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Transcript
00:00:00You know, scorpions are interesting little creatures – six legs, two claws, and a powerful
00:00:05stinger.
00:00:06Now what if humans also wore exoskeletons to protect themselves?
00:00:10So an exoskeleton's mainly made up of chitin, which is a complex material found in insects
00:00:16and reptiles.
00:00:18Thanks to their exoskeletons, these tiny creatures can defend themselves and perform acts of
00:00:22superhuman strength.
00:00:25If you wore a scorpion exoskeleton, you'd be able to climb up any building you wanted.
00:00:30With massive claws in the front, it would be easy to grab hold of things and even cut
00:00:35through them.
00:00:36Might be hard to open a bag of chips, though.
00:00:38But at night, you'd have problems – UV rays.
00:00:41They wouldn't hurt you or cut through you or anything, but you'd definitely glow in
00:00:46the dark.
00:00:47Not exactly ideal for sneaking up on someone.
00:00:50A scorpion's tail is venomous and packs a nasty sting.
00:00:54You could use it to sting anyone in your way, plus it's long enough that you could defend
00:00:59yourself from a safe distance.
00:01:01Scorpions live all over the world in some of the harshest environments, from freezing
00:01:05icy landscapes to scorching hot deserts.
00:01:09If it freezes, a scorpion can even thaw itself out under the sun.
00:01:14This next creature also has two claws and six legs, but it doesn't have a stinger.
00:01:18It's the mighty crab.
00:01:21Its shell is a lot more powerful than a scorpion's, and it's surprisingly quick.
00:01:25So you'd be seriously powerful in one of those.
00:01:28The downside is you'd only be able to walk sideways.
00:01:32And you'd be delicious to someone like me.
00:01:35There are almost 5,000 species of crab all over the world, each with special skills.
00:01:40In a crab costume, you'd definitely be a master digger.
00:01:44Sure, you'd be doing it sideways, but those legs and claws can get the job done.
00:01:49If there were crab-inspired bodysuits, they'd most likely be made for digging.
00:01:54You could even work underwater.
00:01:55You'd be agile, strong, and you'd look awesome.
00:02:00Humans in ant suits would dominate any construction site.
00:02:04Ants live in colonies around most of the world and rely on strength and numbers.
00:02:08But that doesn't mean each little ant's weak or anything.
00:02:11Just the opposite.
00:02:13There are actually already exoskeleton suits out there to help humans do some heavy lifting.
00:02:18But to use the actual strength of an ant would be a game-changer.
00:02:22An ant can lift around 1,000 times its own weight.
00:02:26In a group, they can drag a bird across a field without breaking a sweat.
00:02:30What's even crazier is that they can carry things while they're climbing straight up
00:02:35a wall.
00:02:36Or even upside down.
00:02:37Wow.
00:02:38Imagine a group of humans dragging a jet fighter up the side of the Empire State Building.
00:02:43There wouldn't be any need for bulldozers or cranes anymore.
00:02:46Just strap into an ant suit and get her done.
00:02:50Buildings could be inspired by those huge underground ant colonies.
00:02:54Ants are amazing at making tunnels.
00:02:57Imagine wearing a body suit that flies through the air like a stealth craft.
00:03:01If you wore a hornet suit, you'd have it made.
00:03:04They have a tough exoskeleton that's surprisingly light and easy to maneuver.
00:03:09Picture a fleet of strong flying acrobats.
00:03:11Oh, and don't forget the stinger.
00:03:14Most people think of hornets as pests, but they're not.
00:03:17They do a lot of good for the ecosystem, like eating up those pesky mosquitoes.
00:03:23Having a hornet suit would be essential for any kind of undercover work, not so much for
00:03:27office work.
00:03:28A strong, aerodynamic body suit with a powerful stinger?
00:03:32Sign me up!
00:03:34An armadillo uses keratin to make its body suit.
00:03:37You know, the stuff your hair and nails are made of?
00:03:40What makes it unique is that it's foldable and durable at the same time.
00:03:44It's made up of hexagon-shaped plates that go all over its back.
00:03:49When there's danger around, it can roll up into a ball.
00:03:53Scientists are studying how to make durable bending glass just like the armadillo's
00:03:56body plates.
00:03:58Humans wouldn't be 100% protected with this thing on, but they'd be able to withstand
00:04:03pretty much anything.
00:04:04You could jump out of a plane, no parachute, land on a rooftop, brush it off, roll off
00:04:09the edge, and land safely on a nearby car, all while being chased by tricked-out cars
00:04:14and helicopters.
00:04:15Nah, I've been streaming too many movies.
00:04:19Being one of the slowest animals on Earth does come with an advantage.
00:04:23You got a heavy shell on you 24-7 for protection.
00:04:27Just like armadillos, tortoise shells are made of keratin.
00:04:30What's sweet about its shell is that it grows with the tortoise.
00:04:34Crabs and other shelled animals have to keep replacing theirs as they outgrow them.
00:04:39Animals would be almost invincible if they wore tortoise suits, but they'd be insanely
00:04:44slow and draw a lot of attention.
00:04:46Still, if something goes down, you could just hide in your shell and wait it out.
00:04:52Hopping around from place to place would be pretty sweet, but what about flying?
00:04:57Grasshoppers can do both!
00:04:58They have a set of wings they tuck in behind them, which they unleash after their epic
00:05:02take-off jump.
00:05:03Oh, and they come in all shapes and sizes – great for camouflage!
00:05:08A grasshopper can jump around 10 inches high and 3 feet long.
00:05:12Uh, far?
00:05:13Uh, out?
00:05:14Well, that far.
00:05:16Anyway, it's all thanks to its back legs.
00:05:19Grasshoppers basically catapult themselves when they feel threatened or when they see
00:05:23something delicious.
00:05:25If you had a grasshopper suit, you'd be able to jump a whole football field in one go.
00:05:30You can forget about being stuck in traffic.
00:05:32It might not be the most powerful armor, but with those jumping skills and landing skills,
00:05:38getting your weekend shopping done would be a breeze.
00:05:41Or you could be the world's coolest pizza delivery person.
00:05:44Just imagine the tips!
00:05:46The biggest animal on this list doesn't really have an exoskeleton, but it does have
00:05:51a thick, thick skin.
00:05:53This massive beast's one of the most powerful mammals on Earth, and it comes with a strong
00:05:57horn near its nose for protection.
00:06:00Any guesses?
00:06:01It might look scary, but that humongous rhino's an herbivore – it's not gonna eat you.
00:06:07But rhinos do attack when they feel provoked, so keep your distance.
00:06:10Their thick skin makes them look like a tank, and it keeps them nice and warm.
00:06:16With your rhino suit on, you'd have a monster advantage over the average human.
00:06:20The thick skin suit would be really useful for extreme weather conditions, cold or hot.
00:06:25And a horn on the top of your head would send a pretty powerful message.
00:06:29And it's not just beep-beep.
00:06:32Jaws that look like antlers?
00:06:34Six legs?
00:06:35Meet the stag beetle.
00:06:37Its oversized jaws are used for impressing its friends, and sometimes for a little wrestling.
00:06:42But don't worry, these fearsome jaws aren't strong enough to hurt you.
00:06:46A human stag beetle suit would be pretty weird if you saw one walking down the street.
00:06:51But who knows what people will be into in 10-20 years?
00:06:55Maybe this'll be the future of wrestling!
00:06:58This reptile has the toughest skin of its kind.
00:07:01Crocodiles are fearsome animals, virtually unchanged since the days of the dinosaurs.
00:07:06Our modern-day croc is still top of the food chain, with scales on its back and a very
00:07:10soft underbelly.
00:07:12Its scales are made from some of the most durable materials out there.
00:07:16And don't forget that powerful jaw!
00:07:18It can crush watermelons like chewing gum.
00:07:21A human croc suit would be fast, strong, but mostly limited to hanging around lakes and
00:07:26rivers.
00:07:27It's not a great thing to be wearing during a game of hide-and-seek, though.
00:07:31You're it!
00:07:33This last creature takes the grand prize – toughest exoskeleton ever!
00:07:38It's smaller than a rhino for sure.
00:07:40Presenting the iron-clad beetle.
00:07:43Even the name makes people's knees weak.
00:07:45This beetle has interlocking wing covers that make it twice as strong as it should be.
00:07:50But get this – it doesn't even fly!
00:07:52Yeah, it doesn't need to escape from danger.
00:07:55Whatever you throw at it, it can't be hurt, dented, or even crushed.
00:07:59Not even by a car!
00:08:01These beetles can live up to 2 years – way longer than other beetles who only stick around
00:08:06for a couple of weeks or months.
00:08:08A human suit based on the iron-clad beetle?
00:08:11Wow, that name gets me every time.
00:08:13It'd probably be resistant to just about any collision.
00:08:16Walking through moving traffic would be like strolling in the park on a warm afternoon.
00:08:21This suit would be perfect for deep-sea exploration since it's resistant to pressure.
00:08:26That'd make it excellent for outer space adventures too!
00:08:30Lions, elephants, and bears – oh my!
00:08:34Three of the most beautiful, yet intimidating members of the animal kingdom.
00:08:38But what intimidates these creatures, if anything?
00:08:41You might be surprised – let's take a look!
00:08:44How about we start with the universally recognized king of the jungle – the lion!
00:08:50We'll get to the elephants in a moment, but there's actually one in the room.
00:08:54You know, the one that claims that a certain jungle cat is afraid of the most vital substance
00:08:59known to man?
00:09:00A small hint – it covers 70% of Earth's surface.
00:09:04So is it true?
00:09:06Is the ferocious lion afraid of water?
00:09:09It's actually a myth.
00:09:11Lions enjoy taking a dip in the water because it allows them to cool off.
00:09:16This makes sense if you think about the climates the creatures have to face.
00:09:20Temperatures in a savanna climate range from 68 to 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
00:09:25You know all of us humans hit the beach whenever the weather is like that.
00:09:29So why should we expect anything different from the lion?
00:09:32Especially given that the creatures typically carry around between 280 and 420 pounds of
00:09:38weight, as well as a thick coat of fur.
00:09:41The ironic thing about this whole lions are afraid of water myth is that they're actually
00:09:46fantastic swimmers.
00:09:48The same goes for all of your other favorite large cats from these warm weather climates,
00:09:53such as tigers, leopards, jaguars, and ocelots.
00:09:57It's actually large cats from cold climates that do their best to avoid water.
00:10:02This applies to such felines as bobcats, lynxes, and snow leopards.
00:10:07The latter lives in places like the cold alpine tundra biome.
00:10:11It's a rocky mountainous area.
00:10:13Temperatures there, on average, get as low as 33 degrees Fahrenheit.
00:10:18Again, it makes perfect sense that these big cold weather cats despise water.
00:10:23Getting their fur coats wet would dampen their chances of staying warm, pun intended.
00:10:29I don't think you have to look too far to piece together where this lions are afraid
00:10:34of water myth comes from.
00:10:35In fact, there's a good chance for some of you watching this video that the reason is
00:10:40near your computer screen right now, jumping around and causing mischief.
00:10:45That's right, we may have jumped ourselves to a conclusion that certain behavioral aspects
00:10:50of our own pet cats would match that of a lion.
00:10:55House cats, though related to all the previously mentioned big cats, are not actually directly
00:11:00descended from them.
00:11:01They instead have developed over millions of years from a single wild ancestor that
00:11:06still exists in the wild today, the Near Eastern Wild Cat.
00:11:11As water is not plentiful in the Middle East, these cats were not exposed to it to any great
00:11:16degree.
00:11:17Like their descendants, they only appreciate it as a food source.
00:11:21As you likely see with your pet, they hardly bathe, swim, or interact with water in general.
00:11:27Lucky for them, they don't even need to.
00:11:30These domestic felines use their tongues to clean themselves.
00:11:34They can do this because their tongues have tiny hook-shaped papillae.
00:11:38They assist cats in grooming out knots and keeping the coat clean, sweet-smelling, and
00:11:43in overall immaculate shape.
00:11:47Cats in general are individualistic creatures, and you may be screaming at your screen right
00:11:52now proclaiming that your cat in fact loves water, and this is definitely possible.
