Click this link www.viteramen.com/scishow to get a bundle that gives you free gifts and free shipping in the contiguous USA, and use code SCISHOW at checkout for an additional 10% off!
I had no idea about the bumble bee parasite would love a video on creature parasites internal and external miniature creatures like bees shrimp crabs, butterflies ect
Bees have been known to stare at human faces the same way, and can learn and distinguish between different faces. This is because they see your face as a weird looking flower, and are using the same feature recognition behavior as when they memorize flowers. So if you're a gardener and are spending a lot of time outside among your flowering plants, the bees probably recognize you as part of their environment.
This makes me so happy because there's this one bee I see pollinating my beans almost every day. I love him or her and I swear they can tell it's me and they know I'm not going to hurt them. Sometimes this Bee, which is the biggest bee I've ever seen, will do a quick Buzz around my head while I'm working in the garden. Almost like to say hi. Then resumes going from flower to flower. I think I'll call him Frank. If it's a girl then Francine. :)
I've noticed this with the Bumblebees that live around my house. Their hive was in one of my planters, so I let them be. I could walk around their nest with no issue, when my dad tried, the bees were all defensive. They even started landing on me when they were tired, and I would bring them back to their hive.
One of the most fascinating talks I have ever attended was one about 20 years back on the co-evolution of flower color and pollinator vision. I say "pollinator" because, while that certainly includes insects, it is not restricted to them, and includes many avian species. As far as we can tell from the fossil record, the earliest flowers to evolve were largely in the short wavelength part of the spectrum; i.e., towards the purple and blue end. The evidence of pollinators at that time in evolution, indicates that, partly because they were so small, their color vision was largely restricted to, or at the very least most *sensitive* to, short wavelengths. As evolution progressed, and more species emerged and evolved, many pollinators emerged with expanded color vision, such that flowers in the yellow-orange-red end of the spectrum also emerged (or perhaps it was the other way around!). There may well HAVE been flowers with those colors earlier on, since random mutations are always taking place, but *something* has to be attracted to them to pollinate them and facilitate their reproduction and survival, and if you can't SEE those colors then that flower will not attract your attention.
i really love compilation videos. my memory is quite poor, and even if i’ve seen every one of the clips in a compilation, i love being able to rewatch old videos, but with added new stuff 💜💜
I do the same thing as a learning flight when I park in a big, crowded parking lot. Once I get to the end of the row, I turn around and look, so I can recognize where my car is when I come out.
It seems also that larger bees require more calories to maintain flight, so it would be advantageous to select, and remember flowers having higher calorie content, since they have the energy budget to do this.
Something bugs me in this video and I need to correct it. Treeshrews aren't rodents. In fact, they make up their own distinbct order, which isn't even part of the same grandorder as the order Rodentia. They're part of Euarchonta, while rodents are part of Glira. This means that they're more closely related to us humans than they are to rodents, while rodents are more closely related to lagomorphs (rabbits and hares). The apparent similarity between these two groups is another weird example of convergent evolution. Although, funny enough, they are more closely related to rodents than to actual shrews, since Euarchonta and Glira are sister-taxas that form the superorder...Euarchontaglira (inspired name) and true shrews are part of the Laurisatheria superorder, making them more closely related to things like moles and hedgehogs...also to bats...probably (the placement of the Chiroptera order within the Laurisatheria clade is not very well understood).
I would have guessed that the larger bees use more energy to fly around and forage so they take the time to remember the high yield flowers so they can make a bee line to it next time
Ants are cool. We're just starting to learn how intelligent hive insects can be. Ants might be the smartest insect, though. There ARE rumors that certain species can pass the mirror test, but either way, they are insanely intelligent problem solvers. I've watched ants who had never seen a pitcher plant before, learn that they could simply dump insect parts into it to get it to its feed limit which then stops producing its slippery stuff on the inside and they were then able to get at the sweat nectar.
I love learning about plants and pollinators, honey bees especially so I thoroughly enjoyed this video! Thanks, Scishow! On a side note, I do like Michael's new haircut but I like his hair longer better. I think he lost weight too. Good job, Michael!
