Apart from the worse then usual audio, I wanna apologize for my significant lack of energy in this video 😭 I was still settling into college at the time of recording and my dorm was still blazing hot so I was pretty drained. I'll try and be more upbeat for y'all in my next upload 💚
I remember looking this up because I was curious, but apparently, a mantis shrimp scaled to the size and weight of human could punch with enough force to convert the carbon in a humans body into diamond. Just figured I'd share that
The fact that peeps have been training crows to get money, reminds me of the stories of people sending the cheapest crap known to man to the fae, and getting like entire ancient gold bars and large rare gemstones. Crow is just like: *"Here mortal, take this piece of your earthly currency, I have no use for it, as I come from a place of endless riches."* **Gives 1 dollar bill.**
I love how much you understand octopus intelligence. If you're concerned by the fact that they're capable of holding grudges, then oh boy, you're gonna be terrified by the fact that they literally build cities.
@genericname2747 Yep, there are 2 of them Octopolis and Octlantis. Look them up. Also, probably the most interesting thing about them is that their inhabitants are normally territorial species of octopus that are intentionally going against their instincts and living in close proximity to each other for better survival Actually recently, octopus have been seen using fish to help them hunt and then punching them when they don't cooperate.
@@just_some_guy.703dude we can’t let this go on. They’re gonna start making octopus taxes and have octopus rent and I will not allow another species to make the same mistakes as us
As unsettling as intelligent animals are, the idea that we might someday be able to have intelligent conversations with another species is REALLY intriguing to me. Talking to someone who grew up in a different country than yours lets you learn about a whole other society and culture you've never seen; now imagine that, but you're talking to an ENTIRELY DIFFERENT SPECIES instead. Humans can befriend and form bonds with other animals and vice versa, sure, but it's not like we can walk up to a squirrel or something and have a chat like we can with other people. Can't wait for the future so I can become close friends with an octopus
Fun emu war facts: -On average, it takes 7 hits with a military grade fire arm to down an emu. -Emus can run 45 mph over ruff terrain and through trees for extended poireds, outrunning most military vehicles. -when a flock of Emu are feeding they will post lookouts to watch for trouble. -A flock of Emu generally has a leader who makes command discussions when the flock is under attack. -the avarge emu can take short bursts of machine gun fire and keep running (again anything under 7 hits)
jellyfish have actually been found to have some awareness of their surroundings because when they bump into stuff they know to move out of the way when they get close to it again
@@genericname2747yeah, the box fish, sea wasp, the mdfk with the most letal poison of the ocean and if he is not first place is top 3 have multiple blue dots, each one have detection and works as a an eye, i dont remember how good it is, maybe siluetes and lights
@@changeling6450 They’re good enough to actually make images of things they see in water and process them. They will even chase down prey if they see them. Clams also have eyes as well.
25:00 "turns out you can't fit an entire human mind in a computer that small, all I could do is tell time and know what my name was" - Cave Johnson, Aperture Desk Job
The mantis shrimp is unironically one of my favorite animals. Look at them! It’s a lil guy! It can punch with near the force of a bullet? Its eyes have a ridiculous amount of color receptors? Whatever being drew up the concept art for that little menace was having fun-
For the crow-money-tactic thing, I’m pretty sure they pick money at random and when a human accepts it, they assume we hold value in it. This leads to them continuing to search for money to pay for their care, either that or they observe what humans regularly do and see how we use cash.
I think someone out there bought crows higher quality food after they got a $20 bill, the crows put 2 and 2 together, and began seeing value in the bills to bring to this guy.
I mean Kangaroos come from there and everything about them is just a cartoon character waiting to be made as seen in a lot of media, and that is not even talking about their off main land beings known as the Tasmanian Devil.
@@anthonyoliver418 That’s not even the best part. Back a few thousand years ago. Australia had 20ft galloping crocodiles, a scissor toothed predatory wombat, a massive relative of the Komodo dragon, and a even larger relative of kangaroos that had one toe and could look down at a 5ft person. Australia was a wild place back then.
I JUST REALIZED SOMETHING. There's a blog called Bogleech and he does an annual Creepypasta Cookoff (I don't know if he still does them) and there was a story on there about a giant psychic caterpillar in a nursery that everyone except for one nurse thought was a baby, and at the end of the story it turns out it's a butterfly. The caterpillar does all the same stuff as the large blue butterfly! Unfortunately, I don't remember what the story was called.
I'm SUPER insane about Jumping Spiders. They're super smart and calculate their movements... From what I've researched, they have the ability to see the moon in full HD, and THEY CAN DREAM. THEY HAVE THE ABILITY TO DREAM. What does a spider dream about when it takes a little spider snooze....
I’m surprised you didn’t bring up how messed up the procreation process is for the octopus, considering after the fact the males fall apart until the female or the predator eats him, while the female slowly dies looking after the eggs, but for real these animals make me realize how accurate movies with alien species are when it comes to their bizarre or overpowered aspects, like no wonder predators and Xenomorphs are such good killing machines when Emus exist.