00:11:58Some cats even like to play with water, for example, drips from the tap or bubbles in
00:12:03the bath.
00:12:05There are specific breeds of house cats that are known to enjoy the aqua life more than
00:12:10others.
00:12:11The Turkish Van, for example, which is also appropriately known as the Swimming Cat.
00:12:16It's believed that the breed developed an affinity for water by swimming in Lake Van
00:12:21to cool down.
00:12:22This lake is in the area the animals evolved from.
00:12:26Moving on to a problem a cat definitely doesn't have to deal with, have you ever heard of
00:12:31Musophobia, also known as Suriphobia?
00:12:35Both words are valid names for a fear of mice and rats.
00:12:40There is a common belief that one particular animal that has this fear is the beautiful
00:12:45elephant.
00:12:46That's right, the same animal that, depending on the species, stands at the height of roughly
00:12:5110 feet and weighs about 9,000 pounds.
00:12:55It's supposedly afraid of a creature that is a mere 4 inches in length and weighs less
00:12:59than 1 pound.
00:13:01But why did this belief appear?
00:13:03Well, the reasoning for this rumor is based on the possibility that elephants are paranoid
00:13:09about mice climbing inside their trunks.
00:13:12If a mouse succeeded in doing this, there would be a potential that it could cause irritation
00:13:17and blockage within the trunk.
00:13:19Now I'm not trying to be the guy who spoils parties, but it looks like this belief is
00:13:24also a myth.
00:13:26Experts claim that there's no concrete evidence that suggests elephants are afraid of mice.
00:13:31The most they'll concede is that the giant animal may sometimes take fright by the sudden
00:13:36appearance of the tiny rodent, which is the exact same for ourselves.
00:13:41Experts also claim that even if a mouse did get inside an elephant's trunk, the latter
00:13:46could effortlessly blow it back out with a puff of air.
00:13:49There's also some evidence that, in most cases, the animal remains unbothered by rodents and
00:13:55even allows mice to climb on their heads and trunks.
00:13:59Researchers are sure that as long as an elephant is healthy, there's no other animal that it
00:14:03fears simply because of its size.
00:14:06So lions aren't afraid of water, elephants don't seem to be afraid of mice, then are
00:14:12any of these animal fear rumors real?
00:14:15Hmm, we're probably going to be left just as disappointed by asking if a bear has any
00:14:20legit fear, right?
00:14:22Well, ladies and gentlemen, please give a round of applause for none other than people's
00:14:27best friend.
00:14:28That's right, bears do feel quite uncomfortable whenever they are around dogs.
00:14:34And all this despite a very distant genetic link to them.
00:14:37When the two creatures encounter each other, the dog has the ability to chase, intimidate,
00:14:43corner, or antagonize the bear.
00:14:46As for the powerful animal, it will instead try to avoid any run-ins with the dog.
00:14:51There's even a type of Finnish dog breed known as the Karelian Bear Dog.
00:14:56This dog species is specifically used for standing up to large animals, such as bears.
00:15:02This dog has a great sense of direction, body flexibility and control, courage, sense of
00:15:07smell and persistence.
00:15:10So does this mean you can walk with your dog through an area known to have bears and feel
00:15:14absolutely calm and confident because of the presence of your loyal companion?
00:15:19Not really.
00:15:21Despite the fact that bears may be nervous around dogs, we can't forget their size and
00:15:25power.
00:15:26The American Black Bear can reach a height of nearly 7 feet and weigh up to 660 pounds.
00:15:32If a mother bear has nowhere to run or feels that her cubs might be in danger, it's extremely
00:15:38possible that she will lash out, which can only mean big trouble for you or your dog.
00:15:44So nobody should ever test this theory.
00:15:47Instead, if you're ever planning to visit an unknown area with your dog, you should
00:15:52first plan ahead and familiarize yourself with the wildlife you may encounter there.
00:15:57Because you never know what a bear will do when it notices you and your pooch, especially
00:16:02given their mild case of Cinephobia, which is the name given to a fear of dogs.
00:16:08At least we were able to find one genuine fear of another animal out of these three
00:16:12tough members of the animal kingdom.
00:16:15Isn't it weird that a dog, something that gives so many of us such joy and comfort in
00:16:20our own homes, is still the creature that's brave enough to take on a bear if need be?
00:16:26Well, not all heroes wear capes.
00:16:28Some just wear fur and a dog collar.
00:16:31Why don't we take a look at what frightens these great companions of ours?
00:16:35Ever wondered why your own dog becomes uncomfortable when it hears loud noises?
00:16:39The degree of fear differs in each dog, but it's the simple unpredictability of thunder
00:16:45and flashing lightning, or loud bangs that accompany firework displays, that causes your
00:16:50dog uneasiness.
00:16:51The inability to understand what's causing this deafening noise may cause your dog to
00:16:56tremble, tuck its tail between its legs, or even run away from home.
00:17:02Another thing that can really frighten our loyal pets is when we leave them all alone
00:17:06by themselves.
00:17:08This can, unfortunately, lead to being a nightmare for your next-door neighbors, because a common
00:17:13symptom of this fear is excessive barking.
00:17:17This fear may also cause problems closer to home.
00:17:20Ever asked yourself why your dog chewed up your sofa?
00:17:24Housebreaking accidents are typical when a dog has separation anxiety.
00:17:29You can't stay mad at your dog for long, though, right?
00:17:32Your pooch will make it up to you when you guys run into a bear.
00:17:37If you think your folks were too harsh on you, perhaps this list of negligent animals
00:17:42will show you a broader perspective on bad parenting.
00:17:48Female horses, or mares, have a gestation period of about a year.
00:17:52This might sound like a terribly long time, but elephants won't agree with that.
00:17:56They carry their young for up to 22 months before giving birth.
00:18:01Unlike the other animals who prefer to rest waiting for their cub to arrive, for mares,
00:18:06pregnancy means party time!
00:18:08The moment the female horse gets pregnant, she goes for a walk around the herd and mates
00:18:13with every stallion.
00:18:15Although it seems meaningless because she's already pregnant, there's a reasonable explanation.
00:18:20The male horses are pretty proud and aggressive with their rivals.
00:18:24But if a stallion would think that a brand new foal is his, the chances that he will
00:18:29hurt the youngling will fall to zero.
00:18:31So the mare's actual intention is to keep the foal safe by making it impossible for
00:18:36stallions to determine the real father, which is a good mothering quality.
00:18:41That's why mares are at the bottom of our list.
00:18:46Female cuckoo birds are famous for abandoning their chicks before even hatching.
00:18:50They simply lay eggs in other birds' nests and leave for good.
00:18:55It's hard to distinguish native eggs from foundlings.
00:18:58That's why the unlucky foster birds incubate them all equally.
00:19:02Meanwhile, cuckoo birds even enjoy their single, independent lives.
00:19:06Unfortunately, it's not a win-win deal.
00:19:09The cuckoo chick brings chaos and losses to the foster parents.
00:19:12It grows faster and hatches earlier, making the smaller purebred chicks fall out of the
00:19:18nest.
00:19:21Sparrows are so cute, but don't buy into this innocent little thing.
00:19:24A female house sparrow is a good, caring mom, but also a furious stepmother who might terrify
00:19:31even Cinderella.
00:19:34Sparrows are typically monogamous, but sometimes they can have connections outside the native
00:19:38nest.
00:19:39When it happens, a female sparrow can literally figure out the other women that mated with
00:19:44their partner and destroy their nests.
00:19:47Why?
00:19:48Just to make sure the male sparrow will have enough time to father her own offspring.
00:19:52Apparently, they haven't heard of babysitters.
00:19:59Mothership seals are dedicated to their pups during the first two weeks, so they can't
00:20:02be called the worst mothers in the animal kingdom.
00:20:06In this short period, they keep their offspring close, nursing and feeding them round the
00:20:11clock.
00:20:12But after that, mother seals say goodbye and leave the younger generation alone on the
00:20:17ice.
00:20:18Seal pups are still very vulnerable because they don't know how to swim, hunt, or protect
00:20:23themselves.
00:20:24They should be at least two months old to learn all those skills.
00:20:28So they spend this time waiting, losing weight, and trying not to get eaten by predators.
00:20:34It's no wonder that only one-third of all little seals actually make it through the
00:20:38first year of life.
00:20:42Hamsters are harmless, cuddly, and cute, right?
00:20:45But still, they have one dark secret that can shock their owners if no one warns them.
00:20:51In some cases, hamster females may confuse their own offspring with dinner.
00:20:57Nobody knows exactly why, but scientists have developed several theories.
00:21:02Some suggest that they're trying to replenish nutrients after giving birth.
00:21:05Others claim that mother hamsters might feel stressed and threatened by too large a litter,
00:21:10so this action is a self-protection mechanism in a way.
00:21:14To avoid this sad ending, experts recommend keeping the mother hamster away from any stress
00:21:19and giving her all necessary nutrients.
00:21:26All or nothing is probably the favorite motto of black bears.
00:21:30They usually have two or three cubs at a time.
00:21:34But if a mother bear only has one cub for some reason, she's likely to abandon it,
00:21:39hoping for a larger litter the next year.
00:21:41Why?
00:21:42Probably because raising only one baby isn't worth the effort.
00:21:47That's a strange kind of laziness.
00:21:49And while a black bear cub may increase the chances of survival by having a sibling, pandas
00:21:54follow the opposite tradition.
00:21:56It's hard to admit, but these cute fluffy fellows are pretty negligent parents.
00:22:02Panda mothers usually have twins, but they prefer taking care of only one of them.
00:22:07They will feed and nurse the strongest cub.
00:22:09Meanwhile, the weakest one will be neglected and forced to survive on its own.
00:22:15The explanation for their cruelty is pretty practical.
00:22:18Pandas eat bamboo, but it's not nutritious enough to make milk for both cubs.
00:22:23Even pandas that live in the zoo follow the same tradition of abandonment.
00:22:27But thankfully, zookeepers provide all the cubs with milk equally.
00:22:36Although monkeys usually have the reputation of caring, responsible parents, these little
00:22:41mustache cuties stand out.
00:22:44After a gestation period of around five months, the mother tamarin usually gives birth to
00:22:49twins.
00:22:50If they happen to fall out of the tree by mistake, she will have the nerve to ignore
00:22:53her own cubs crying.
00:22:56Some of them can throw the cubs out of the tree voluntarily for unknown reasons.
00:23:01Who knows what hides in those little heads?
00:23:04But not all of them are so cold-hearted.
00:23:07If a mother tamarin is surrounded by a wide social group of strong food providers and
00:23:11protectors, she's likely to take good care of her offspring.
00:23:15But when no one's watching or helping, she can stop making any effort, probably because
00:23:20the cubs won't have a high chance of survival anyway.
00:23:24Although mustached tamarins look like great pet material, experts claim that these monkeys
00:23:29require more daily commitment and dedication than any other pet.
00:23:33Well, at least you're too heavy to kick out of the tree!
00:23:40Bunnies are usually associated with warm hugs and cuddles.
00:23:44In real life, they're not so gentle when it comes to their own newborns.
00:23:49Rabbit mothers prefer leaving the burrow as soon as they give birth.
00:23:53And these cute little bunnies have to learn to face life challenges on their own.
00:23:58They only interact with their mother for a few minutes a day during feedings.
00:24:04Scientists suggest that the female rabbit abandons her offspring to confuse predators
00:24:09and keep them away.
00:24:11Of course, this method doesn't provide a 100% guarantee.
00:24:15After all, the rabbit mothers don't put much effort into creating a safe shelter for the
00:24:19cubs.
00:24:20They usually build it out in the open.
00:24:23And where's the happy father, I hear you ask?
00:24:26Well, it's recommended to isolate the mother from any male rabbits while she raises the
00:24:30newborns.
00:24:32Unlike the horses, male rabbits will probably not hurt the younglings.
00:24:36He can impregnate the female rabbit again, even on the same day she gives birth!
00:24:43Reptiles aren't known for being warm and caring creatures.
00:24:46And their practical approach to life extends to their parenting style as well.
00:24:51But long-tailed skinks bring personal boundaries protection to the next level.
00:24:56This mother lizard will eat her own eggs when too many predators gather around her home.