I must be part bumblebee. I had trouble remembering faces when i was younger so i when I met a new person who i expect id need to interact with and recognize, I’d stare at them for a few seconds and then close my eyes and try to picture their face in my mind. I probably thought i was a robot or something, scanning an image of them into my hard drive lol. I must’ve looked like a freak, i doubt it helped anyways. I actually still have trouble with faces and with names. Not enough for it to really affect me much but i do remember this one time in middle school i met a girl who lived nearby in my new neighborhood. We hung out like everyday and she probably told me her name 2-3 times before i got so embarrassed by the fact that i just couldn’t remember that I stopped asking her and just avoided calling her by her name while desperately looking for some clue in her room or on her phone or something to tell me what her name was 🥲 I think that went on for like 2 weeks. She was oblivious the whole time poor thing. And no i don’t remember her name anymore xD
I'm honestly just the worst at faces. I have literally had coworkers that I worked with for 2+ years, some of them up to 30 hours a week for months on end, and yet when they showed up at the counter or came through drive through, it would literally take them being like, "So do you need my employee numbers?" or something similar for me to realize who they were. Like, I'm sorry, if you want me to recognize you I need your to be in the same location, doing one of four recognizable actives, hair up and uniform on. Now that I'm in an office setting it's even worse. There are so many people and they all seem to know my name and I honestly can't tell most of them apart unless they mention an email they sent me, etc. Strangely, I'm good at remembering names in a context where I don't have to associate it with a person. This has lead me to, when first meeting someone and learning their name, I am always immediately do two things: 1. I try to pick out a character or famous literary figure (I was an English Lit major), even a movie/TV characer though preferably one that I've read about so I can imagine their name in writing. I then do my best to find some (preferably physical) aspect, however small, of the person I can connect back to the character in question. 2. I comment on their name. I am a bit of an etymology nerd, so this part is pretty easy for me anyway as I often know either the meaning of the name, the name it was derived from, or it's native language. Sometimes people think that's odd, sometimes they didn't know themselves, but sometimes people will get really excited over you knowing the meaning of their name. Honestly, though, it can be anything from, "Oh, you know that comes from the latin for light" to "Oh, I have an aunt named - " to "that's an interesting name, do you happen to know it's origin?" to "How do you spell that?" Just anything so that they have to talk even just a little more about their name, giving me a bit more time to associate them with it. Plus, after you've discussed the derived meaning, linguistic origin, of why their parents chose said name, it really strengths the connection between the two. Still suck at faces, though. People don't take "oh, where did that come from?" Quite as well when your pointing at those hairline or ears.
it took me 2 months to learn who was who at the machine next to me in my new job. 2 weeks to learn their names, then 2 months to remember which face goes with which name. since everybody at work wears the same uniform I've learned to distinguish most of the colleagues I don't have daily contact with by body shape and, some, body language..
The jump cuts were too aggressive. I didn’t really think the pace of his speech was that unusual, but they left literally zero breathing room. I understand cutting out pauses and vocal tics, but this was extreme.
Did you watch the last segment? His voice is higher than it should be...and that means... These have been time compressed to cut the total length. 1 minute and 2 seconds short of 30 minutes...
@@silverXnoise To make ALL of it come in under a half hour...like all the other compilations...and they didn't cut the content in any way, that's not how "time compression" works. Content producers actually care about run-time for the same reason that the performers want to get their segment in...money. Win-win. Same is done with movies "edited for TV", a two hour movie still fits a two hour TV slot...with twenty minutes+ of commercials you see it a lot during the credits...
I like one ‘non-carnivorous’ pitcher plant in Borneo… it attracts mice-like rodents, with sweet sap on the underside of its lid. It doesn’t eat the mice! Rather.. the sap acts like… prunes do, to humans. This plant eats mouse poop!
Man, some people don't see just how ALIVE plants and insects are. They may not have what we call consciousness, but you can't tell me they aren't a society in their own way.
