistic enough that if you didn't know enough about sharks, you could be fooled pretty easily
Good to see more of the lovely Bee and, of course, shark content.
A whole list of weird and wonderful sharks, here we come!!!
Another great shark video! Looking forward to Emilia's Spinosaurus month!
I've always loved Deep Sea documentaries, I used to watch the Blue Planet 'The Deep' episode and others like it over and over and now I love watching the Nautilus streams on YT! Fascinating!
As kids, we used to climb around the sand cliffs ~ 10 miles inland from the ocean, scaling 50 feet up looking for big shark teeth :)
I wish I knew what happened to those I found, along with obsidian arrowheads found in surrounding mountains :)
Great episode and I LOVE BEE more of her please!!!
I understand the frilled shark is the closest living relative of Orthacanthus the apex predator of Permian swamps. (Some large amphibians would challenge that). I wonder if it killed in a similar way to a snake as well. Unusual dental wear seems to run in that family.
sharks!
0:29 this gives me the best unintentional "eagle vs shark" vibes! XD
Yessss!! 😂
Eee Blunt-nose Six gills getting some mentions, but also Megamouths!!! My favorites!!! They’re such amazing, beautiful animals. I hate that so many of them are at risk. I’m glad to know it’s at least trying to be protected now, and I’m super glad that you mentioned the human impact, too.
Thank you Ben G Thomas we all say in unison
I think it's amazing how sharks have unique organs that can sense the Slightest electrical impulses around them. How their skin is basically a ton of tiny teeth. How salmon Sharks have a unique ability to maintain a higher body temperature then the cold waters that they live in. Allowing salmon Sharks to be much more active then their prey that gets slower in colder temperatures. There's a lot more. Point is They are awesome.
Really enjoyed your video! I did my doctoral research back in the 1970s around Hawaiian waters, so it's good to hear some up-to-date research findings from Ben and Bee.
I'd like to take exception, though, to your statements about oxygen in the deep sea. Most abyssal and hadal waters are well oxygenated. Oxygen gets dissolved in sea water through two sources, both at or near the sea surface: either dissolved oxygen from the air through the sea surface, or by photosynthesis by marine plants or phytoplankton in the epipelagic zone. That water can sink to the bottom of the ocean in the polar regions, mostly in the waters around Antarctica. Cold water holds more dissolved oxygen than warm water, so the polar water sinking around Antarctica (and also off Greenland) is high in oxygen. Once below the surface, oxygen is used up through biological mechanisms, such as the breakdown of organic matter through bacterial action, as dead plankton or larger critters fall slowly through the water column. This results in an oxygen minimum layer at around 1000 meters depth, at least in the Eastern Tropical Pacific and most other areas I've read about.
The depths you give for the various depth zones are figures you'll find in most reference sources. Note though that they vary somewhat from place to place. I did my research in the waters around the Hawaiian Islands, in an area of very low biological productivity (and hence very clear water). In Hawaiian waters the epipelagic zone extends down to around 400 meters, and the mesopelagic zone extends to 1200 meters. This represents probably an extreme case, although similar light values would apply to much of the open ocean, as opposed to, say, the higher-productivity waters off California or Japan. Interestingly, we found it useful to consider an upper and a lower mesopelagic zone, with distinct communities in the two regions, with a boundary around 650 meters during the daytime.
Thanks for extra context + facts!
Incrediblly informative as usual, but Bee's contributions added to this. Her information and footage gave me a new favorite shark, the megamouth.
Thank you, Ben and Team! 💙🦈🌏
At this point I’ve seen so many of your shark week videos that I knew all of this! Thank you for creating such great content that teaches so well!
I had no idea that being a shark was so complicated. Thanks for the... deep dive on this topic. I'll show myself out. 😂
Three Scottish sisters were in a rowing boat in a large sea loch when they saw a huge shark swimming towards them.
It wasn't in a hurry but the girls rowed as hard as they could to get back to shore.
They were still schoolchildren and this was in the closing decade of the 19th century. They all survived into the last quarter of the 20th century although one of them lost an eye in a child's game.