00:25:01She won't make any effort to fight off the danger.
00:25:05Perhaps her philosophy is, if I can't have it, no one will.
00:25:09After the threat is gone, they'll just live on and lay new eggs.
00:25:14The female eagle lays 2-3 eggs within a week.
00:25:18After around a month of the breeding period, the eaglets finally emerge, but their problems
00:25:23are only getting started.
00:25:25Technically, all eggs have slightly different ages, so they don't hatch simultaneously.
00:25:31And when it comes to sibling competition, black eagles can get pretty aggressive towards
00:25:35younger chicks.
00:25:37The older chicks usually start to peck the younger before they even get the chance to
00:25:41start their lives, probably to reduce the competition for food and space.
00:25:46But the eagle mommy won't bother to pull apart her chicks, even if their fight leads to serious
00:25:51injuries.
00:25:52She would neither scold the winner nor save the loser.
00:25:56Apparently, her indifferent attitude should prepare the chicks for the harsh life of an
00:26:00adult eagle.
00:26:02After all, it's a bird of prey, and it keeps the habit of hunting mammals and other birds
00:26:07at their nests throughout life.
00:26:12Now sloths can hold their breath longer than dolphins.
00:26:16Yep, incredible but true.
00:26:18They slow their heart rate so much, they can stay under the surface for up to 40 minutes.
00:26:23Unlike fish, dolphins and whales are aquatic mammals, which means they can't breathe underwater.
00:26:29When it comes to breathing, they're more similar to us than the fish.
00:26:33Both of them have lungs, and they breathe air through something we know as a blowhole.
00:26:38When they're under the surface, they hold their breath until they come up for some air
00:26:42again.
00:26:43Dolphins can stay under the water for 10 minutes.
00:26:46A sperm whale can hold its breath for 90 minutes, while an elephant seal holds the record when
00:26:51it comes to aquatic mammals and can stay under the water for 2 hours without having
00:26:56to go up.
00:26:57There's a wasp so tiny, much tinier than its name, it's smaller than an amoeba, even
00:27:03though amoebas are made of one cell only.
00:27:06You can see this wasp has the same body parts as the rest of the bugs – wings, brain,
00:27:11eyes, and the rest – but it's really a tiny version of an insect since it's only
00:27:168 thousandths of an inch long.
00:27:19Even the smallest adult insect we know of is a parasitic wasp with a big name, also
00:27:25known as the fairy fly.
00:27:27Their males don't have wings, they're blind, and only 5 thousandths of an inch long.
00:27:32It's no coincidence each animal species has different colors and patterns.
00:27:37One of the reasons for that is to help them stand out when looking for their potential
00:27:42mating partners or to send a warning to predators they're poisonous and hope they get the
00:27:47message right.
00:27:48Often there are ambush predators, such as tigers.
00:27:51It's very important for them to remain invisible because the difference is huge.
00:27:56If their prey sees them before they get there, no dinner that night.
00:28:01But why exactly are tigers orange?
00:28:04For us, orange is a color used for things that need to be ultra-visible.
00:28:08For example, items such as safety vests or traffic cones.
00:28:13To the human eye, orange will mostly stand out in the environment.
00:28:17So if there's a tiger coming for you, you'll spot it relatively easily.
00:28:21But humans have so-called trichromatic color vision.
00:28:25When light from your surroundings enters your eye, it hits the retina, a thin layer located
00:28:30in the back.
00:28:31To process that light, the retina uses two kinds of light receptors – rods and cones.
00:28:37Rods can only distinguish differences in light and darkness.
00:28:40They can't sense color.
00:28:42Our eyes will mostly rely on rods in dim light.
00:28:46Retinas are in charge of color perception.
00:28:49Humans mostly have three types – cones for green, blue, and red.
00:28:53That's exactly why we call our vision trichromatic.
00:28:57Most humans see three primary colors together with their colorful combinations.
00:29:01Apes, and some monkeys, also have such a style of vision.
00:29:06But most mammals that live on land, including cats, horses, deer, and dogs, have dichromatic
00:29:12color vision.
00:29:13Tigers in their eyes have cones for two colors only – green and blue.
00:29:18When humans get information from their green and blue cones only, they're considered
00:29:22colorblind since they can't, for example, tell the difference between green and red
00:29:27shades.
00:29:28This is similar with mammals that live on land.
00:29:31Deer are surely tiger's prey way more than humans.
00:29:35And deer don't see tigers as orange, but green.
00:29:39Seeing tigers would surely be more difficult to spot, which would mean more dinner for
00:29:44tigers.
00:29:45But evolution still decided to go with orange because it's simply easier to produce such
00:29:50a color.
00:29:51The only green mammal is a sloth, but its fur is not naturally green – it's because
00:29:56of the algae that grows in it.
00:29:58And they can hold their breath for 40 minutes.
00:30:01The water around the poles can get very cold during certain periods of the year.
00:30:06There's plenty of fish that live there, but when that happens, they need to swim away
00:30:10to survive.
00:30:11But there's a special group of fish native to the southern ocean near Antarctica.
00:30:17The temperatures there are from 28 to 39 degrees F. Technically, that's below freezing, but
00:30:23all those dissolved salts in the seawater don't allow it to freeze over.
00:30:28And these fish can survive because they have a special feature called glycoprotein.
00:30:34It helps them stay in their home because it acts as sort of a natural antifreeze.
00:30:38It's a protein that prevents all those ice crystals from forming in their blood and helps
00:30:43it continue to flow normally.
00:30:45Have you ever wondered how tiny animals like ants breathe?
00:30:49Try to open your mouth and throat, but at the same time, hold your chest and diaphragm
00:30:54still.
00:30:55The diaphragm is a muscular structure that separates the chest and abdominal cavities
00:31:00in all mammals.
00:31:02It expands as you breathe.
00:31:04If you can't do this, you can't hold your breath, because oxygen will still find its
00:31:08way into your lungs.
00:31:10At least, enough of it to keep up with your body's demands.
00:31:14But generally, when you breathe, diaphragm is actively pumping air in and out of your
00:31:19body.
00:31:20To survive without the diaphragm doing so, you'd need more than one throat and a way
00:31:25smaller body.
00:31:27Now, ants have 9 or 10 pairs of openings along the sides of their tiny bodies.
00:31:32They're called spiracles, and each is connected to branching series of tubes.
00:31:37It's a system similar to human lungs.
00:31:40Their blood doesn't carry oxygen from those tubes to the rest of the body.
00:31:44Instead, the tubes spread this oxygen.
00:31:47The endings of these branches directly touch the membranes of their cells.
00:31:51This can only work in really small animals.
00:31:54When the body is bigger than 8 tenths of an inch, these tubes are too long, so they
00:31:59can't diffuse air fast enough.
00:32:02There are a couple of reasons why giraffes have long necks, which, by the way, can grow
00:32:07up to be 6 and a half feet long.
00:32:10From first glance, it seems evolution gave them those to reach the sweetest topmost leaves
00:32:15of the trees.
00:32:16It's exclusive access other animals can only dream of, so giraffes don't have to
00:32:22compete for the best bites.
00:32:24But over time, researchers realized it's not the only reason.
00:32:28They also think the neck could be a good factor when male giraffes go into combat.
00:32:34The same as male antelopes will use their prongs or when a stag uses its antlers.
00:32:40The thicker the neck, the bigger the chances to win the combat.
00:32:44Some insects play possum when there's a predator nearby.
00:32:48For instance, in one research, scientists have observed an antlion larva insect.
00:32:54It played possum for 61 minutes.
00:32:56How does this even help?
00:32:58Well, let's say you're in a garden where you see a bunch of identical bushes with soft
00:33:03fruit.
00:33:04You go to the first bush and start collecting and eating fruits.
00:33:07Mmm, yummy, it's so simple!
00:33:09And you're doing it relatively fast.
00:33:12But as you strip that bush, it's getting harder for you to find more fruits.
00:33:16Plus, it's kind of irritating because it takes way more time now than at the beginning.
00:33:21So now you need to decide whether to stay there and try to find more, or simply switch
00:33:26to another bush to have it all easy and fast once again.
00:33:31Assuming you are the predator, and predators are greedy, you'll just look for ways to
00:33:35eat as much fruit as possible in the shortest period of time.
00:33:39This means you'll go on and start collecting fruits from another bush, and the next one,
00:33:44and so on.
00:33:46Researchers use the same logic when it comes to bird and antlion larva.
00:33:50It appears that insects waste the predator's time when playing possum, which has a significant
00:33:56impact on how things go later.
00:33:58That way, they encourage the predator to look for food elsewhere, because the predator doesn't
00:34:03have that much time to waste.
00:34:05So pretending to be not alive is actually a good way to stay alive.
00:34:11Depending on the species, young birds spend from 10 to 30 days in their eggs.
00:34:16There's no air inside, but Mother Nature created a perfect mechanism for them to still
00:34:21be able to breathe.
00:34:23As a young chick is developing inside the egg, it grows some kind of hollow sac-like
00:34:28structure from the gut.
00:34:30It's like a tiny pouch that fuses with a second membrane that goes around the chick and its
00:34:35yolk.
00:34:36So, one end is attached to the chick, while the other is close to the inner surface of
00:34:41the eggshell.
00:34:42That way, this special membrane acts like lung tissue and connects the outside world
00:34:47with the chick's circulatory system.
00:34:50Most animals have two eyes, but some species need more.
00:34:54For example, some reptiles, amphibians, and fish have a third eye on top of the head.
00:35:01It's not something that improves their vision that much, but it simply helps them navigate
00:35:05via the sunlight and regulate their body temperature.
00:35:09Many invertebrates have more than two eyes.
00:35:12Spiders have eight of them, because that way, they can spot their prey easier.
00:35:18Leopard seals look so cute, don't they?
00:35:21You wouldn't expect a creature with such lovely eyes to harm you, especially since, on TV,
00:35:26seals were always represented as playful animals who like to goof around with humans.
00:35:31But leopard seals are apex predators you shouldn't trust that much.
00:35:35After all, they got the name after a black spotted coat, similar to the one a big cat
00:35:40has.
00:35:41That means they're at the top of the food chain, with rarely any other animal ready
00:35:46to oppose them.
00:35:47It's not that common, but there are known cases where they attack humans.
00:35:51They're generally more aggressive than other seals.
00:35:54And they're not animals that play well with others.
00:35:56Generally, they prefer to spend time by themselves.
00:36:00The ends of their mouths are permanently curled upward, which looks like they always smile.
00:36:05Since they're solitary animals, finding a partner is harder, so they vocalize to attract
00:36:10it.
00:36:12They even sometimes sing underwater.
00:36:15Dingoes.
00:36:17When you see one, you might think you're looking at an average street dog.
00:36:20But be careful.
00:36:22Dingoes are more closely related to wolves than dogs.
00:36:26They're the biggest land predator in Australia and apex predators.
00:36:30They go after their prey in packs.
00:36:32When they get together, they can confront even bigger animals like the red kangaroo.
00:36:37They generally avoid humans, but when in significant numbers, you should avoid them.
00:36:43Who doesn't love pandas?
00:36:45Because they look so adorable and innocent, they've become a symbol of kindness and peace.
00:36:50Also, they're very lazy, since they spend most of their time resting and eating bamboo.
00:36:56Sounds peaceful, but you better not mess with them.
00:36:59If you accidentally cross a panda's territory, or the animal senses you're a danger, it can
00:37:04hurt you.
00:37:05They have strong jaws and claws, and in most cases, they're way stronger than humans.
00:37:11They rarely attack humans, but you're safer knowing that pandas are one of those animals
00:37:15you should leave to enjoy their own peace.
00:37:20Slow loris.
00:37:21These animals are so slow that even when something dangerous is approaching, they just stop moving.
00:37:27And don't let their big wide eyes and tiny nose get you.
00:37:31This creature may be adorable, but its bite is venomous and can get you into a lot of
00:37:35trouble.
00:37:36Scientists say slow loris tends to mimic a cobra.
00:37:40It's one of the few venomous mammals in the animal kingdom.
00:37:43And they don't secrete the venom in their mouth like a majority of other animals.
00:37:48Their secret lies in a sweat gland on their arms.