Evolution is sometimes just so mind-boggling. Like those plants at 22:57. How does that even happen? One plant just happens to have a mutation that makes its stem slightly more tasty? And some ants happen to come along and protect the plant? Was this single plant enough for this mutation to be carried on and selected for? Or did this mutation occur several times? Do nature sometimes 'miss' beneficial strategies just because a single mutation wasn't enough and the mutation chance was too small to ever spread? Evolution, man.
That is one of the many reasons I’m a creationist. All the “science” against creation can’t be repeated and therefore isn’t science. All the evidence suggesting an earth millions of years old could have been created that way. The whole rock dating system seems completely unreliable and arbitrary to me anyway. It’s way easier for me to accept that then the idea that all these ridiculously complex organisms and unlikely symbiotic relationships just evolved by chance over millions of years leaving behind practiaclly zero evidence of transitional forms. Which one sounds more logical to you? Men latch on to the theory of evolution because creation means we have a Creator to whom we are accountable. We would rather live in sin and darkness then trust and obey the One who made us. It would be easier for me to believe a super computer evolved by chance then an eyeball or any other of millions of complex things in nature.
paused at 0:27 Didn't we find out a few years ago that without the fungus involved between insects and plants that we wouldn't actually have the insects or the plants to talk about? Like, didn't we figure out that its a three-way street instead of just two? anyways. I proceeds to watch. :) Ahhhhhhh. there it is... i shoulda waited just 4 more seconds... ROFLMAOS! to be fair as this comilation plays... I'm pretty sure it was you guyses video i was thinking about. evem more ROFLMAOS! LOL
This is an amazing video. Love stuff like this. It's not pronounced the Lowes pitcher plant. Think of it more like Low . E . I Keep makin more awesome videos. Knowledge is power!
IMO 4 the spidle bug disease the best option would be to find a bacteriofage virus that would go 4 the bacteria and it would take care of the problem both inside the bug's gut and inside the plants.
Tree shrew aren't rodents though, but a distinct order known as Scandentia. They're potentially fairly close relatives of primates, but it's been back and forth for awhile. Interestingly, some species are known to get drunk-- seemingly intentionally-- on the fermented nectar of certain flowers.
What if they see well on a certain distance? For smaler ones they might need to be so close to the flower that they cant see it as a hole and get a picture that makes sence to them... If the bee is bigger it might can be so far from the flower it can see "the whole flower"/ a bigger picture, a picture that are possible for them to make sence of? :p // I mean if we would stand infront of a gigant and look at his gigant shoe,,, if wer small enught we would only see it as a "black wall" infront of us, but the bigger we get the more we see.... Like if we are bigger we might see that it is a shoe and if we are even bigger than that we might see that it is a gigant person, with black shoes.
what if the ones that flew a bit further and remembered when they noticed a good find, evolved bigger and being able to fly further out cuz they could feed themselves better?
I had an idea. Dont know if anyone has thought of this but why don't we have high-schools running trials and studies so they can be replicated all the time and out of the hands of companies?
Saw the thumbnail, thought the flower was a chicken, saw the bee, and thought to myself, "yea, the birds and the bees get pretty complicated sometimes." Needless to say, I clicked pretty quickly
Ever since SciShow started doing shorts, their content has dropped dramatically. You used to upload a *_new_* video daily, now we're lucky to get a new video once per week. During that week, we get compilations from old videos like this, or worse shorts which are the destroyers of knowledge based channels, because of their length. You're feeding your own downfall with Shorts! There's a great old adage relevant here: *_When you're onto a good thing; stick to it!_*
When I see it’s a compilation, I stop the video and move on. There are way too many repeats. It’s like they gave up trying. Shorts, I don’t even bother with those on any channel.
Hank are you out of your goddamn mind??? $100 for a 10 pack of instant ramen when you include their outrageous shipping and handling fee. What a terrible sponsor to have.
First Opening Hymn Was Finalized Recall, Your Dad Christened Me For With Also For The Benefit Of The Backbenchers A While Later, by 5, 7.. Song Lists. No Frequent Flying Kite Flyers Flown Kites Up Where I Hear Not Yet Ever Since Also.. 1988 onwards.. 2000 onwards. December 20 2012 onwards that Total Alcohol Consumption was 10 liters Of Under By Almost 10 miles in atleast..