Basking Sharks were often found in these waters in that season of the year but they hadn't learned that yet.
15:08 that shark has lived a life
so far i’m loving bee’s addition
This is the best video of yours so far. Keep it up.
Awesome video! I'd love to see more like this, and more shark content is _always_ welcome.
I thoroughly enjoyed your intelligent and informative video.👍😎 It's was nice to see a sensible video about sharks👍😉. Well worth a sub,best wishes from jolly old England👍😎 Pete 🤓
Sharks are such interesting creatures especially the prehistoric ones. I had a bamboo shark as a pet and I loved that little guy.
Nice vid, my knowledge of sharks and deep sea has increased by orders of magnitude. Still minuscule.
As an angler in central Minnesota, I thought I’d seen some bizarre things come out of the water before today. Silly me. I live a couple miles from the most productive walleye lake for many miles. It reaches depths of a staggering 9 feet or so, which is still about 4 feet more than it generally takes to drown. Scary.
I have a dvd documentary that touches upon the deep diving habits of Great Whites.
Also, I'm jelly of Bee getting to see a living Megamouth.
Bloody interesting stuff, and beautifully presented. Thanks guys 👍🏽🇦🇺
4:42 That didn't age well...
?
Some metallic rocks here discovered to be producing "dark" oxygen deep in the ocean
I'm sure there would be many more deep sea sharks in many more places if Commercial Fishing didn't annihilate most of the planets deep sea reefs!!
Fish are friends no food!
@@vEGan1909 Nah they're great with butter and lemon
I could listen to her read anything, what a beautiful voice and orator
Deep sea sharks! I've loved them and other strange and wonderful denizens of the twilight and abyssal oceans since I was a boy, drawn to their alien lifestyles and body plans. Still adore them! Fine work, mate 💙🦈.
Living megamouths are so cute
cookie cutter sharks are my new favorite shark. they have big teefs and just take bites out of other fishes and swim along. i love them
Gurl u bad AF with those mega mouth rescue clips!
Happy shark week everyone 🦈✨✨✨
What was all that about dogs horses and moose being the diet for that shark ? Me and my son were dying laughing because she said that so casually.
Please provide answers
Dead animals that washed out to sea.
@@jayblemsin4226 Google it. Creators aren't going to be able to reply to every comment and question.
Google what has been found in tiger shark stomachs
Moose are food for orcas because occasionally, they will try to swim across arctic waters. I imagine something similar
Holy crap dude... I remember your old videos. You make me feel old.. still amazing content
Benthic foraminifera are frequently, maybe most commonly, used to determine paleobathymetry in marine deposits. They show a very distinct change in assemblage make-up at the shelf-slope break. Many genera and species are found only on the shelf or in the bathyal zone or deeper. This distinguishes neritic, or shelfal assemblages, from bathyal or abyssal assemblages. Though the swimmers and floaters may not show much difference the critters living on the bottom definitely do.
26:04 That’s like saying that because I found a Mammoth Tusk dated to 8,000 years ago instead of 20,000 that means they still exist. No, just means they died later than we thought even if it were true.
Bee is a badass! Holy crap!
Great presentation of actual scientific and technical info in a very engaging and accessible way.
Idk why ppl want Megalodon back so much when we basically are Megalodon. As mentioned, the trophic effect would be insane. It might even be equivalent to us. So yeah we're p much Megalodon.
Thanks for the great video 🦈 really enjoyed Bee as guest presenter too 😄 thanks for all your efforts you guys!
I learned an amazing amount from this!
I suddenly became very very interested in sharks every time Bee came on. 😂
Goblin shark, my favourite animal!
They're in my top 5 sharks/rays. So cute.
Scalloped hammerhead really said
👁️ω👄ω👁️
What an amazing video, i actually learned new thing i hadn't known before.
Great video!