You will NOT be happy to hear that harbor seals and gray seals can do the same human voice mimicry thing that crows do, but with a more disturbing degree of accuracy because we’re both mammals and our larynxes are shaped exactly the same. Go look up Hoover the seal and see if you can find an audio recording of the little guy mimicking his trainer’s voice.
That would be selkies. Sirens were traditionally depicted as birds with human features, and they only started being represented as fishlike extremely recently.
@RandomTheIdiot55 sirenia are manatees and the like, named more than a century or two ago, so it's not terribly recent nor do they have to be fish like. Even the bird ones lured sailors into the water not into flying. The mermaid type appearance was from the middle ages or possibly earlier. Oh and beluga can also imitate human voices so it's even less surprising sirens are associated with the sea
@RandomTheIdiot55 yes 214 years is not 'recent' for Sirenia and 1,100 ish years for the Latin oceanic depiction certainly isn't 'recent' either. Strabo, a Greek, identifed a siren island as far back as the first century. I think you mean "Only Greek sirens at the time of the Odyssey specifically" and even then both could be true. Just because they were depicted as bird ladies doesn't mean 'thing that called ships towards rocks with oddly human like voice' wasn't a sea dog who subsequently dipped when the humans got closer
I started being so silly once you said specifically “Corvidae” I LOOOVE CORVIDAE SO MUCH EHEHEHHEHEHEHHEEHE (also in the best way possible, your videos feel like a isolated cold chamber and I adore them)
I love them as well. They’re the most intelligent dinosaurs and they make that knowlege very clear to us mammals when they steal our stuff or swoop us.
8:32 Also, many butterflies and moths drink blood/tears and butterflies can taste things with their feet (the feet are like a tongue to the butterfly). Many butterflies attack the eyes of animals to DRINK THEIR TEARS, this flying beast that is seen as "beautiful and elegant" is driven only by HATE and the TEARS of its enemies. But moths are cute! I love moths
Glad ants got the recognition they deserve, but may i add that they have straight up pokemon abilities? Their are ants with hairs that when zoomed in on look like hypedemic needles, ants with stingers, acid sprays, whatever big headed ants are getting up too, combinations of abilites, you have ants that can spend up to 24 hours underwater. There are ants that became reflective to deflect the suns rays so they dont burn to death in the Sahara desert. These things are insane and im so happy you gave the time of day. Ever since i wrote my first college paper i was hooked on the little guys, and if you, yes you are reading this, i implore you to spend an afternoon just learning about these little buddies, bc they are amazing.
The 40,527 coming of salmonella? And he has taken the form of a skeleton dragon necromancer in this channel? Bless us all as the savior has come… again 40,527x
I LOVE THE WOBBLEDOGS MUSIC for a second, i was like "hang on, i recognize that melody... IS THAT WOBBLEDOGS?????" instant subscription. no doubt. love ya :D
Relating to the Thumbnail Octopus being too smart, that's why I don't eat em! I refuse to eat a creature intelligent enough to put a lid back on a jar.
Adding onto moose a bit, they are really good at diving. Which just by looking at them is ridiculous and because of there diving ability one of the mooses predators is the killer whale
Also somehow the Greenland Shark, which is an exceptionally weird animal in its own right and has a top speed just shy of 2 mph, we don't know how but they have somehow managed to eat moose.
I gotta be honest, I don’t know why, but I think the audio quality makes the video sound a little more pleasant to listen to, actually. It’s an almost analog-like sound, I like it!
hey just a little fun fact for all ya sillies: mantis shrimp (if i remember correctly) has a wider range of color than us. it just knows some things we never will and that scares me. why do you need that many colors little guy?
Well damn, that was a really interesting vid, I'm glad to have found your channel! Also gotta admit, I'm surprised dolphins weren't included. Like, you mentioned octopodes can learn spite, but dolphins know straight-up cruelty. They do some reaaaallly bad and messed up stuff (i'm talking huffing pufferfish, AND worse!), not even for survival but just for the sake of it, which is even worse considering how smart they are. I'm just saying, the good opinion ppl have of them (being friendly creatures and all) is absolutely undeserved. But rant aside, that was a ptty instructive and entertaining video, and I learned new stuff, so, great work!
Hi. Australian here. I just wanted to say that regarding the emu war, the term "war" for the first attempt is very much an exaggeration (it was a handful of troopers with 2 machine guns mounted on their own truck.) Most of the rounds that hit didn't kill the emu's, it just wounded them (only ~24ish emu's dead out of 1000). Most of the emu's were somewhat successfully herded away from crop farms, but they quickly organized into smaller packs which made machine guns significantly less effective (you could argue this as emus being intelligent like corvids and using guerilla tactics if you really want to stretch the definition). The second attempt was much more "successful", as 40 were outright killed and around 2500 were wounded. Higher ups and conservatives (especially ones from the UK) then told them to withdraw as to not cause further damage to the ecosystem and wanted to protect the "rare birds". Personally, I think viewing the situation as a war is a bit... insincere? But people like to use it as a buzzword and a propaganda statement to downplay the Australian military's competence. I know people like to clown on this, but I don't really see it as justification for putting emu's as "weird animals", as they weren't responsible for the events that happened to them, it was a consequence of droughts, farmers affecting the ecosystem, migration and military personnel trying to relocate them with as few resources as possible. I think that there are many much more valid candidates for Australian wildlife that could easily take the position of emu's in the video, personally I would've picked the cassowary, one of our spiders or maybe the kangaroo (even drop bears would be a better candidate than emus imo). Platypus is fair game though, despite being really cute and adorable.