Put compilation at the start of your titles I'm tired of getting baited into adding recycled content into my daily viewing. I have been watching Scishow from the start so I have no interest in rewatching past content unless I want to review something, and even then I will go find the specific video instead of sitting through a half hour compilation that may or may not contain what I'm looking for. Just to be clear make your compilation videos they are a great way to introduce new viewers to older content and the information therein but just take the bare minimum effort to make it more obvious what I'm clicking on please.
Compilation is in the title...and videos longer than 7-8 minutes are always compilations.. I don't know about "from the start" but for YEARS... You're welcome.
who would buy instant ramon that's $6 a serving and that's with %10 off. There's tons of fire ramon out now that's priced way better yea its not as good for you but its way better then the 25 cent packs.
Click this link www.viteramen.com/scishow to get a bundle that gives you free gifts and free shipping in the contiguous USA, and use code SCISHOW at checkout for an additional 10% off!
Awe Somely Cool tbh ngl 😅😂😢😮 ❤lmfso CSSl CSIKSZENTMIHALYI
I had no idea about the bumble bee parasite would love a video on creature parasites internal and external miniature creatures like bees shrimp crabs, butterflies ect
Bees have been known to stare at human faces the same way, and can learn and distinguish between different faces. This is because they see your face as a weird looking flower, and are using the same feature recognition behavior as when they memorize flowers. So if you're a gardener and are spending a lot of time outside among your flowering plants, the bees probably recognize you as part of their environment.
This makes me so happy because there's this one bee I see pollinating my beans almost every day. I love him or her and I swear they can tell it's me and they know I'm not going to hurt them. Sometimes this Bee, which is the biggest bee I've ever seen, will do a quick Buzz around my head while I'm working in the garden. Almost like to say hi. Then resumes going from flower to flower. I think I'll call him Frank. If it's a girl then Francine. :)
@@smeggiamagarwine If it belongs to a solitary bee species then it could be a male bee that visits flowers ONLY for the nectar.
I've noticed this with the Bumblebees that live around my house. Their hive was in one of my planters, so I let them be. I could walk around their nest with no issue, when my dad tried, the bees were all defensive. They even started landing on me when they were tired, and I would bring them back to their hive.
Y'all might be smoking way too much pot ?
This is the basis of the bee movie
One of the most fascinating talks I have ever attended was one about 20 years back on the co-evolution of flower color and pollinator vision. I say "pollinator" because, while that certainly includes insects, it is not restricted to them, and includes many avian species. As far as we can tell from the fossil record, the earliest flowers to evolve were largely in the short wavelength part of the spectrum; i.e., towards the purple and blue end. The evidence of pollinators at that time in evolution, indicates that, partly because they were so small, their color vision was largely restricted to, or at the very least most *sensitive* to, short wavelengths. As evolution progressed, and more species emerged and evolved, many pollinators emerged with expanded color vision, such that flowers in the yellow-orange-red end of the spectrum also emerged (or perhaps it was the other way around!). There may well HAVE been flowers with those colors earlier on, since random mutations are always taking place, but *something* has to be attracted to them to pollinate them and facilitate their reproduction and survival, and if you can't SEE those colors then that flower will not attract your attention.
i really love compilation videos. my memory is quite poor, and even if i’ve seen every one of the clips in a compilation, i love being able to rewatch old videos, but with added new stuff 💜💜
I do the same thing as a learning flight when I park in a big, crowded parking lot. Once I get to the end of the row, I turn around and look, so I can recognize where my car is when I come out.
Same!
It seems also that larger bees require more calories to maintain flight, so it would be advantageous to select, and remember flowers having higher calorie content, since they have the energy budget to do this.
This guy is by far the best host on the channel!
😆 New to Hank Green?
He is Awesome for sure!