00:37:51So when you think about it, it's not a cute teddy bear, but more like a real little monster.
00:37:57The same goes with koalas.
00:37:59They look so calm, but they'll also attack you if they see you as a threat.
00:38:03It's not that they're typically dangerous animals.
00:38:06They spend most of their time high in eucalyptus trees since they sleep 22 hours a day.
00:38:11And if you came across a koala in the wild, the animal would probably just climb higher
00:38:16so it could avoid you.
00:38:17But if it felt threatened, it would most likely use its teeth and claws as a defense.
00:38:24A swan does not only look delicate and graceful, but romantic too.
00:38:28Many associate swans with true love, but in their case, love hurts because these animals
00:38:34could really harm you.
00:38:36If they see you as a potential danger, they'll do whatever it takes to protect themselves
00:38:40and especially their young.
00:38:42First, they will start hissing like a cat and then flap their giant wings.
00:38:46You should already be running at this point because they can use their strong beaks to
00:38:50pull, bite, and hit with their powerful wings.
00:38:55Platypus.
00:38:56This one looks a bit like a mythical creature and a combination of different animals.
00:39:01Take a look at its webbed feet and the snout.
00:39:04Definitely a duck, right?
00:39:06It has the fur of an otter and a paddle tail like a beaver.
00:39:09And they look so graceful when you see them swimming underwater using their webbed front
00:39:13feet.
00:39:14But they're not so elegant while walking on land.
00:39:16You see their nails come out so they can walk better.
00:39:19Also, the nails are venomous.
00:39:21You can see sharp stingers on the heels of their rear feet.
00:39:25And remember, they'll use them for self-defense.
00:39:29Poison dart frog.
00:39:30A toad looks way more dangerous than this small charming one that looks surprisingly
00:39:34beautiful, considering it's a frog.
00:39:37But in reality, a toad is just not that good looking.
00:39:40It won't harm you, unlike a poison dart frog.
00:39:43There are over a hundred poison dart frog species and they all have different toxicity
00:39:48levels.
00:39:49The golden one is the most dangerous that can take down ten humans if they only touch
00:39:55it.
00:39:56A hedgehog has a special place in most people's hearts, looking at this cute creature curling
00:40:02up like a little ball and running so innocently.
00:40:05But it's still a prickly animal that uses the spikes when it feels it needs to defend
00:40:09itself from something dangerous.
00:40:11Its quills can puncture your skin and, well, that hurts.
00:40:16The anteater.
00:40:17With their warm, benign eyes, anteaters look so harmless, they don't even have teeth to
00:40:22defend themselves and hurt us.
00:40:25But they do have claws.
00:40:27They mostly use them to get food, but they won't hesitate to use them when they believe
00:40:31you could harm them.
00:40:33Also, did you know their tongues are covered in spikes?
00:40:36Yep, that's their main tool for collecting food.
00:40:40And their tongue can be up to two feet long.
00:40:42It's long and narrow, so anteaters can easily maneuver it down into some pretty narrow spaces
00:40:48to look for termites and ants for lunch.
00:40:52Owls are not even that adorable, but they look so shy and clever.
00:40:56Plus, you'd never say they even pay any attention to you.
00:41:00But what can really make them mad is if you come closer and interfere with their nests.
00:41:05They have big, sharp claws, so it's not an animal you want to mess with.
00:41:10They can rotate their heads 270 degrees, so even if you're coming from their back, don't
00:41:16think they won't see you.
00:41:19Kangaroos aren't generally those animals that go around looking for trouble.
00:41:23But if you face them, they're not afraid to stand up for themselves and show you who's
00:41:27in charge.
00:41:28They can go after a human as if it's another kangaroo.
00:41:32Their arms are very strong, and they're even able to grapple with you with their forepaws.
00:41:37But it's way worse when they kick out with their hind legs.
00:41:42Deer look like they came from an idyllic fairy tale, but be careful.
00:41:46Males have antlers, and it can be tricky if you come too close and they perceive you as
00:41:50a potential threat.
00:41:52They also have a habit of trampling private gardens and eating what they find.
00:41:57They can be dangerous for some domestic animals people have in their backyards, especially
00:42:02dogs.
00:42:04Red foxes can't harm us looking like that, right?
00:42:07They can carry the rabies virus, so it's better not to interact with them too much, even though
00:42:12they generally avoid humans.
00:42:14They can be aggressive towards them and some small animals.
00:42:18They're pretty unpredictable, so be careful.
00:42:22Raccoons look friendly and cute, and it seems that the only trouble they can bring is turning
00:42:27over your trash can, but not quite.
00:42:30These little fellas are definitely not afraid to show their teeth when they sense something
00:42:34dangerous, even though it's just you going out to see what's making that noise in your
00:42:38trash can.
00:42:39And their little paws might be cute at first, but they're hiding sharp claws you wouldn't
00:42:43want to mess with.
00:42:45Tarsiers are among the tiniest and most adorable primates in the world.
00:42:50Although the first thing you'd want to do when you see one is to give them a hug, you
00:42:53better think twice.
00:42:55They're not outright dangerous, but they're not fans of humans trying to touch them, so
00:42:59they can react pretty neurotically if that happens.
00:43:02Better admire them from a distance!
00:43:07Looking for something slimy?
00:43:09Many people tend to believe that snails are just slugs with shells, but even though they
00:43:14look so similar, they're completely different species.
00:43:18Slugs don't need any protective shells, as all their internal organs are, well, internal
00:43:23inside their slimy bodies.
00:43:25They can squish themselves and get into hard-to-reach places, which is why slugs can often be found
00:43:31in the most unlikely spaces, like under tree bark, or inside tiny crevices, or at the library
00:43:38pretending to study for exams.
00:43:40Snails, on the other hand, are tightly connected with their shells and can't survive without
00:43:45one.
00:43:46Unlike hermit crabs, which replace their shells as they grow, snails are born with a shell
00:43:51on their back.
00:43:52Baby snails look adorable with those fragile translucent bubbles that calcify and become
00:43:57bigger and tougher with age.
00:43:59Cute?
00:44:00Well, you be the judge.
00:44:02Many of the snail's internal organs are inside the shell too, meaning that if it gets
00:44:06crushed or damaged, well, the animal would probably not survive.
00:44:10Still, a snail can repair small scratches and cracks in the shell with the help of proteins
00:44:15and calcium secreted by its mantle.
00:44:19Turtles are very close to snails in this regard, by the way, because, contrary to common myth,
00:44:25they can't leave their shell at a whim either.
00:44:27A turtle's shell is an integral part of its body, and despite the reptile being able
00:44:32to hide its head and paws inside to protect itself from predators, its skeleton is fused
00:44:37with the hard shell, and just like any other animal's skeleton, it grows with the turtle
00:44:43itself.
00:44:44Now, koalas do only eat eucalyptus leaves, but there are over 600 different kinds of
00:44:49those, and koalas only munch on 30, or just 5% of what's available on the menu, so it
00:44:56has to be a very specific eucalyptus tree to make a good meal for a picky koala.
00:45:02These adorable creatures also have something in common with domestic cats.
00:45:06They sleep for 18 to 20 hours a day!
00:45:10Polar bears aren't at all white.
00:45:12Their skin is black under the fur.
00:45:14They need the white color to disguise themselves while on the hunt.
00:45:17The color black absorbs the sun better than any other, while white fur doesn't stop
00:45:22sunlight.
00:45:23Rays pass right through it.
00:45:25In a sense, a polar bear has transparent fur.
00:45:29There's a myth that dogs and cats see the world in black and white.
00:45:33In reality, they just can't distinguish some colors.
00:45:37Nobody knows how exactly dogs see.
00:45:39Some think they only distinguish two colors.
00:45:42Could be blue and yellow, for all we know.
00:45:44But they can see shades of other colors better than people, and cats have wonderful night
00:45:49vision.
00:45:50They need about 7 times less light than a human to see in the dark.
00:45:55Giraffes were thought to be mute, but recently it's been found that they make low-frequency
00:46:00sounds at night to communicate with each other.
00:46:03During the day, they don't say a word and warn each other of danger in a very unusual
00:46:08way, by moving their well-developed eyebrows.
00:46:13It's likely that at night, it's difficult to see the eyebrows, so they start talking
00:46:17for real.
00:46:19While we're on the topic of giraffes, these animals sleep much more than 30 minutes a
00:46:23day, but probably not as much as you do.
00:46:26Their sleeping pattern is quite typical.
00:46:28After researchers monitored a herd of giraffes, they found out they slept at night and took
00:46:33short naps in the afternoon.
00:46:35In total, each giraffe had around 5 hours of sleep every day.
00:46:39Oh, and by the way, a herd of these guys is actually known as a tower of giraffes.
00:46:45Makes sense with the long necks.
00:46:47Seagulls can drink seawater.
00:46:49There are salt-secreting glands near their eyes.
00:46:52These glands purify seawater very quickly, and the salty residue comes out through the
00:46:56nostrils.
00:46:57Yep, you guessed it, salty snot.
00:47:01The Adelie penguins are real romantics.
00:47:04They only have one partner for life.
00:47:06The male must give a smooth stone to the female to create a family.
00:47:10You could say that's kind of an engagement ring.
00:47:13Like humans, though, a female penguin may refuse and not accept the ring.
00:47:18Speaking of animal love, foxes are romantic too.
00:47:22Male foxes are good fathers and husbands.
00:47:24They're devoted to their loved ones for life.
00:47:27They look after the females and even pick fleas from their fur.
00:47:31Aww.
00:47:32Male foxes improve their whole houses and take an active part in their babies' upbringing.
00:47:38Dolphins can sleep with one eye closed and the other one open.
00:47:41Half of the brain dreams and rests, and the second half closely monitors the environment
00:47:46for signs of danger.
00:47:48It's the perfect brain for sleeping during boring classes and meetings.
00:47:51Hey, I didn't say that.
00:47:53Besides, dolphins manually control their breathing.
00:47:56They can simply drown if their whole brain is sleeping.
00:48:00Sea otters are the cutest sleepers among all animals.
00:48:03In the summer, because of the heat, sea otters spend all the time in water.
00:48:07They swim on their backs and sleep in that position.
00:48:10The babies are sleeping on their mother's stomach, and two adults hold each other by
00:48:14the paws so that they're not carried apart by water currents.
00:48:19Ostriches don't stick their heads in the sand when threatened.
00:48:22In fact, these guys don't bury their heads at all.
00:48:25This myth has spread thanks to that famous idiom to hide one's head in the sand.
00:48:29In real life, ostriches have to dig holes in the sand for their eggs because they're
00:48:34flightless birds.
00:48:35To make sure they're evenly heated, ostriches put their heads in there to rotate the eggs
00:48:40from time to time.
00:48:41But ostriches still have some escaping mentality.
00:48:44When they face some threat, they can flop to the sand and stay perfectly still, pretending
00:48:50they aren't alive.
00:48:51Now, according to a popular misbelief, sharks can breathe only while moving because swimming
00:48:57helps them push water over their gills.
00:49:00Although many kinds of sharks are designed this way, many others, like bottom-dwelling
00:49:04nurse sharks, don't need swimming to pump oxygen-rich water over their gills.
00:49:10Meanwhile, all sharks do lack swim bladders, so if they stop swimming, they'll probably
00:49:15sink to the bottom.
00:49:17But luckily, a shark's body can't be compressed.
00:49:20That's why rapid descents or ascents are safe for them.
00:49:25Scientists from Japan played audio recordings for cats to prove they're truly dismissive.
00:49:31In those recordings, the owners of the cats called them by their names.
00:49:35When the cat's pupils dilated, the animals moved their tails, legs, or ears.
00:49:40Cats heard people, but rarely responded.
00:49:43It's all about evolution.
00:49:45Cats came to people because they were attracted by mice that ate grains.
00:49:49They lived close to people, but were never tame.
00:49:52And yet, we keep feeding them.
00:49:55Birds are actually the only surviving dinosaurs.
00:49:58They evolved from theropods, the dinosaurs that ran on two legs.
00:50:02Yep, T. rex is a distant relative of chickens, ostriches, and even hummingbirds.
00:50:08In reality, flamingos are white.
00:50:11The bird turns pink due to beta-carotene.