VIDEO SUGGESTION; Which cartoon characters could you logically lock up in prison, and for what crimes? Anime characters and claymation (Wallace and Gromit, Naruto, Paranorman, Sailor Moon, etc.) are also on the table.
1) newer follower and enjoying what content you have 😌 2) jellyfish give me existential dread when I think too much about them because how is the least conscious creature effectively immortal while those of us with consciousness have to fear our mortality 😭
Enjoy these college years while you can, seriously, I've made a LOT of good memories there, so make the most of it. And, even as a new fan, please don't pressure yourself too much with new content. We'll (probably) all still be here when you get back.
5:03 also crows/ravens can domesticate wolves 6:07 Ants can also make trenches 22:36 mantis shrimp can also see more colors than us 23:05 that image looks like a sus early AI generated picture 23:22 thought they were boards four of them appeared in my town one time, the daughter of one of my mothers friends had a car crash with one of them, breaking her car as a result while the board reminded intact and I once saw them on my way to school 15:10 there's also a species of frog where their eggs breaks from their backs, leaving behind a perfect trypophobic nightmare (Idk if I wrote that right I'm spanish)
This video made me so so happy. Thanks for teaching me about the Bone Hair Frog (which is definitely the name all scientists call it.) I don't encounter many top ten animal videos that have a critter I haven't Googled in a joyful autistic frenzy. Hurrah for learning!
Oh btw, you forgot that the mantis shrimp has 12 color vision than us, this makes their vision see through the dark and have uv light. They are basically cyborgs shrimp but they are not cyborgs.
an animal that makes me insane is the arapaima. they’re fish that can be around ten feet long, breathe air, and jump out of the water to eat small primates. they are also my favorite fish of all time and i’m so happy that they’re making a comeback in the wild
I don't think the crows understand the value of money lol. They just understand that giving bread guy the funny green paper means they get better bread in return. So they find money to give in exchange for better food. They don't understand the value of money, but they get the concept of this being a good thing to exchange if that makes sense.
13:20 Wait until she hears about the cassowary. (They are like big deadly emus.) They actually jump like ostriches and use their claws to cut a person into pieces.
You forgot the part that platypus venom is extremely terrifying and has been described by actual war veterans as being the worst thing they've ever felt.
I think the octopus should’ve been number 1 or 2. They have complex eyes, that can see 360 degrees, and they have no rods and cones. They just have a photoreceptor (pretty much they can only tell if a certain spot has or doesn’t have light, and from that it can maneuver in an organized manner. Each limb can be cut off, and regrown. Along with that, each arm has its own brain that responds to a central brain. They can change color instantly, they can change appearance, and they can even change texture. They can go from feeling like slime to feeling like sand paper on a whim. Their blood is different. Almost every animal on earth has iron based blood, and that makes it red… the octopus has copper based blood. They can grow up to 30 feet and 600lbs… If intelligent life from outside earth has arrived here (by contamination or transportation) it is the Octopus. Most animals have nothing in common with the octopus. They are aliens on earth
For me two things come to mind when I’m asked what animals I’m shocked by their audacity to exist. 1. Vampire Deer, one of the last animals you’d expect to have fangs are deer, yet there are FOUR kinds that do. Notable mention to the muntjac which in addition to their fangs, also have several pheromone glands on their face, which when open up, make me feel all sorts of uncomfortable. All that said I find them cool as hecc. 2. The African spiny mouse, if you’re willing to tear off your skin when a predator grabs you, you deserve to get away, im not dealing with something with that much determination.
no comment about the ribbon worm? The one who vomits its own intestines? Also good video, glad to see you're enjoying making content and I hope it goes well along with college, have a great day ^^
Here's my entry: megamouth sharks. They don't look like something humans were ever meant to see and they worry me. On the plus side, their closest living relative is most likely the thresher shark, and if you've seen a thresher you know they're among god's most perfect creatures.
Very educational video about topic I love. I knew a lot of these, but also learned a lot from this too. I feel like a vid like this works GREAT in this style. Good stuff.
ants not only use war tactics similar to us, but they've been doing it for millions of years before we existed. Their pheromone trails also might display patterns similar to our use of syntax in language. Also, chimps once had a real war in the 70s.
funniest interaction i had with a crow was when i was on a bin run at work, previous guy left the bins laid out so i was just collecting the bags, usually you get seagulls absolutely ripping the bags apart but this crow just made the tiniest hole to pull a piece of chicken out so when it flew away when i approached i just took out the half pulled tender and threw it half way between us, dude slowly apprached it you know a real bonding moment when a fucking seagull flew in at mach speed swiping the chicken and the crow just looked back at me with the most dumbfounded look, felt so awkward just shrugging to it and continuing my day lmao
Not to mention the fact that mantis shrimps can apparently see colors that we humans do not have capacity to see. There's a whole world of colors that we can't see, but the angry punching water guy can.