Something bugs me in this video and I need to correct it. Treeshrews aren't rodents. In fact, they make up their own distinbct order, which isn't even part of the same grandorder as the order Rodentia. They're part of Euarchonta, while rodents are part of Glira. This means that they're more closely related to us humans than they are to rodents, while rodents are more closely related to lagomorphs (rabbits and hares). The apparent similarity between these two groups is another weird example of convergent evolution. Although, funny enough, they are more closely related to rodents than to actual shrews, since Euarchonta and Glira are sister-taxas that form the superorder...Euarchontaglira (inspired name) and true shrews are part of the Laurisatheria superorder, making them more closely related to things like moles and hedgehogs...also to bats...probably (the placement of the Chiroptera order within the Laurisatheria clade is not very well understood).
I would have guessed that the larger bees use more energy to fly around and forage so they take the time to remember the high yield flowers so they can make a bee line to it next time
Totally sounds plausible
12:43 for the people that don't know spanish, the word "fastidiosa" literaly means nuisance, witch seems petty acurate for what this thing does.
Ants are cool. We're just starting to learn how intelligent hive insects can be. Ants might be the smartest insect, though. There ARE rumors that certain species can pass the mirror test, but either way, they are insanely intelligent problem solvers. I've watched ants who had never seen a pitcher plant before, learn that they could simply dump insect parts into it to get it to its feed limit which then stops producing its slippery stuff on the inside and they were then able to get at the sweat nectar.
Whoa, that's so cool!!
Wow! What an interesting symbiotic relationship.
It's Allah creation. Thank to Allah that i'm muslim. Everything has a purpose.
@@algerino-tl8vc or maybe animals are smart and plants evolve with animals
@@RoseOnFire just let them believe dickweed
I love learning about plants and pollinators, honey bees especially so I thoroughly enjoyed this video! Thanks, Scishow! On a side note, I do like Michael's new haircut but I like his hair longer better. I think he lost weight too. Good job, Michael!
I just cannot get over how much like actual toilet seats the poop collecting pitchers look
So glad to see my fave food sponsoring my fave show! Vite Ramen is seriously so, so good. I’m a huge fan!
Thank you for all that you do, and the joy and wonders you all work hard to share!
I must be part bumblebee. I had trouble remembering faces when i was younger so i when I met a new person who i expect id need to interact with and recognize, I’d stare at them for a few seconds and then close my eyes and try to picture their face in my mind. I probably thought i was a robot or something, scanning an image of them into my hard drive lol. I must’ve looked like a freak, i doubt it helped anyways.
I actually still have trouble with faces and with names. Not enough for it to really affect me much but i do remember this one time in middle school i met a girl who lived nearby in my new neighborhood. We hung out like everyday and she probably told me her name 2-3 times before i got so embarrassed by the fact that i just couldn’t remember that I stopped asking her and just avoided calling her by her name while desperately looking for some clue in her room or on her phone or something to tell me what her name was 🥲 I think that went on for like 2 weeks. She was oblivious the whole time poor thing. And no i don’t remember her name anymore xD
I'm honestly just the worst at faces. I have literally had coworkers that I worked with for 2+ years, some of them up to 30 hours a week for months on end, and yet when they showed up at the counter or came through drive through, it would literally take them being like, "So do you need my employee numbers?" or something similar for me to realize who they were. Like, I'm sorry, if you want me to recognize you I need your to be in the same location, doing one of four recognizable actives, hair up and uniform on.
Now that I'm in an office setting it's even worse. There are so many people and they all seem to know my name and I honestly can't tell most of them apart unless they mention an email they sent me, etc. Strangely, I'm good at remembering names in a context where I don't have to associate it with a person.
This has lead me to, when first meeting someone and learning their name, I am always immediately do two things:
1. I try to pick out a character or famous literary figure (I was an English Lit major), even a movie/TV characer though preferably one that I've read about so I can imagine their name in writing. I then do my best to find some (preferably physical) aspect, however small, of the person I can connect back to the character in question.
2. I comment on their name. I am a bit of an etymology nerd, so this part is pretty easy for me anyway as I often know either the meaning of the name, the name it was derived from, or it's native language. Sometimes people think that's odd, sometimes they didn't know themselves, but sometimes people will get really excited over you knowing the meaning of their name. Honestly, though, it can be anything from, "Oh, you know that comes from the latin for light" to "Oh, I have an aunt named - " to "that's an interesting name, do you happen to know it's origin?" to "How do you spell that?" Just anything so that they have to talk even just a little more about their name, giving me a bit more time to associate them with it. Plus, after you've discussed the derived meaning, linguistic origin, of why their parents chose said name, it really strengths the connection between the two.