00:50:14This pigment is found in the algae and the shrimp that it feeds on.
00:50:18You can change your color too.
00:50:19If you eat a lot of carrots, your skin will turn slightly orange.
00:50:23This will happen because of the high beta-carotene content in the vegetable.
00:50:28Sailors from all over the world talked about the giant squid they met on their voyages.
00:50:33For many years, scientists considered monsters with long tentacles to be a myth.
00:50:38But in 2004, the first photo of a giant squid was taken.
00:50:42They actually exist.
00:50:45Scientists have registered an animal that has grown to 43 feet.
00:50:49Mosquitoes actually bite some people more than others.
00:50:52The most delicious humans are those with type O blood.
00:50:55Also, these insects have really good eyesight.
00:50:58They're attracted by green, black, and red colors.
00:51:01So check the color of your clothes before you go camping.
00:51:06You can actually put a shark in a trance for 15 minutes.
00:51:10To do this, you need to stroke the nose of a dangerous animal with your hand.
00:51:14This sort of hypnosis is called tonic immobility that happens thanks to the receptors in the
00:51:20shark's nose.
00:51:22The receptors send a lot of signals, and the shark's brain is unable to process them
00:51:26all.
00:51:27What it doesn't say here is exactly how you get close enough to a shark to rub its
00:51:31nose.
00:51:32I'd say that's important information, don't you think?
00:51:36Elephants aren't afraid of mice, per se.
00:51:38But these massive animals have bad vision.
00:51:41They also move fairly slowly.
00:51:43That's why they can get startled by a bird or a small creature, like a mouse, darting
00:51:48past them.
00:51:49Just the element of surprise, nothing more.
00:51:52The chameleon can change its color, but this creature doesn't do it to camouflage itself.
00:51:58The color change helps the animal regulate its temperature and communicate with peers.
00:52:03Now when most dogs pant, their tongues hang out of their mouths.
00:52:08That's why many people think that's how they sweat.
00:52:10In reality, dogs' sweat glands are located on their paw pads.
00:52:14Plus, there are other sweat glands all over their bodies.
00:52:18Dogs pant to evaporate moisture from their nasal passages, tongues, and the lining of
00:52:23their lungs.
00:52:24This also helps to cool them down.
00:52:26You might leave wasps alone, but don't be so sure they'll do the same.
00:52:31Bees do respect human boundaries, and if you don't bother them, they won't hurt you.
00:52:36But wasps are so bad-tempered, they can sting you even if you're just walking by their
00:52:41nest.
00:52:42Fooey on them!
00:52:44A human year is not the same as a dog year.
00:52:49You might have thought that dogs age 7 times faster than we do, but it's not that simple.
00:52:55A dog that's been around for one year is, in fact, already 31.
00:53:00It will most likely even have its own little puppies running around.
00:53:04But here's where it gets tricky.
00:53:06Two human years don't necessarily mean that your dog is 62, either.
00:53:12Your buddy will need to be around 4 in our years before it reaches old age.
00:53:16A 4-year-old dog will be 50, but a 7-year-old dog will be 62.
00:53:22And an 8-year-old dog will only be 64.
00:53:26So they age faster, but also slower and slower as time passes by.
00:53:32The next time you're celebrating your best bud's birthday, be sure to put lots of candles
00:53:36on the cake, and buy even more presents than you normally would.
00:53:40A common misconception is that dogs are colorblind.
00:53:44They're not, but they don't see color exactly as we do.
00:53:48They have trouble distinguishing between their reds and greens.
00:53:52It all just looks like a mash of gray, brown, blue, and even yellowy tones.
00:53:58That's because their eyes lack one of three photoreceptors needed to perceive colors fully.
00:54:05You can't teach an old dog new tricks.
00:54:07Wrong!
00:54:08Because of their old age, they might need more persistence from you, but it's not impossible.
00:54:15The key here is to be as positive as you can.
00:54:17If you see they're not feeling up to it right now, that's okay.
00:54:20Let them rest, and in a little bit, you can pick the training session back up.
00:54:25Rewards still need to be a big part of the whole ordeal.
00:54:29After Max successfully speaks, give it its favorite biscuit.
00:54:32Then, it'll speak on command whenever you ask it to.
00:54:37That dog has shoes on.
00:54:39They might seem unnecessary, but today, the weather's 90 degrees outside.
00:54:44Imagine walking with your bare feet on asphalt during this heat.
00:54:47You'd feel like you're stepping on lava, and so would your pup.
00:54:51Some dogs are better equipped to handle different weather conditions, but dog shoes can prevent
00:54:57your little buddy from harming its paws.
00:55:00It's the same during winter.
00:55:01When it's freezing cold, you wouldn't just walk around without a jacket on, so make sure
00:55:05your buddy is warm, too.
00:55:08Dogs with a lot of fur don't need to get their hair cut to feel lighter.
00:55:13They have what's called an undercoat.
00:55:15In winter, it gets thicker, which gives your buddy an extra layer of protection from the
00:55:19cold.
00:55:20Then, during springtime, your dog will shed some of its fur.
00:55:25It's that same undercoat that will keep your dog comfy during hotter days.
00:55:29When you shave a dog's fur, the new one coming in might get curly or entangled.
00:55:34It might just be better to leave it as is.
00:55:37You can also find different alternatives to keep them cool.
00:55:41Keep it in the shade when they're out, and always bring a bottle of cold water with you,
00:55:45so your buddy's always refreshed.
00:55:49At home, you can put damp towels for them to lie on.
00:55:52If you have a garden, you can also turn its sprinklers on and let Max run free.
00:55:57It'll exercise and have lots of fun.
00:56:00Not all dogs are great swimmers, but all dogs love swimming.
00:56:04If yours can't swim all that well, it might be because it has a bulky chest and a large
00:56:08flat head.
00:56:09In fact, it might not even be able to stay afloat.
00:56:13Get it a swimming vest designed especially for dogs.
00:56:18Some people might say a slightly open window is enough to keep a dog in the car.
00:56:22This isn't true, because after spending just a few minutes in a heated or cold car might
00:56:27mean severe health implications for your best friend.
00:56:31Some states even let you let a dog out of the car if you see it in there to let it breathe.
00:56:37If your dog can't stand mail carriers, it might be because it's trying to protect you.
00:56:42They bark because they're trying to alert you, their pack leader, that the vicious mail
00:56:46carrier is coming.
00:56:48You can fix this by introducing them to one another.
00:56:51This way, your dog will recognize them as a friend and not a villain.
00:56:56Unlike you, your dog isn't yawning because it's sleepy.
00:57:00Yawning is a way for them to show anxiety.
00:57:02If it doesn't like cats, and there's one around, it could yawn.
00:57:06Or maybe there's a new person in the house, and Max isn't feeling comfortable in their
00:57:10presence.
00:57:11Or, you take your dog to a play date, but they're not getting along.
00:57:16Max keeps yawning because he's getting upset.
00:57:19Yawning is also a way to show you it's running out of patience.
00:57:22It might be time for both of you to leave.
00:57:26Dogs eat grass when they're sick, but this isn't always the case.
00:57:30Catching your dog eating grass when you've been talking to your friend for way longer
00:57:33than you should have probably means it's just bored.
00:57:37They do it to be rebellious, too.
00:57:40Or just because it's fun.
00:57:41It won't be a problem if the grass isn't treated.
00:57:44Either way, just make sure it doesn't eat too much of it.
00:57:47Otherwise, head out to the vet.
00:57:50Even a little bit of chocolate is poisonous for your pup and should be kept hidden away
00:57:54at all times.
00:57:56This includes cocoa powder and baker's chocolate.
00:57:59This applies to cats, too.
00:58:02If you suspect that your pet has eaten a large amount of chocolate, take it to the vet's
00:58:06office immediately.
00:58:08Well-trained dogs will do what they're supposed to and obey commands.
00:58:12But don't think they'll never bite you.
00:58:15It can act out of emotion.
00:58:17Imagine your dog's scared.
00:58:19You've put it in an uncomfortable situation with lots of new faces.
00:58:22This has been going on for a while, and Max isn't able to control his emotions anymore.
00:58:28So a new person tries to reach it to give it a pet and gets punished.
00:58:32Nothing harsh, but it was unexpected.
00:58:34Maybe it felt like it needed to be defensive.
00:58:37Thinking they're protecting and guarding you is another reason why a dog might bite.
00:58:42Or if they're feeling too intimidated by whoever it might be.
00:58:47You've got two dogs and you're about to enter your house.
00:58:51One of them is waiting for you in its bed.
00:58:53It doesn't make a big whoop about it rather than wagging its tail.
00:58:56The other one comes running to the door, it whimpers, jumps, and wags its whole body while
00:59:01running in circles around you.
00:59:03This doesn't mean it loves you more.
00:59:05It just means it's not properly trained yet.
00:59:09Tail wagging doesn't always mean your dog is excited.
00:59:12You can observe a dog's tail to understand what it's feeling.
00:59:16If it holds its tail high but isn't moving it, it's alert but also trying to assert its
00:59:21leadership.
00:59:23Still held high, the tail is moving now.
00:59:26It means the feeling's changed a bit.
00:59:28It's alert but happy.
00:59:30It's still trying to show it's the boss here.
00:59:32But at least it's feeling excited now.
00:59:36When its tail is between the legs, your dog's feeling afraid.
00:59:39Or if there's an alpha dog around, it might mean your buddy admits its leadership.
00:59:45A tail that's held straight out means the dog is taking in new information, feeling
00:59:49the room.
00:59:51It's not reacting though, it'll stay neutral while doing this.
00:59:56If a dog's tail is wagging fast, it means excitement.
01:00:00The faster they wag their tail, the more excited they are.
01:00:04A slow wag conveys insecurity.
01:00:07It might be because of another dog or person.
01:00:11Now imagine your dog is wagging its entire body.
01:00:15You even see its hips wagging.
01:00:18This means it's friendly.
01:00:19It might happen when you're in the elevator, and it spots its best friend from the apartment
01:00:24complex.
01:00:26The worst wag of them all is an extremely fast vertical wagging tail.
01:00:31When doing this, your dog can be mean to others.
01:00:35It might be feeling territorial over you.
01:00:37It's best to remove yourself from the situation.
01:00:41If your dog's tail is wagging to the right, it means it's more relaxed.
01:00:45And a left wagging tail means stress.
01:00:53You're walking through the park with your lovely little poodle.
01:00:57You throw the ball, the pet runs after it and brings it back.
01:01:00You throw again, and he's running happily.
01:01:03Then, he stops.
01:01:05The poodle freezes, shivers, then turns around and looks at you.
01:01:10Get it, Snowball!
01:01:11But he doesn't listen.
01:01:12Then, you approach the ball, pick it up, and look at the dog.
01:01:17Snowball stares at you with a piercing look.
01:01:19You throw the ball next to him.
01:01:21Snowball, take it!
01:01:23The dog puts his paw on the ball, then slowly shakes his head as a sign of refusal.
01:01:29You're a little scared, and look around.
01:01:32Notice some other people in the park also have problems with their pets.
01:01:36Some dogs are barking at their owners.
01:01:39Others are running around.
01:01:41Your poodle looks at you like you've done something bad.
01:01:44Then, it goes away.
01:01:46You're running after Snowball, asking him to come back.
01:01:50You leave the park and find yourself on the road.
01:01:53You can hear the creaking of tires nearby.
01:01:56Several people are running in your direction.
01:01:58They're scared.
01:01:59You try to ask them what's happened, but after a second, you understand it yourself.
01:02:05Elephants, zebras, lions, and gorillas are moving along the road.
01:02:11They jump on cars, demolish hydrants, knock people off their feet.
01:02:15Elephants are screaming through their trunks.
01:02:18When they run past you, you notice penguins sitting on the back of these huge animals.
01:02:23You don't forget about Snowball and decide to find your dog.
01:02:27You're wandering through the streets, meeting other people who lost their pets too.
01:02:32You've got a lot of messages on your phone.
01:02:35Your friends are asking you to check the news.
01:02:37You go online and see that all over the world, animals' behavior has become strange.
01:02:44You can see footage of a panda getting into someone's car and driving away.