Bee is too cute! love her onesie and i’ll def be checking her page out 🫶🏻
Sleeper sharks (Greenland sharks specifically) are my favorite kind of shark. With cookiecutters (I was obsessed with them growing up, possibly a hyperfixation) and frilled sharks coming in a close second.
Okey but why isn’t anyone pointing out how much you look like daniel Jackson from stargate😂!!! He is my favorite character in the series
I have seen Megamouth specimen #2 in Los Angeles - amazing and also kind of sad, lying on its side.
Great episode. More Bee please.
Could you make a video on sperm whales? All that diving info made me wonder more about them
Super thanx. Very awesome info and deep Sea sharks are my fav. Remember the greenie from a long time ago 🦈
Don't quite know how I got here ...Zola Chen you're amazing ... (so much information , thank you )
Bea, scrap all those other platforms, join the dark side, and come to TH-cam. Anyway, on the subject of yoyo dives in Whites. I recently read a post that when an Orca killed a Great White near California all the whites in the area scarpered and that one with a tracker was noted to go really deep and swim all the way to Hawaii. This could of course been anecdotal but it got me wondering whether yoyo diving was an anti predator behaviour, I'm thinking in terms of wartime submarine behaviour (and ships zig-zagging to avoid torpedoes). But I'm guessing that yoyo diving would take a shark through varying thermal layers which may help evade echo-location from angry mammals. Plus a creature with gills could outlast an airbreathing predator by going deeper, when it probably couldn't outrun them in the shallows.
I really enjoyed Shark week this year. Than you!!
Beelovesthesea should start a youtube channel.
😂😂 yeh sure
7:51
"CAN SPIDERCRAB COME OUT TO PLAY?!"
Great video with valuable and informative content, full of interesting information. Please share more. This video is truly wonderful.
The goblin shark gets 4.7m long!? I just assumed it was small like max 2 meters that is horrifying.
That snail got a window named after them. Way to go, you cheeky mollusk.
Good video on shark habitat focalities.
Updated terminology there fore mapping things that will or can be a guide to underwater natures and dietary that might play a role in bioluminescence.
Cookie cutter hybrids?
With whale shark potentials?
We will see?
Oh wow she's so pretty and her voice is so smooth 😍
The heaviest, deepest, most brutal part. The Mariana Trench!
It’s funny to think in the deep sea, for us it’s really dark down there.
But to them it’s a world of small little lights, looking like a starty night.
I hope bee appears in future ocean adventure on the ben g Thomas channel. Everyone on the ben g thomas crue has soothing voices and bee fits that also.
31:00 "Something a bit fishy is going on with our paradigms" Well, at least we know who wrote the outro!
Puns aside, I did have a question, albeit one from someone with no background in zoology- do we have any indication of why so many sharks ended up with 5 gills? I know the 6-gills live in less oxygenated waters, but honestly I'd have thought that more oxygen absorption capability would be useful, especially in an active predator. Maybe more gills are trouble, but then why have 5 gills instead of 4? Is the answer simply that 5 is the sweet spot for the widest range of habitats? Am I over or under-thinking this?
Lots of good information!
All of this info and all the info in the comments is why I come here. Not disappointed. 🖤👍
Brilliant video 🎥
Sharks diving deep could be down to it simply feeling good such as relieving pressure on eyes etc
Lantern Sharks appear to be having a tough time, but are putting on a brave face in spite of it.
Thank you for feeding my current ADHD hyperfixation! This was an excellent video
hello! it would be really helpful to add the names or species of the sharks in the pictures instead of just the photographers name, i'm guessing :)))
This one sounds good! I love the deep sea.
the Mariana trench is roughly 7 mils deep, which is also the cruising altitude for most planes, so next time you see a plane way up high stop and imagine you're looking down at it, enjoy the horror
The further I get into this video, the more respect I lose for the writing in Shark Tale.
Awesome video is there no footage of a frilled shark eating?
Sharks are rad asf
They actually are cool. Idk why people hate them, they’re so unique!
@@mattstudios740Jaws (1975)
I need a list of these sharks so I can have something to hyperfixate on and research for the next 12 hours