Still suck at faces, though. People don't take "oh, where did that come from?" Quite as well when your pointing at those hairline or ears.
it took me 2 months to learn who was who at the machine next to me in my new job. 2 weeks to learn their names, then 2 months to remember which face goes with which name.
since everybody at work wears the same uniform I've learned to distinguish most of the colleagues I don't have daily contact with by body shape and, some, body language..
This episode reminded me of a curious question. How do bats poop while sleeping upside down? How do they not poop all over themselves? Or do they?
omg, I had to check that my video wasn't on 2x speed during the "how plants attract bodyguards" part, he's talking so much faster than usual! 😂
I was already on 2x since I usually watch TH-cam at that speed and good lord that was some rapid speech!
The jump cuts were too aggressive. I didn’t really think the pace of his speech was that unusual, but they left literally zero breathing room. I understand cutting out pauses and vocal tics, but this was extreme.
Did you watch the last segment? His voice is higher than it should be...and that means...
These have been time compressed to cut the total length. 1 minute and 2 seconds short of 30 minutes...
@@jbarnhart2653 ??? Why would any of this content need to be cut for length?
@@silverXnoise To make ALL of it come in under a half hour...like all the other compilations...and they didn't cut the content in any way, that's not how "time compression" works.
Content producers actually care about run-time for the same reason that the performers want to get their segment in...money. Win-win.
Same is done with movies "edited for TV", a two hour movie still fits a two hour TV slot...with twenty minutes+ of commercials you see it a lot during the credits...
Xylella fastidiosa, where "fastidiosa" literally means "annoying", is the best name for a very annoying crops disease ever and I love it.
Thank you for flagging this as a compiliation right away. Very much appreciated! ❤
I like one ‘non-carnivorous’ pitcher plant in Borneo… it attracts mice-like rodents, with sweet sap on the underside of its lid. It doesn’t eat the mice! Rather.. the sap acts like… prunes do, to humans. This plant eats mouse poop!
Parasitic wasps also target aphids. So if you have an aphid problem it's a natural pesticide.
Hank, I really hope the sponsors are rewarding you generously. Have you ever considered doing a cooking show?
Love this channel
Man, some people don't see just how ALIVE plants and insects are. They may not have what we call consciousness, but you can't tell me they aren't a society in their own way.
It’s nice that as time goes by you and the other hosts now speak slower. For a non native english speaker it’s much easier to follow. 👍
Evolution is sometimes just so mind-boggling. Like those plants at 22:57. How does that even happen?
One plant just happens to have a mutation that makes its stem slightly more tasty? And some ants happen to come along and protect the plant? Was this single plant enough for this mutation to be carried on and selected for? Or did this mutation occur several times?
Do nature sometimes 'miss' beneficial strategies just because a single mutation wasn't enough and the mutation chance was too small to ever spread?
Evolution, man.
That is one of the many reasons I’m a creationist. All the “science” against creation can’t be repeated and therefore isn’t science. All the evidence suggesting an earth millions of years old could have been created that way. The whole rock dating system seems completely unreliable and arbitrary to me anyway. It’s way easier for me to accept that then the idea that all these ridiculously complex organisms and unlikely symbiotic relationships just evolved by chance over millions of years leaving behind practiaclly zero evidence of transitional forms. Which one sounds more logical to you? Men latch on to the theory of evolution because creation means we have a Creator to whom we are accountable. We would rather live in sin and darkness then trust and obey the One who made us. It would be easier for me to believe a super computer evolved by chance then an eyeball or any other of millions of complex things in nature.