I feel like in another 20-30 years, were gonna learn some lynchpin in biology that proves Jellyfish technically aren't animals, but some weird ass underwater plant spore or something
This is awesome I had not idea that ants can pass the mirror test. Emus are basically modern dinosaurs, that's why you are so scared lol. Jellyfish are cool, they're like between animal and plant. Look up the life cycle of jellies, it's bonkers.
i... hope that she knows that some crustaceans like lobsters are...pseudo immortal..? (as in, they never die of old age, rather, they die from predation, illness or from failure to molt)
I’m a bit surprised you didn’t mention dolphins, ever since I learned that dolphins are far from being just a kind and innocent animal I haven’t been able to see them in the same way ever again. On the other hand sharks are actually pretty chill and misunderstood.
Well, at least helicoprion gets attention. Although to clear things up, helicoprion only goes after squid. We are too big to be hunted by it. If it was alive today.
Apart from the worse then usual audio, I wanna apologize for my significant lack of energy in this video 😭 I was still settling into college at the time of recording and my dorm was still blazing hot so I was pretty drained. I'll try and be more upbeat for y'all in my next upload 💚
dw about it, me personally, i don't care about the audio, ur still a really funny creator
Is ok we all facing problems in life and you done your best
Honestly I didn't notice a difference
Either way it's fine!
nah, its fair to be drained settling into something as significant as college
Don't worry about it Skela, you're an inspiration to me
I remember looking this up because I was curious, but apparently, a mantis shrimp scaled to the size and weight of human could punch with enough force to convert the carbon in a humans body into diamond. Just figured I'd share that
Infinite diamond glitch
holy shit I love them infinitely more.
Shh, you are gonna give her more trauma
CRAZY DIAMOND, UNWELD HIS CARBON ATOMS
Uh… wait that’d be a cool anime power idea
The fact that peeps have been training crows to get money, reminds me of the stories of people sending the cheapest crap known to man to the fae, and getting like entire ancient gold bars and large rare gemstones.
Crow is just like:
*"Here mortal, take this piece of your earthly currency, I have no use for it, as I come from a place of endless riches."*
**Gives 1 dollar bill.**
I love how much you understand octopus intelligence.
If you're concerned by the fact that they're capable of holding grudges, then oh boy, you're gonna be terrified by the fact that they literally build cities.
Pardon
@genericname2747 Yep, there are 2 of them Octopolis and Octlantis. Look them up.
Also, probably the most interesting thing about them is that their inhabitants are normally territorial species of octopus that are intentionally going against their instincts and living in close proximity to each other for better survival
Actually recently, octopus have been seen using fish to help them hunt and then punching them when they don't cooperate.
@@just_some_guy.703dude we can’t let this go on. They’re gonna start making octopus taxes and have octopus rent and I will not allow another species to make the same mistakes as us
@@theman6422 If we don't foster their intelligence and show people that they are intelligent, people are going to keep eating them.
@@theman6422 Literally the plot of Splatoon in a nutshell.
As unsettling as intelligent animals are, the idea that we might someday be able to have intelligent conversations with another species is REALLY intriguing to me. Talking to someone who grew up in a different country than yours lets you learn about a whole other society and culture you've never seen; now imagine that, but you're talking to an ENTIRELY DIFFERENT SPECIES instead. Humans can befriend and form bonds with other animals and vice versa, sure, but it's not like we can walk up to a squirrel or something and have a chat like we can with other people. Can't wait for the future so I can become close friends with an octopus
Fun emu war facts:
-On average, it takes 7 hits with a military grade fire arm to down an emu.
-Emus can run 45 mph over ruff terrain and through trees for extended poireds, outrunning most military vehicles.
-when a flock of Emu are feeding they will post lookouts to watch for trouble.
-A flock of Emu generally has a leader who makes command discussions when the flock is under attack.
-the avarge emu can take short bursts of machine gun fire and keep running (again anything under 7 hits)
Oh, so *that* is why they won the war.
oh sh*t! oh sh*t!
24:26 i was expecting skela to say “this jellyfish figured out immortality before we got GTA 6”
7:41
I love low-quality sprites like this. They convey such an indescribable emotion so perfectly.
Yes, gives perfect “Idiotic but lovable gremlin” vibes
i wish animals were real sometimes ngl
This will be scarily relevant in the future
Me too
Within our world are animals slowly waiting for freedom once we are all gone. But sadly that only exists in the Kirby series.
They are real.
@@spacerunner357 mfw i was joking
jellyfish have actually been found to have some awareness of their surroundings because when they bump into stuff they know to move out of the way when they get close to it again
Some jellyfish even have functioning, image forming eyes. Yet they have no real brains with with to process these images.