01:02:49Another video captured several wolves standing in line at the supermarket.
01:02:54Chimpanzees are running out of a store with packs of books.
01:02:58In another video, several seals push a fisher out of his boat.
01:03:03Three waiters are sitting in the corner of a restaurant while lions are walking around them and roaring.
01:03:10One of these animals puts its paw on the menu.
01:03:13Looks like it wants to order some food.
01:03:16You don't notice a giraffe standing next to you.
01:03:19It bows its head and is also watching the video on your phone.
01:03:23You scream and run away.
01:03:25You approach your house and see Snowball.
01:03:29Your pet is surrounded by several stray cats and dogs.
01:03:33Looks like they're communicating with each other.
01:03:36They notice you and immediately run in different directions.
01:03:39You get into the house with Snowball.
01:03:47Cook your lunch and pour dry food into his bowl.
01:03:50Snowball refuses to eat those crunchy meatballs.
01:03:54He points his paw at your plate and jumps on a chair and waits for you to serve him a normal meal.
01:04:00It's all strange, but you give him your food and sit down next to the dog.
01:04:06After lunch, the dog runs into the living room and sits near the wardrobe.
01:04:10You open it.
01:04:12Snowball points at the second shelf with his nose.
01:04:15There's some blank paper there.
01:04:17You put one sheet on the floor.
01:04:19Snowball jumps onto the table and takes a pen with his mouth.
01:04:23The dog's holding it with his teeth and drawing something on the paper.
01:04:28After five minutes, you look at the drawing and realize that it's a crooked, incomprehensible
01:04:33inscription.
01:04:34And it says, from now, I understand everything.
01:04:39You look at the poodle and he nods.
01:04:43From this moment on, the lives of all people on the planet are changing.
01:04:49Your pet isn't the only one who has become sentient.
01:04:52All the mammals in the world are now as intelligent as humans.
01:04:57Dogs no longer walk the streets on leashes.
01:05:00Many pets run away from their owners and never come back.
01:05:08Others stay in houses and apartments, but only under certain conditions.
01:05:12Any pet has to eat the same food as their owner, sleep on a separate bed, choose TV
01:05:17shows to watch, and walk out when they want.
01:05:22Farms around the world offer animals a chance to pass intelligence tests.
01:05:27Zebras pound out some famous melodies with their hooves.
01:05:30Gorillas are excellent at drawing and writing.
01:05:33Bulls draw geometric shapes on the sand with their horns.
01:05:37As soon as people realize the animals are smart, they decide to release all the mammals
01:05:42from captivity.
01:05:43Pigs, sheep, cows, and other farm animals escape from farms and pastures.
01:05:49They want to be free.
01:05:51Milk products are disappearing from all stores.
01:05:54Milk production slows down because not every cow wants to share it with people.
01:05:59Animals get freedom, but it isn't enough.
01:06:02They want to say something important, but they can't because their vocal cords are not
01:06:07capable of it.
01:06:08To solve this problem, scientists create a collar that reads an animal's brain activity
01:06:13and turns their thoughts into words.
01:06:16Now mammals can speak with robot voices.
01:06:20A million wild and domestic animals come out of forests and the jungle all around the
01:06:25world.
01:06:26Reporters gather around them with cameras.
01:06:27A llama with a collar approaches the microphone.
01:06:28It declares the planet belongs not only to people, but to animals as well.
01:06:29From now on, people are prohibited from harming nature.
01:06:30If they violate the agreement, the animals will begin to take over the cities.
01:06:31A 500-page act is signed.
01:06:32The terms of the agreement are written in detail.
01:06:53Some of the animals move to the forests and jungles, but some mammals want to live in
01:06:58a comfortable urban environment.
01:07:01Several years pass.
01:07:03Animals and people are getting used to a new way of life.
01:07:06Every mammal living with humans now wears a speech collar.
01:07:10This allows them not only to communicate with humans, but also to become full-fledged society
01:07:15members.
01:07:17Now you can see wolves delivering mail on the streets.
01:07:20Antelopes work as track and field coaches.
01:07:22Orangutans work as librarians.
01:07:25One bat becomes a popular DJ and makes the best techno parties.
01:07:30People have learned a lot about animals thanks to the collars.
01:07:33It turns out that bulls are mannered, gallant gentlemen who don't like aggression and fights.
01:07:39Lions admit they love popularity.
01:07:42They want to be actors, writers, and musical artists.
01:07:46Bears are the laziest creatures on Earth.
01:07:48It turns out they can't stand hunting and enjoy sleeping.
01:07:52That's why their winter hibernation lasts for months.
01:07:56Lemurs and jerboas are worried about the future of the planet.
01:08:00They work as politicians and hold the positions of CEOs in many large IT companies.
01:08:06But cats have surprised people most of all.
01:08:09It turns out they have always been intelligent.
01:08:13They just didn't tell us about it because they've been living well enough.
01:08:17Since ancient times, cats have been highly respected in many countries.
01:08:21They stay at houses all day, relax, and bask in the sun.
01:08:26People love them and give them food.
01:08:28It's a great life.
01:08:29When they got collars, they said they didn't want to change anything.
01:08:33Famous fashion houses hire animals as models.
01:08:37You can see lions, gorillas, elephants, lemurs, and koalas in stylish outfits on the covers
01:08:43of magazines.
01:08:45Whales and dolphins are mammals too.
01:08:47They've also become intelligent, but their way of life hasn't changed much.
01:08:52They still like to swim in the seas and oceans.
01:08:55One day, people decided to interview a blue whale, the biggest mammal in the world.
01:09:00The whale said that two things are important in this world, clean water and the ability
01:09:06to communicate at low frequencies with other whales.
01:09:10And be careful with animals that came here from another planet.
01:09:15Then the whale simply swam away instead of answering the question of what it just meant.
01:09:20Over time, people realized that animal intelligence develops faster than that of humans.
01:09:26They build unique exosuits that allow working with their paws like people.
01:09:30A roe deer gets in the exosuit and builds structures with the help of mechanical hands
01:09:36instead of hooves.
01:09:38Using modern technologies, some animals create comfortable houses in the forests.
01:09:42They also install video cameras on trees to monitor people who decide to chop some wood.
01:09:48Then the animals invent their own language.
01:09:51Now they can communicate with each other without collars, using gestures, sounds and smells.
01:09:58One hundred years later, a group of deer and sheep create their own company to conquer space.
01:10:05Mammals send the first rockets into space and colonize Mars with people.
01:10:15Did you know that animals see the world differently from us?
01:10:18Like this.
01:10:19Pigeons actually have better vision than humans.
01:10:21Crazy, right?
01:10:23So let's try to see the world from the animals' eyes.
01:10:26Let's start with snakes.
01:10:27Their way of seeing the world is totally different from ours.
01:10:30They have special infrared-sensitive receptors in their snouts.
01:10:34This allows them to see the radiated heat of warm-blooded mammals.
01:10:38Now let's move on to cows.
01:10:40These big guys don't see colors as well as humans do.
01:10:43They can't see the color red, because they don't have the necessary receptors in their
01:10:47retinas for that.
01:10:48So they only perceive variations of blue and green.
01:10:51Also, they don't like it when someone approaches them from behind.
01:10:55They have a near panoramic vision.
01:10:58And the only area they can't see is directly to the back.
01:11:01So if you're ever sneaking up on a cow, make sure you give them a heads up.
01:11:06Horses have a blind spot right in front of their faces because of their eye placement.
01:11:10This means they can't see things directly in front of them.
01:11:13Also, they don't see as many colors as we do.
01:11:16Just like cows, their world is mostly made up of greens, yellows, and blues.
01:11:20Poor guys.
01:11:22Fish eyes have ultraviolet receptors and a more spherical lens than humans.
01:11:26This gives them an almost 360-degree vision.
01:11:30As for colors, they're able to see all the same ones as we humans do.
01:11:34But because light behaves differently underwater, they have a hard time discerning red and its
01:11:38shades.
01:11:39Deep-sea fish can easily see in the dark, which is pretty cool.
01:11:43Sharks, on the other hand, can't distinguish colors at all, but they see much clearer under
01:11:48the water than we do.
01:11:51Birds have some pretty unique ways of seeing the world.
01:11:54Unlike humans, birds can see ultraviolet light.
01:11:58This helps them differentiate between males and females of their own species, as well
01:12:02as better navigate in their surroundings.
01:12:04Also, they are very good at focusing.
01:12:07For example, falcons and eagles can focus on a small mouse in the field up to a distance
01:12:11of one mile.
01:12:13A pigeon can see all the tiny details.
01:12:15So if you ever need to find a crack in the pavement, just ask a pigeon.
01:12:19And by the way, it has a 340-degree field of vision, and generally their vision is considered
01:12:24twice as good as a human's.
01:12:26There you have it.
01:12:27I'm envious of a pigeon.
01:12:30Insects have some weird vision patterns, too.
01:12:33Flies, for example, have thousands of little eye receptors that work together to give them
01:12:38a big picture of what's going on around them.
01:12:40And get this, they see everything in slow-mo.
01:12:43Plus, they can see ultraviolet light.
01:12:46It helps them with communication.
01:12:49Bees have their own problems.
01:12:51These guys can't tell what the color red is.
01:12:53To them, it looks like a dark blue.
01:12:55How messed up is that?
01:12:57Now rats.
01:12:59These little guys can't see red either, but that's not the weirdest part.
01:13:02Either of their eyes moves on its own, so they're seeing double like all the time.
01:13:06It's a wonder they don't run into more walls, am I right?
01:13:11Cats don't see shades of red or green, but they do see brown, yellow, and blue hues like
01:13:15a boss.
01:13:16Plus, they got a wide-angle view, so they can peep more stuff on the sides than we can.
01:13:22There's more, though.
01:13:23When it's pitch black outside, cats become ninja-like and can see six times better than
01:13:28us.
01:13:29Their pupils adjust to any lighting like magic.
01:13:32Now let's talk about dogs.
01:13:34These furry friends can't see red or orange, but they do rock at blue and violet.
01:13:38Plus, they can differentiate 40 shades of gray.
01:13:41I mean, it's not 50, but still impressive.
01:13:45On a related note, frogs are really picky eaters.
01:13:48They won't even bother with food that isn't moving.
01:13:51They could be surrounded by a buffet of delicious bugs, but if they don't wiggle, frogs won't
01:13:55even bat an eye, and they're not the most observant creatures either.
01:13:59If something isn't important to them, like a shadow, they won't even bother looking at
01:14:03it.
01:14:05Chameleons have eyes that can move independently of each other, so they can see everything
01:14:08around them without even turning their heads.
01:14:11They can even see two images at the same time, like a double-feature movie, one in front
01:14:16and one behind.
01:14:18Pretty impressive, right?
01:14:19What would you do if you suddenly got 360-degree vision like a chameleon?
01:14:24Share in the comments.
01:14:27Now one of the most common animal myths is that mice love cheese.
01:14:32It popped out a long time ago, probably as early as when people started storing food.
01:14:38Since mice are regular visitors to human homes, they were constantly looking for food they
01:14:42could eat.
01:14:43People used to store grains in glass jars.
01:14:46They also kept their meat hanging up high.
01:14:48But they'd lay the cheese on the shelf, which was an easy target for all the unwelcome pantry
01:14:54visitors like mice.
01:14:55So they ate it because they couldn't reach anything better.
01:14:59But a mouse will definitely more likely go after chocolate or some other sweet thing
01:15:03than the cheese.
01:15:04Who can blame them?
01:15:06Now flamingos don't really stand in the water on one leg so they wouldn't get cold.
01:15:11This is just a simple way for them to spare the effort.
01:15:14It's exhausting for us humans to stand on one leg, but for them, this is the most stable
01:15:19position possible considering their peculiar anatomy.
01:15:23This pose doesn't require any muscular work.
01:15:25Now I'm jealous.
01:15:30One of the most widespread and oldest myths out there is that ostriches hide their heads
01:15:35in the ground every time they're scared.
01:15:37A long time ago, researchers thought ostriches weren't very smart because they bury their
01:15:42heads in the ground without being aware the rest of their large bodies are still out there,
01:15:46where everyone can see them.