Hank I was on Spotify and say one of your tracks 🤣. It was fantastic
paused at 0:27 Didn't we find out a few years ago that without the fungus involved between insects and plants that we wouldn't actually have the insects or the plants to talk about? Like, didn't we figure out that its a three-way street instead of just two? anyways. I proceeds to watch. :)
Ahhhhhhh. there it is... i shoulda waited just 4 more seconds... ROFLMAOS! to be fair as this comilation plays... I'm pretty sure it was you guyses video i was thinking about. evem more ROFLMAOS! LOL
13:15 despite the obvious negative, couldnt it be used to create a more "gentle" Methode of pruning?
One video on plant material cellulose and it's contribution to GHG please!
This is an amazing video. Love stuff like this.
It's not pronounced the Lowes pitcher plant. Think of it more like Low . E . I
Keep makin more awesome videos. Knowledge is power!
Michael talks with his hands more than an Italian Peter Griffin
The Vite Ramen sponsorship was just a soft launch of Hank's mukbang channel. 🍜
IMO 4 the spidle bug disease the best option would be to find a bacteriofage virus that would go 4 the bacteria and it would take care of the problem both inside the bug's gut and inside the plants.
Hell yeah Bee's! I love them! Glad to know some kinds of love triangles do have a happy ending, for all parties involved :)
Seems BOTH interesting & KOOL ALL @ da same time Ngl brotha
What about the effects of drought on trees and how they flower fruit and help the animals around them.
Good video ❤
Tree shrew aren't rodents though, but a distinct order known as Scandentia. They're potentially fairly close relatives of primates, but it's been back and forth for awhile. Interestingly, some species are known to get drunk-- seemingly intentionally-- on the fermented nectar of certain flowers.
So much cool stuff!
I do the same thing bees do when I take a new trail, so I know what my turn looks like, and I can get home. Lol.
Fun fact: "fastidiosa" (from the plant killing bacteria) means "annoying" in italian
Theory: Oh no the yeast is compromising the nectar quality
Reality: and giving everything else a glow up.
8:45 I love my Sundews. Even more so if I get fruit flies.
Interesting!!
What if they see well on a certain distance? For smaler ones they might need to be so close to the flower that they cant see it as a hole and get a picture that makes sence to them... If the bee is bigger it might can be so far from the flower it can see "the whole flower"/ a bigger picture, a picture that are possible for them to make sence of? :p // I mean if we would stand infront of a gigant and look at his gigant shoe,,, if wer small enught we would only see it as a "black wall" infront of us, but the bigger we get the more we see.... Like if we are bigger we might see that it is a shoe and if we are even bigger than that we might see that it is a gigant person, with black shoes.
So what im hearing is that bees, flowers, and yeast are in a thriving polyamorous relationship.
Are their any herbivorous plants?
I’d like to know this too
Nice video
I want a Vite Ramen, but I'm in Brazil, how can I get it? 😋
what if the ones that flew a bit further and remembered when they noticed a good find, evolved bigger and being able to fly further out cuz they could feed themselves better?
I'm a plant nerd, and I approve this message 😁👉🌿
Where do the birds come into this situation? I heard they have something to do with how baby is formed.
What baby?
If you listen closely to the background music in this episode, you can hear them *humming* about flowers and birds!
@@darklessian uhhmmmm I didn't watch the whole video lol I was stupid
A 28 minute scishow. Bet
I cant but imagine bees with those vaccuums like in Bee Movie. I also wonder if food looks like crumbly cheese to them.
thermogenetic plants used as thermo power generators?
Aren't there pitcher plants that also function, essentially, like toilets for small animals like frogs?
today i learned that toilet can naturally occur which kinda proof our toilet is perfectly designed
🤯 anyone else. Wow! 🖖
I had an idea. Dont know if anyone has thought of this but why don't we have high-schools running trials and studies so they can be replicated all the time and out of the hands of companies?
Saw the thumbnail, thought the flower was a chicken, saw the bee, and thought to myself, "yea, the birds and the bees get pretty complicated sometimes."
Needless to say, I clicked pretty quickly
Nature invented toilets millions of years before humans did. Go nature!
TIL smol bees isnt flower prejudice
That thumbnail is complicated; I always think it's a bee staring a a chicken's butt.