@blobbertmcblob4888 THEY CAN HAVE EYES??
@@genericname2747yeah, the box fish, sea wasp, the mdfk with the most letal poison of the ocean and if he is not first place is top 3 have multiple blue dots, each one have detection and works as a an eye, i dont remember how good it is, maybe siluetes and lights
@@changeling6450 They’re good enough to actually make images of things they see in water and process them. They will even chase down prey if they see them. Clams also have eyes as well.
GREAT they’re becoming more aware *that’s not concerning at all*
25:00 "turns out you can't fit an entire human mind in a computer that small, all I could do is tell time and know what my name was" - Cave Johnson, Aperture Desk Job
The mantis shrimp is unironically one of my favorite animals. Look at them! It’s a lil guy! It can punch with near the force of a bullet? Its eyes have a ridiculous amount of color receptors? Whatever being drew up the concept art for that little menace was having fun-
Yeah mantis shrimps are cool
For the crow-money-tactic thing, I’m pretty sure they pick money at random and when a human accepts it, they assume we hold value in it. This leads to them continuing to search for money to pay for their care, either that or they observe what humans regularly do and see how we use cash.
I think someone out there bought crows higher quality food after they got a $20 bill, the crows put 2 and 2 together, and began seeing value in the bills to bring to this guy.
"Australia is just a real world cartoon, and i refuse to believe anything that happens there is real" W skela
time stamp is 12:30 btw
I mean Kangaroos come from there and everything about them is just a cartoon character waiting to be made as seen in a lot of media, and that is not even talking about their off main land beings known as the Tasmanian Devil.
@@anthonyoliver418 That’s not even the best part. Back a few thousand years ago. Australia had 20ft galloping crocodiles, a scissor toothed predatory wombat, a massive relative of the Komodo dragon, and a even larger relative of kangaroos that had one toe and could look down at a 5ft person. Australia was a wild place back then.
Okay, but that blue butterfly thing translated to people would be a fantastic short horror story.
I'm definately stealing that idea
THE BABY EATING HUMAN MIMIC
I swear to God.I think there's a little horror game. Where are you plans like a weird grub monster human hybrid
I JUST REALIZED SOMETHING. There's a blog called Bogleech and he does an annual Creepypasta Cookoff (I don't know if he still does them) and there was a story on there about a giant psychic caterpillar in a nursery that everyone except for one nurse thought was a baby, and at the end of the story it turns out it's a butterfly. The caterpillar does all the same stuff as the large blue butterfly! Unfortunately, I don't remember what the story was called.
Somewhat related,but I am half sure that there is a character in jungle juice based on it.
0:30 i still love that stupid ass bird image so much you have no idea. weird fucking creature. ...
(dam!!!!!)
THE C R E A T U R E
🇩 🇦 🇲 🇳 !!!!!!!
It’s so precious😢
it looks so punchable
I'm SUPER insane about Jumping Spiders. They're super smart and calculate their movements... From what I've researched, they have the ability to see the moon in full HD, and THEY CAN DREAM. THEY HAVE THE ABILITY TO DREAM. What does a spider dream about when it takes a little spider snooze....
omg
I don't like spiders at all, with the exception of peacock jumping spiders.
As a Corvid lover, especially of crows and ravens, yes. Everything you said about them is so true. I love them.
I’m surprised you didn’t bring up how messed up the procreation process is for the octopus, considering after the fact the males fall apart until the female or the predator eats him, while the female slowly dies looking after the eggs, but for real these animals make me realize how accurate movies with alien species are when it comes to their bizarre or overpowered aspects, like no wonder predators and Xenomorphs are such good killing machines when Emus exist.
You will NOT be happy to hear that harbor seals and gray seals can do the same human voice mimicry thing that crows do, but with a more disturbing degree of accuracy because we’re both mammals and our larynxes are shaped exactly the same. Go look up Hoover the seal and see if you can find an audio recording of the little guy mimicking his trainer’s voice.
Probably how we got siren myths
That would be selkies. Sirens were traditionally depicted as birds with human features, and they only started being represented as fishlike extremely recently.
@RandomTheIdiot55 sirenia are manatees and the like, named more than a century or two ago, so it's not terribly recent nor do they have to be fish like. Even the bird ones lured sailors into the water not into flying. The mermaid type appearance was from the middle ages or possibly earlier.
Oh and beluga can also imitate human voices so it's even less surprising sirens are associated with the sea
We named the manatees AFTER siren myths. It’s recent as hell and it’s nowhere in the original mythology.
@RandomTheIdiot55 yes 214 years is not 'recent' for Sirenia and 1,100 ish years for the Latin oceanic depiction certainly isn't 'recent' either. Strabo, a Greek, identifed a siren island as far back as the first century.
I think you mean "Only Greek sirens at the time of the Odyssey specifically" and even then both could be true. Just because they were depicted as bird ladies doesn't mean 'thing that called ships towards rocks with oddly human like voice' wasn't a sea dog who subsequently dipped when the humans got closer
I started being so silly once you said specifically “Corvidae” I LOOOVE CORVIDAE SO MUCH EHEHEHHEHEHEHHEEHE
(also in the best way possible, your videos feel like a isolated cold chamber and I adore them)
I love them as well. They’re the most intelligent dinosaurs and they make that knowlege very clear to us mammals when they steal our stuff or swoop us.