01:15:48In fact, ostriches do it when they want to swallow sand and pebbles to boost their digestion
01:15:53or just turn over the eggs they lay in their nests.
01:15:56And even then, they technically don't bury their head but put it near the ground.
01:16:01Otherwise, with its head in the sand, the poor thing wouldn't be able to breathe.
01:16:06No reason to think of an ostrich as a frightened bird.
01:16:08Like some other animals, it will flee if it senses there's a danger coming.
01:16:13And in some situations, it'll fight back and defend itself.
01:16:16And that's one angry bird.
01:16:20What do you think is the largest thing a blue whale can swallow?
01:16:23Well, we're talking about the biggest animal ever known to have lived on our planet.
01:16:28It can grow up to 100 feet long with a weight of 200 tons.
01:16:32Its heart is as big as a car, and its tongue can weigh as much as an average elephant.
01:16:37It's easy to imagine a blue whale swallowing cars, people, and even small ships, perhaps.
01:16:42But it's all wrong.
01:16:44The largest thing it can actually swallow is a grapefruit.
01:16:47Its throat can take the size of a small salad plate.
01:16:51Camels feed on small fish, plankton, and marine crustaceans, so they don't need a
01:16:56bigger throat.
01:16:57But we wouldn't be able to survive the juices inside a blue whale's stomach anyway.
01:17:01It would finish us within 15 seconds, similar to how long we'd last in space without a
01:17:06spacesuit.
01:17:07So, don't try this.
01:17:11Camels don't store water in their humps.
01:17:13We're talking about animals with extraordinary resistance to some pretty extreme conditions.
01:17:18They can survive even when drinking water only every 8-10 days, but not because they
01:17:23have a secret stash on their back.
01:17:25It's because, when they have a chance to drink, they will swallow 50 gallons of water
01:17:30at one sitting.
01:17:31They mostly use it to replenish 30% of their total body weight, an amount they can lose
01:17:36by dehydration.
01:17:37So, they lose a lot of water but quickly regain it.
01:17:41Their humps are where they deposit fat.
01:17:43But it's not for producing water.
01:17:45The oxygen camels would need to inhale would cause them to lose too much water because
01:17:50it would evaporate through their lungs.
01:17:52That's why they use fat as a nutritional source for energy.
01:17:55This helps them survive in arid regions and times of scarcity.
01:18:00It's a myth that anteaters vacuum ants using their noses.
01:18:04They don't go around looking for ants and hoovering them through their long snouts.
01:18:09Anteaters have very long tongues.
01:18:11Giant anteaters have tongues that go up to 2 feet long.
01:18:15It's the shape of a strand of spaghetti and covered in spiny hooks and sticky saliva
01:18:19that traps ants.
01:18:20Up to 160 times in a minute.
01:18:23Which means they eat up to 20,000 insects in a single day.
01:18:27That's a lot of bugs.
01:18:28They open ant hills using their claws and then do the rest of the work with the tongue.
01:18:33They don't have teeth, so they only swallow all the insects they catch.
01:18:38Movies might have given you a false sense of security when it comes to dinos.
01:18:43Nope, standing very, very still couldn't save you from a raging T-Rex coming after
01:18:47you.
01:18:48Uh-uh.
01:18:49It's a myth the Dino King had bad vision.
01:18:51These beasts may have seen better than modern-day raptors.
01:18:55They had excellent death perception, something present in today's animals such as eagles
01:19:00and hawks.
01:19:01Even if, by some miracle, the Dino King can't see you or thinks you're just a small tree
01:19:06or some other object because you're standing so still, they had a pretty good sense of
01:19:11smell.
01:19:12So, the better option would be to run because the T-Rex is not as fast as scientists used
01:19:17to think – up to 33 mph.
01:19:20Considering their anatomy, they could move at a speed of 12 mph.
01:19:24Anything faster than that would've caused serious bone damage.
01:19:27But this didn't stop them from ruling the animal world because there were plenty of
01:19:31dinosaurs way slower than them, so they didn't have to worry about food.
01:19:37Another misconception states that owls can spin their heads.
01:19:40Neither more nor less than 360 degrees.
01:19:44Their head-spinning does have its limit – 270 degrees in one direction.
01:19:48Since they can turn 270 degrees to the left and right, owls have a 540-degree range of
01:19:55motion.
01:19:56Don't worry, if you touch a butterfly's wings, the animal won't lose its ability
01:20:01to fly.
01:20:02It will survive, despite the common myth that says the opposite.
01:20:07Butterfly wings have scales.
01:20:08When you touch them, some scales might shed off.
01:20:11But it's not a bad thing because they shed off naturally too.
01:20:15Because of sheddable scales, they can escape more easily if they get stuck and trapped
01:20:19in spider webs.
01:20:22The next myth has inspired many movies, books, and TV series scenarios, but no, wolves don't
01:20:28howl at the moon.
01:20:29They typically howl at night, true, but because that's the period of time when they're
01:20:34most active.
01:20:35They'll also look up while howling since this helps the sound travel.
01:20:39That way, other wolves will hear them from around 6-7 miles away.
01:20:44And that's why they howl in the first place – to communicate with each other.
01:20:47They make specific sounds for a certain situation.
01:20:50For example, to help a wolf that lost its pack find its way home.
01:20:55The moon just happened to accidentally be there while wolves were communicating.
01:21:00Okay, giraffes only need 30 minutes of sleep a day.
01:21:04That's another myth.
01:21:06They sleep about 4.5 hours daily.
01:21:08It's not that unusual for animal species that are most active during daylight.
01:21:13Studies also show giraffes usually lay down to sleep for less than 11 minutes at a time.
01:21:19Many people believe moles are blind.
01:21:22These small, burrowing mammals actually can see.
01:21:25It's just their vision is really poor and only adapted to recognize light.
01:21:29They're also colorblind.
01:21:32When they're searching for food and navigating the dark underground, these creatures mostly
01:21:36rely on their touch and sense of smell.
01:21:39Now their sense of touch is sharp, which is why moles can feel nearby vibrations of activity.
01:21:45This helps them avoid danger or find their next meal more easily, like millipedes, worms,
01:21:50centipedes, and other invertebrates.
01:21:52Yum!
01:21:53They're really fast at digging and can dig a couple of inches per minute.
01:21:58In the winter, animals hibernate not because it's too cold for them to be outside, but
01:22:03because there isn't enough food during that period.
01:22:06When an animal is in hibernation, its heart rate, body temperature, breathing, and other
01:22:11metabolic activities slow down significantly.
01:22:14That's how they conserve energy.
01:22:16Chipmunks, bats, turtles, snakes – they all hibernate during the winter, which saves
01:22:22them energy for other seasons when they get more active and are capable of getting more
01:22:26food.
01:22:27I'd say bears too, but they're not the true hibernators.
01:22:31If you try waking one up during the winter when you believe the animal is sleeping, you
01:22:35might end up having a bad time.
01:22:38They do slow down, which means they sleep for extended periods of time.
01:22:41They're still not asleep for the entire winter season, and you can easily wake them
01:22:46during their sleep, so let's not.
01:22:50Don't believe myths – earwigs won't lay eggs in your ears.
01:22:54Yep, despite their name, they're not that interested in your ears.
01:22:58Well, at least, there's no evidence they'd want to go there.
01:23:02They prefer to spend their time in dark, moist places, such as under tree bark or in soil.
01:23:07So your ears are off the hook.
01:23:13Despite their cold-blooded nature, crocodiles and alligators are some of the most caring
01:23:18and gentle parents in the animal world.
01:23:21Come on, really?
01:23:22Yeah!
01:23:23The females of these frightening animals lay from 10 to 60 eggs at a time and then bury
01:23:28their eggs in riverside nests.
01:23:30They build the nests out of plants they break off with their teeth and push together using
01:23:34back legs.
01:23:36Then croc moms patiently wait up to 3 months, protecting their future babies from any danger.
01:23:42Although crocodiles themselves are very strong and frightening animals, they don't hesitate
01:23:47to hire special babysitters to protect their nests.
01:23:50The water thickness It might seem like a risky deal, but these
01:23:53birds have formed a win-win alliance with crocs.
01:23:57They place their eggs nearby, and together, they scare away big reptiles like Nile monitors
01:24:02and other predators.
01:24:04Crocodiles have an excellent sense of hearing.
01:24:07Bird cries alert the mother about all uninvited guests, and the mama croc goes out of the
01:24:12water to protect her babies and bird nests along the way.
01:24:17When baby crocodiles are born, they're of a size of a large banana, and it takes years
01:24:22for them to reach maturity, from 4 to 15 years, depending on the species.
01:24:27In some cases, a female crocodile helps her babies to hatch by putting the eggs in her
01:24:32mouth and rolling them.
01:24:34Then she what, spits out a kid?
01:24:36Apparently so!
01:24:37Baby crocs tend to stay together close to their mommy during the first 1 to 3 years
01:24:41of life.
01:24:42The mother assists her children in digging out of the nest and carries them to the water
01:24:47in her mouth.
01:24:48A female crocodile can place up to 15 babies in her mouth at once, and instincts prevent
01:24:53her from closing her jaws.
01:24:55So newly-hatched babies feel safe in the crocodile's mouth as if it were a cradle…with teeth.
01:25:03Although the croc teaches her babies to hunt and provides protection from predators, only
01:25:08about 1% of the hatchlings survive to adulthood due to predators and weather conditions.
01:25:14Sad news for any parent, but crocs are cold-blooded reptiles after all.
01:25:18The only reason they cry is physiological rather than emotional.
01:25:23When crocs spend enough time out of the water, their eyes get so dry that they cry to keep
01:25:28them lubricated.
01:25:29If a baby crocodile manages to survive its childhood, it gets the chance to live a very
01:25:35long life.
01:25:36Just like some other reptiles, turtles, and whales, crocodiles exhibit the so-called negligible
01:25:42or, in simple words, a lack of normal aging.
01:25:45It means they don't actually get older, just bigger and badder.
01:25:49They're only afraid of getting sick or being attacked by other predators.
01:25:54Although the average lifespan of crocodiles varies from 50 to 70 years, some of them reach
01:25:59over 100 years.
01:26:01So in theory, someone may meet a 500-year-old crocodile as huge as an airplane somewhere
01:26:07deep in the tropics.
01:26:08But the chances to survive and tell the tale of this meeting are slim because the crocodile's
01:26:13appetite grows in proportion to its body.
01:26:16Mr. Freshie, who passed away at the age of 140 years, was the oldest documented crocodile
01:26:22that was in captivity.
01:26:24It was caught in the Moorhead River in 1970 and resided at the Australian Zoo.
01:26:29Mr. Freshie was called after its kind, Freshwater Crocodile, the breed that has never been witnessed
01:26:35doing any harm to humans.
01:26:37At the age of 10, when crocodiles reach the body length of about 5 to 10 feet, they become
01:26:43mature enough to give birth to their own babies.
01:26:47The mating dance involves several steps.
01:26:49Males produce a special low-frequency sound which humans can't perceive.
01:26:54But for crocodile females, it sounds like an invitation to become a mother and continue
01:26:58the gentle parenting tradition.
01:27:00Hey, could we call this the Crocodile Rock?
01:27:03Hey, I like that song!
01:27:06Of course, crocodiles are not the only animals that demonstrate surprisingly high family
01:27:10values and dedication.
01:27:12Polar bears, for example, are very attentive and take time to teach their cubs all necessary
01:27:17survival skills in the cold climate.
01:27:20While the babies are still in their mother's belly, polar bears construct a special space
01:27:24by digging into deep snow drips.
01:27:27This space serves as a home for the future cubs.
01:27:30They spend the first months of their life getting milk and heat from their mother.
01:27:34Polar bears usually give birth in a period between November and January and don't allow
01:27:38the cubs to get out until spring.
01:27:42The newborn's fur is very fine, and they're not yet ready to face severe colds.
01:27:47Once the cubs emerge from the den, the mother bear begins to teach them how to survive in
01:27:51the outside world.
01:27:53Babies mimic her every move, learning how to swim, hunt, build dens, and migrate.
01:27:59The mother will fight off predators and larger polar bears and hide her cubs from any threat.
01:28:04After 2-3 years together, babies learn everything they need to know and leave her.