Ahh, that's was great! But God da*n you guys talk so quick, all the info starts to turn into a blur! I just got science blitzed!
k so i love your groups vids but pls. the editor. take 1 second..maybe 2. to please notice the edit when you cut stuff off
Well this is interesting
Why yes it is
Tiz indeed an interest
Wow much interest indeed. I concur
This subject has piqued my interest in such a compelling way
Yeast in the honey for healthy bees? BEE PENICILLIN
Big bees like big flowers. Hehe.
Hank, the bigger Bumblebees carry little cameras. The little Bumblebees don't have pockets. Did you sleep through that day in science class?
Craft ramen?!
What I learned:
*Plants have better romantic lives than I have...
Bees can be seen eating fungus from rotting wood.
Everything on this planet is complicated
Echo located bat rest stops. XD
I’m not accepting 15 minutes to digest an insect. Ever try to get something to disappear in acid? Maybe ‘starts to digest within 15 minutes.’
nectar toilet.. not on my bingo card. evolution is defo random :)
Why fast forward him?
Oh Don, it’s fastidiosa not fastidioSAR!
They just do it to look menacing as hell
Maybe bigger bees are just older and wiser.
I don't know if it's a joke, but he meant that different species of bees that are bigger than others species
NO WAY TOILETS EVOLVED (ToT)
Why were they talking so fast in the flashback portions? Were you guys over dosed on caffeine?
Your comments about brown fat are totally wrong. No glucose involved! Fat is broken down without making ATP, thus generating heat.
Bee's... Awesome, brilliant, amazing, wonderful; adorable (at least European bee).
Gonna kill us all too...
£6.50 is a rip off for instant noodles. I'll stick with the 40p noodles I know I like.
You know, the TH-camr Scott Christian Sava draw you today
Spit bugs 🤝 Squirt
ITS PISS?!?!? Nooo-!
Ever since SciShow started doing shorts, their content has dropped dramatically. You used to upload a *_new_* video daily, now we're lucky to get a new video once per week. During that week, we get compilations from old videos like this, or worse shorts which are the destroyers of knowledge based channels, because of their length. You're feeding your own downfall with Shorts! There's a great old adage relevant here: *_When you're onto a good thing; stick to it!_*
When I see it’s a compilation, I stop the video and move on. There are way too many repeats. It’s like they gave up trying. Shorts, I don’t even bother with those on any channel.
Soo you Say rodents use plant toilets? Cute.
Hank are you out of your goddamn mind??? $100 for a 10 pack of instant ramen when you include their outrageous shipping and handling fee. What a terrible sponsor to have.
First Opening Hymn Was Finalized Recall, Your Dad Christened Me For With Also For The Benefit Of The Backbenchers A While Later, by 5, 7..
Song Lists.
No Frequent Flying Kite Flyers Flown Kites Up Where I Hear Not Yet Ever Since Also..
1988 onwards..
2000 onwards.
December 20 2012 onwards that Total Alcohol Consumption was 10 liters Of Under By Almost 10 miles in atleast..
You guys speak so fast omg slow down
Put compilation at the start of your titles I'm tired of getting baited into adding recycled content into my daily viewing. I have been watching Scishow from the start so I have no interest in rewatching past content unless I want to review something, and even then I will go find the specific video instead of sitting through a half hour compilation that may or may not contain what I'm looking for. Just to be clear make your compilation videos they are a great way to introduce new viewers to older content and the information therein but just take the bare minimum effort to make it more obvious what I'm clicking on please.
Compilation is in the title...and videos longer than 7-8 minutes are always compilations.. I don't know about "from the start" but for YEARS...
You're welcome.
who would buy instant ramon that's $6 a serving and that's with %10 off. There's tons of fire ramon out now that's priced way better yea its not as good for you but its way better then the 25 cent packs.
You know it's just to get paid to make more videos that theydo ads for the ramen, not really because we should eat it
Ugh. Highlight guy needs to slow down and breathe.
It's been time compressed to keep all the segments and still have it under 30 minutes...
"It's not bird spit, its bug pee. Let's be clear". Thanks Hank.😂
Thank you so much#Drosereaaron on TH-cam for what you did in my life, if you are in any situation with infertility, PCOS, fibroid♥️♥️
Stop with the compilations!