I kinda forgot you existed...
But you've become my comfort channel, and I love your videos :)
3:40 ok that first “what’s up” definitely sounded like something you’d hear in a found footage video or something
“Say it in my voice.” The fact it knows.
3:29 I didnt understand what you meant but when i heard it say "hello" I was SO taken a back. Like omg, was not expecting THAT.
8:32 Also, many butterflies and moths drink blood/tears and butterflies can taste things with their feet (the feet are like a tongue to the butterfly). Many butterflies attack the eyes of animals to DRINK THEIR TEARS, this flying beast that is seen as "beautiful and elegant" is driven only by HATE and the TEARS of its enemies.
But moths are cute! I love moths
Glad ants got the recognition they deserve, but may i add that they have straight up pokemon abilities? Their are ants with hairs that when zoomed in on look like hypedemic needles, ants with stingers, acid sprays, whatever big headed ants are getting up too, combinations of abilites, you have ants that can spend up to 24 hours underwater. There are ants that became reflective to deflect the suns rays so they dont burn to death in the Sahara desert. These things are insane and im so happy you gave the time of day. Ever since i wrote my first college paper i was hooked on the little guys, and if you, yes you are reading this, i implore you to spend an afternoon just learning about these little buddies, bc they are amazing.
And then there's the honeypot ants. funny little guys.
Weaver ants are cool. So are honeypot ants.
@@reshiramwings5000 You are so right. Shoutout to weaver and honeypot ants.
18:46 a platypus? Platypus: puts on fedora. PERRY THE PLATYPUS!!!!! 😨😨😨
tally hall fan ripoff.... GRRRR how dare you mock us... don't just laugh and clap right now. This is serious, I'm not delirious
Darn! Someone else thought of it
The 40,527 coming of salmonella? And he has taken the form of a skeleton dragon necromancer in this channel? Bless us all as the savior has come… again 40,527x
@@leftIncel being compared to Sam 'O Nella is probably the highest compliment I've ever received. Nowhere close to him unfortunately haha
I LOVE THE WOBBLEDOGS MUSIC
for a second, i was like "hang on, i recognize that melody... IS THAT WOBBLEDOGS?????"
instant subscription. no doubt. love ya :D
Relating to the Thumbnail Octopus being too smart, that's why I don't eat em! I refuse to eat a creature intelligent enough to put a lid back on a jar.
do you eat pigs?
@@Just_a_guy909 Do pigs put lids back on jars?
@@AmbrosiaPoly-yolkEgg No, but they have saved people's lives
@@Just_a_guy909 with clear intent to, or happenstance?
@AmbrosiaPoly-yolkEgg Some have like Prudence the pig.
WE ARE SO BACK! Also your thumbnail looks you are doing the “GET O-“ Meme. Keep it up! ❤
Adding onto moose a bit, they are really good at diving. Which just by looking at them is ridiculous and because of there diving ability one of the mooses predators is the killer whale
I misread "diving" as "driving."
When?
Also somehow the Greenland Shark, which is an exceptionally weird animal in its own right and has a top speed just shy of 2 mph, we don't know how but they have somehow managed to eat moose.
I gotta be honest, I don’t know why, but I think the audio quality makes the video sound a little more pleasant to listen to, actually. It’s an almost analog-like sound, I like it!
hey just a little fun fact for all ya sillies: mantis shrimp (if i remember correctly) has a wider range of color than us. it just knows some things we never will and that scares me. why do you need that many colors little guy?
Well damn, that was a really interesting vid, I'm glad to have found your channel!
Also gotta admit, I'm surprised dolphins weren't included. Like, you mentioned octopodes can learn spite, but dolphins know straight-up cruelty. They do some reaaaallly bad and messed up stuff (i'm talking huffing pufferfish, AND worse!), not even for survival but just for the sake of it, which is even worse considering how smart they are.
I'm just saying, the good opinion ppl have of them (being friendly creatures and all) is absolutely undeserved.
But rant aside, that was a ptty instructive and entertaining video, and I learned new stuff, so, great work!
I love crows and ravens also if I remember correctly ravens also passed the mirror test but that might have been blue jays I’m thinking of
Wait until you find out jellyfish are the first animals to ever swim.
Genuinely the most enjoyable video I've watched in quite a while, so glad I'm subbed to this channel c:
Hi. Australian here.
I just wanted to say that regarding the emu war, the term "war" for the first attempt is very much an exaggeration (it was a handful of troopers with 2 machine guns mounted on their own truck.) Most of the rounds that hit didn't kill the emu's, it just wounded them (only ~24ish emu's dead out of 1000). Most of the emu's were somewhat successfully herded away from crop farms, but they quickly organized into smaller packs which made machine guns significantly less effective (you could argue this as emus being intelligent like corvids and using guerilla tactics if you really want to stretch the definition).
The second attempt was much more "successful", as 40 were outright killed and around 2500 were wounded. Higher ups and conservatives (especially ones from the UK) then told them to withdraw as to not cause further damage to the ecosystem and wanted to protect the "rare birds". Personally, I think viewing the situation as a war is a bit... insincere? But people like to use it as a buzzword and a propaganda statement to downplay the Australian military's competence.
I know people like to clown on this, but I don't really see it as justification for putting emu's as "weird animals", as they weren't responsible for the events that happened to them, it was a consequence of droughts, farmers affecting the ecosystem, migration and military personnel trying to relocate them with as few resources as possible. I think that there are many much more valid candidates for Australian wildlife that could easily take the position of emu's in the video, personally I would've picked the cassowary, one of our spiders or maybe the kangaroo (even drop bears would be a better candidate than emus imo).
Platypus is fair game though, despite being really cute and adorable.
Didn't the Australian government also put out a bounty on emus in the end that resulted in farmers killing loads of them?
VIDEO SUGGESTION; Which cartoon characters could you logically lock up in prison, and for what crimes?
Anime characters and claymation (Wallace and Gromit, Naruto, Paranorman, Sailor Moon, etc.) are also on the table.
1) newer follower and enjoying what content you have 😌
2) jellyfish give me existential dread when I think too much about them because how is the least conscious creature effectively immortal while those of us with consciousness have to fear our mortality 😭
Enjoy these college years while you can, seriously, I've made a LOT of good memories there, so make the most of it. And, even as a new fan, please don't pressure yourself too much with new content. We'll (probably) all still be here when you get back.
5:03 also crows/ravens can domesticate wolves
6:07 Ants can also make trenches
22:36 mantis shrimp can also see more colors than us
23:05 that image looks like a sus early AI generated picture
23:22 thought they were boards four of them appeared in my town one time, the daughter of one of my mothers friends had a car crash with one of them, breaking her car as a result while the board reminded intact and I once saw them on my way to school
15:10 there's also a species of frog where their eggs breaks from their backs, leaving behind a perfect trypophobic nightmare
(Idk if I wrote that right I'm spanish)
0:16 debt 😢😢😢
I love the RVB references, keep em coming!
This video made me so so happy. Thanks for teaching me about the Bone Hair Frog (which is definitely the name all scientists call it.) I don't encounter many top ten animal videos that have a critter I haven't Googled in a joyful autistic frenzy. Hurrah for learning!
Ants are really out here living Warhammer 40K irl
You're probably one of the funniest TH-camrs I'm subscribed to also you should do more videos like this
22:35 they also can see the widest range of colors, and it boils my brain just thinking how could those 'invisible' colors look like
Oh btw, you forgot that the mantis shrimp has 12 color vision than us, this makes their vision see through the dark and have uv light. They are basically cyborgs shrimp but they are not cyborgs.
your description of the caterpillar but from a human perspective kinda makes me want to homebrew a d&d monster that actually does do that lol
make sure you include the part that you KNOW something is wrong but every instinct in your body is telling you that it’s completely fine.
real monarchs already do this, except they use propaganda instead of mind control gas
A new Skeletal Spyro video? Always a delight
an animal that makes me insane is the arapaima. they’re fish that can be around ten feet long, breathe air, and jump out of the water to eat small primates. they are also my favorite fish of all time and i’m so happy that they’re making a comeback in the wild
I don't think the crows understand the value of money lol. They just understand that giving bread guy the funny green paper means they get better bread in return. So they find money to give in exchange for better food. They don't understand the value of money, but they get the concept of this being a good thing to exchange if that makes sense.
Hi, i'm actually a marine biologist! As a specialist on my field i can assure that yes 15:39 this is certainly a fish
My dream job
The mantis shrimp learning that a small little sea creature can dish out 1,500 newtonic power whenerver it wants it's kinda scary
Imagine being alive, and not knowing. That’s just sad and depressing.
Don't mess with the emu's
17:30 octopie. We shall fight with gaint inflatable hammers
“No sir, I can’t come into the office to accept my promotion, new skele video just came out.”
Im sorry, THERE IS A FUCKING IMMORTAL JELLYFISH IN THE FIRST PLACE??????
Ngl, that’s kinda scary
"Please put your bones back in your fingers-"
This quote will live in my head forever. 😂
13:20 Wait until she hears about the cassowary. (They are like big deadly emus.)
They actually jump like ostriches and use their claws to cut a person into pieces.
You forgot the part that platypus venom is extremely terrifying and has been described by actual war veterans as being the worst thing they've ever felt.
Also ants are capable of *SLAVERY* and *FARMING* other smaller bugs.
So what you're saying is the ants and grasshoppers should have swapped in A Bug's Life?
24:21 omg i remember watching an Octonauts episode about this
ME TOOOOOO
I saw a Wild Kratts episode about it.
Hooray! A fellow ant enjoyer!
These videos are quite enjoyable. Keep it up!
I think the octopus should’ve been number 1 or 2.
They have complex eyes, that can see 360 degrees, and they have no rods and cones. They just have a photoreceptor (pretty much they can only tell if a certain spot has or doesn’t have light, and from that it can maneuver in an organized manner.
Each limb can be cut off, and regrown. Along with that, each arm has its own brain that responds to a central brain.
They can change color instantly, they can change appearance, and they can even change texture. They can go from feeling like slime to feeling like sand paper on a whim.
Their blood is different. Almost every animal on earth has iron based blood, and that makes it red… the octopus has copper based blood.
They can grow up to 30 feet and 600lbs…
If intelligent life from outside earth has arrived here (by contamination or transportation) it is the Octopus. Most animals have nothing in common with the octopus. They are aliens on earth
8:57 so youre telling me ants make noises?!
ive never heard of the black swallower before omg!!! so cute!!!!
3:05 So do humans and oh god are we good at it
Btw humans scare me
For me two things come to mind when I’m asked what animals I’m shocked by their audacity to exist.
1. Vampire Deer, one of the last animals you’d expect to have fangs are deer, yet there are FOUR kinds that do. Notable mention to the muntjac which in addition to their fangs, also have several pheromone glands on their face, which when open up, make me feel all sorts of uncomfortable. All that said I find them cool as hecc.
2. The African spiny mouse, if you’re willing to tear off your skin when a predator grabs you, you deserve to get away, im not dealing with something with that much determination.
no comment about the ribbon worm? The one who vomits its own intestines?
Also good video, glad to see you're enjoying making content and I hope it goes well along with college, have a great day ^^
Ok the part of you talking about the knight and the queen made me think of some freaky horror movie but the queen is a dragon
Here's my entry: megamouth sharks. They don't look like something humans were ever meant to see and they worry me. On the plus side, their closest living relative is most likely the thresher shark, and if you've seen a thresher you know they're among god's most perfect creatures.
Very educational video about topic I love. I knew a lot of these, but also learned a lot from this too. I feel like a vid like this works GREAT in this style. Good stuff.
This is probably one of my fav videos on the internet
I was watching this at my table when a little baby spider came crawling up and now I got the sickest video of it. Feels fitting almost
1:33 i grabed a couch
I robbed a restaurant for the chair
I hope things go well for you in college-
Amazing thumbnail this time around, honestly.
ants not only use war tactics similar to us, but they've been doing it for millions of years before we existed. Their pheromone trails also might display patterns similar to our use of syntax in language. Also, chimps once had a real war in the 70s.
funniest interaction i had with a crow was when i was on a bin run at work, previous guy left the bins laid out so i was just collecting the bags, usually you get seagulls absolutely ripping the bags apart but this crow just made the tiniest hole to pull a piece of chicken out so when it flew away when i approached i just took out the half pulled tender and threw it half way between us, dude slowly apprached it you know a real bonding moment when a fucking seagull flew in at mach speed swiping the chicken and the crow just looked back at me with the most dumbfounded look, felt so awkward just shrugging to it and continuing my day lmao
12:35 as a Australian this is very much true.
3:40
“Who’s a good bird?”
“ 🅆 🄷 🄰 🅃 ‘⃞ 🅂 🅄 🄿 ⍰ “
Not to mention the fact that mantis shrimps can apparently see colors that we humans do not have capacity to see. There's a whole world of colors that we can't see, but the angry punching water guy can.
I feel like in another 20-30 years, were gonna learn some lynchpin in biology that proves Jellyfish technically aren't animals, but some weird ass underwater plant spore or something
The fact that there's an immortal jellyfish makes me wonder if other animals could find a way to become immortal
This is awesome I had not idea that ants can pass the mirror test.
Emus are basically modern dinosaurs, that's why you are so scared lol.
Jellyfish are cool, they're like between animal and plant. Look up the life cycle of jellies, it's bonkers.
i... hope that she knows that some crustaceans like lobsters are...pseudo immortal..? (as in, they never die of old age, rather, they die from predation, illness or from failure to molt)
15:05 Eye of Rah ahh Skela 😭🙏
What if I gave you one eye and put your head tentacles together and put them on them on the top of your head..
We need octopi as well as squids to be our successors once humans die out, how else will there be cats revived
I’m a bit surprised you didn’t mention dolphins, ever since I learned that dolphins are far from being just a kind and innocent animal I haven’t been able to see them in the same way ever again. On the other hand sharks are actually pretty chill and misunderstood.
the vorefish is a good name for a fish that swallows anything whole. apply that to humans and you got VORE..
And when I think of mantis shrimp, my mind goes to Topoda! If you know what that is, congrats on getting that far.
Well, at least helicoprion gets attention. Although to clear things up, helicoprion only goes after squid. We are too big to be hunted by it. If it was alive today.
fun fact
crocodiles, bears, cats and the ant's cousins the bees also passed the mirror test .
plataps is my fav animal, it has been for a year, and still is
One bug that disturbs me is the praying mantis because they can catch and eat birds and lizards bigger than they are.
Jellyfish are practically the first complex organism out there, which is cool