01:28:10But they'll still be able to recognize their mother throughout their life, which lasts
01:28:13up to 30 years.
01:28:15Another example of caring motherhood can be found among our close relatives, primates.
01:28:20Gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos, a cousin of the chimp, embrace and kiss their newborns
01:28:26just like humans.
01:28:28While feeding their little ones, primate females release special hormones associated with motherhood
01:28:33feelings and gentleness.
01:28:35When it comes to breastfeeding, orangutans are the champions.
01:28:38This process may continue for up to 8 years.
01:28:41In the wild, orangutan mothers nurse their offspring for up to 7 years, which is longer
01:28:46than any other primate.
01:28:48During this period, mothers teach their infants to find food and build sleeping nests on their
01:28:52own.
01:28:54The bond between female orangutans and their mothers is stronger than that of males.
01:28:59Daughters may continue living with mothers until they reach the childbearing age that
01:29:03equals 15 or 16 years.
01:29:05Yeah, they just won't move out!
01:29:08Just like humans, apes may have mother issues that impact their social life.
01:29:13Maternal support helps young primates to gain dominance and mating success when they grow
01:29:17up.
01:29:18On the other hand, apes who didn't get enough nurturing in their childhood tend to have
01:29:22fewer children when they reach maturity.
01:29:25Meanwhile, males of African elephants don't fight for dominance because all important
01:29:30issues are resolved by females.
01:29:33And every calf in the herd is cared for by everyone equally.
01:29:36A young elephant mother gets the assistance of her sisters and older aunts while giving
01:29:41birth and raising her child.
01:29:43That's why elephants are considered some of the most protective moms on the planet.
01:29:49Males of female elephants and children tend to travel together in a special circle.
01:29:53They put the youngest members of the group inside the circle to protect them from predators.
01:29:58Also, older elephants will adjust the pace of the herd so the calves don't get tired
01:30:02and lag behind.
01:30:04Females in the social group will communicate with babies using affectionate gestures and
01:30:09teach them how to find food.
01:30:11And everyone packs their own trunk!
01:30:14By the way, girl elephants are very attached to their mothers and will typically remain
01:30:19together until the mother passes away from old age.
01:30:22And the average lifespan of elephants is around 65 years or even more.
01:30:27Mothers bear the cubs for 2 years of that time, so no surprise they're so attached
01:30:32to each other!
01:30:34Giraffe females also have a long pregnancy period – 15 months.
01:30:39It makes sense because the giraffe calf is already on its feet very soon after birth.
01:30:45Mother nurses giraffe babies for about 9-12 months.
01:30:48When she needs to go find some food, she will hide her babies or ask other giraffes to look
01:30:53after them.
01:30:54Like humans, giraffe moms need to stay awake – they can afford to sleep from 30 minutes
01:30:59to a couple of hours a day.
01:31:01And even that in extremely short periods, like 5-10 minutes at a time.
01:31:05The remaining time is dedicated to guarding and protecting her babies.
01:31:09Emperor penguin mothers are not afraid of difficulties either.
01:31:13After laying an egg, the female leaves it with a male who protects it from any threat.
01:31:17Meanwhile, the mother takes a long journey of up to 50 miles to reach the ocean shore
01:31:22and catch some fish.
01:31:24When the fishing is over, she returns to the hatch site to feed the fish to her newly hatched
01:31:28babies.
01:31:29Mmm, seafood!
01:31:31Using the warmth of her own body, the penguin female keeps the younger generation safe and
01:31:36warm.
01:31:37Alright, you're scuba diving in the ocean, watching corals and colorful fish flitting
01:31:44by, when suddenly an enormous shadow appears above you.
01:31:49You look up and see a massive creature approaching you, its mouth a gaping abyss.
01:31:55Relax, just stay still and you'll be fine.
01:31:58This leviathan is a basking shark, one of the scary sea monsters that isn't really
01:32:04capable of doing harm to anyone.
01:32:07Basking sharks are filter feeders, just like baleen whales.
01:32:10They open their large mouths to swallow plankton, and don't even have teeth!
01:32:15It's late night in the Central American jungle.
01:32:19You're out in the wild to watch birds, and you hear flapping of wings.
01:32:23Excited, you look intently into your night vision goggles, only to see a face out of
01:32:29your worst nightmares.
01:32:30Don't scream, you'll scare it away!
01:32:34It's a perfectly harmless wrinkle-faced bat, and it isn't interested in you.
01:32:39These are fruit bats, and wrinkles on their faces allow them to collect fruit pieces and
01:32:44juice for later snacks.
01:32:46By the way, their Latin name, Centurocenex, was given to them for their semblance to 100-year-old
01:32:52humans.
01:32:54Walking around a Nepali national park and deciding to wash your face in the river nearby,
01:33:00you freeze in terror.
01:33:01A crocodile is looking straight at you from no more than a few feet's distance.
01:33:07Then it raises its snout above the water, and you exhale in relief.
01:33:12It's a gharial.
01:33:13These reptiles have long and narrow snouts that allow them to efficiently catch fish
01:33:19and at the same time prohibiting them from hunting any other prey.
01:33:23While still carnivores, gharials are pretty shy and will slither away at the sight of
01:33:28humans.
01:33:29Right now, there are no more than a thousand of these crocodilians in the whole world,
01:33:34so let it go.
01:33:36Especially if it's a girl gharial.
01:33:40You dig your garden in the backyard and notice something moving on your shovel.
01:33:45You take a closer look and drop the tool in horror.
01:33:49A small creature looking like a hostile alien is scurrying away into some burrow in the
01:33:54ground.
01:33:55No worries, it's just a star-nosed mole.
01:33:59These critters have peculiar snouts that look like they've been blown up from within.
01:34:04Their eyes are small and weak, so the star on their nose helps them a lot to move around
01:34:09and seek food.
01:34:10It's always on the move, touching everything it can reach as if the tendrils were tiny
01:34:15fingers.
01:34:16Oh, you're bathing in the ocean again.
01:34:19Well, look to your right, there's a real toothed shark going right at you!
01:34:24Nah, don't panic, it's just a sand tiger shark.
01:34:28Neither a sand nor a tiger one, it's a vulnerable fish-eating shark that slowly swims in the
01:34:33seas and chases its prey from time to time.
01:34:37There have been no reports of it ever attacking humans.
01:34:40But it still has rows of sharp teeth, so don't try to touch it just in case.
01:34:46It may seem placid, but you don't want it to get a bite out of you, do you?
01:34:51Ok, from ocean to desert, you're in Australia and longing for some water.
01:34:57You see a likely spot and start digging the ground only to stumble upon a creature straight
01:35:02from the depths of neither, all covered in thorns.
01:35:06It eyes you suspiciously and slinks away because it's just a thorny devil.
01:35:12Despite its ominous name, this lizard is harmless to humans.
01:35:16Horn-like bumps on its skin are for protection from predators and birds of prey.
01:35:22The thorns are hard, but as long as you don't touch them, you're fine.
01:35:27If you have arachnophobia, it won't calm you down.
01:35:31But tailless whip scorpions you might meet in North and South America, as well as Asia
01:35:35and Africa, are more afraid of you than you are of them.
01:35:40Tell yourself that.
01:35:41These nightmarish creatures don't have stingers and won't even bite when threatened.
01:35:46The worst they could do, and only if you corner them, why would you do that, is prick you
01:35:51with their front legs, leaving tiny puncture marks on your finger.
01:35:56Many people even keep them as pets, and they're quite affectionate toward their owners.
01:36:02If you ever stumble upon a burrow from which a hairless, big-toothed creature is peeking
01:36:07at you, just don't mind it and let it be.
01:36:11Naked mole rats are the sphinx cats among rodents.
01:36:15They're close relatives of mole rats, but, well, naked.
01:36:19And they're fascinating in their own right too, thanks to living entirely underground.
01:36:24They're almost totally cold-blooded, but can conform to any temperature outside.
01:36:30And their flappy, wrinkled skin doesn't feel any pain at all.
01:36:33So pins and prickles, as well as sharp teeth, don't scare naked mole rats.
01:36:38You're once again lost in the jungle, this time on Madagascar.
01:36:43Poor you.
01:36:44The night has fallen, and you seek shelter.
01:36:47But when you think you've found a suitable tree to build a lean-to, you freeze in terror.
01:36:53A black, long-fingered hand appears on a tree branch right above you, and two huge yellow
01:37:00eyes are staring you down.
01:37:02Then you see a shaggy face and realize it's just a lemur.
01:37:06An aye-aye, more precisely.
01:37:09This creature is native to Madagascar and only goes out at night, so you're lucky to
01:37:14see it.
01:37:15It fulfills the role of a woodpecker in tropical forests.
01:37:18It knocks on tree trunks to find bugs and uses its long, wizened fingers to reach inside.
01:37:25Tired of being scared?
01:37:27You seek your way home, but your horrors aren't over yet.
01:37:30There's a big red and white snake across your path.
01:37:34It hisses and lies in wait for you to move.
01:37:38You know it's a coral snake, a really dangerous venomous kind.
01:37:42You stop in your tracks, and only when it finally slithers away, you realize it was
01:37:47actually a milk snake.
01:37:50They often mimic venomous ones, not only coral snakes, to protect themselves from predators.
01:37:55Still, if you're not a snake expert, it's always best to stay away.
01:38:02This creature will infest your darkest dreams.
01:38:04A giant African millipede.
01:38:07It's big, it's glossy black, and it has hundreds of tiny, crawly legs.
01:38:12And yet, if it had googly eyes, it could even be cute.
01:38:16Perhaps that's why so many people keep them as pets.
01:38:20Giant millipedes can't really bite.
01:38:25Their only defense is curling into a tight ball and secreting irritating liquid from
01:38:30the pores of its skin.
01:38:32If you dare touch it, don't rub your eyes or nose afterwards.
01:38:35It's quite unpleasant.
01:38:39Goliath birdeater is another popular pet creepy crawler.
01:38:43It isn't dangerous for humans, despite it looking like your worst nightmare.
01:38:47This is one of the largest spiders in the world, and as its name implies, it sometimes
01:38:53hunts small birds for food.
01:38:55But they aren't part of its regular diet.
01:38:57The spider prefers worms and amphibians.
01:39:01Make sure you don't frighten it, though.
01:39:02It can still bite or release hairs in self-defense.
01:39:05The bite is similar to a wasp sting, and hairs can cause severe irritation on your skin.
01:39:12But mostly, this gentle giant is just shy and will crawl away at the sight of you.
01:39:18Oh dear, there's another snake approaching you.
01:39:20And fast!
01:39:21You're about to turn and run when you see a hulking eight-legged form cutting into the
01:39:26snake's path and leaping on it.
01:39:28It's another arachnid, and it looks even more terrifying than the snake.
01:39:33It's a camel spider.
01:39:35Not really a spider, nor a scorpion.
01:39:38These creatures belong to a separate family.
01:39:40They became the stuff of many urban legends, but in fact, they don't even have any venom.
01:39:46Sure, they can bite, and their jaws are pretty powerful, but camel spiders can't do much
01:39:51more to a human than just bite.
01:39:53They hide in the sand and burrow to leap on unsuspecting lizards, invertebrates, and yes,
01:40:00even snakes.
01:40:01And now, picture a pill bug.
01:40:05Not exactly a beauty, but since it's small, it's okay.
01:40:08But what if it were 10 times as large?
01:40:11Nope, definitely not okay.
01:40:13Still, such a creature exists, and it's a giant isopod.
01:40:18Thankfully, it lurks in deep, dark, and cold waters, so it won't ever come up in your backyard.
01:40:25Giant isopods grow to such enormous size because of something called deep-sea gigantism.
01:40:31Deep-dwelling creatures have to endure great pressure of water, extreme cold temperatures,
01:40:36and scarce food, so their metabolism slows down.
01:40:41Isopods don't move much, and more often than not, just lie in wait until some poor small
01:40:46bug or crustacean crawls within their reach and they can munch on it.
01:40:51And though it looks like a many-legged chaos from below, a giant isopod can hurt you, even
01:40:57if it wanted to.
01:40:59Just pet it already!
01:41:04They're off.
01:41:05In the ultimate test of speed versus endurance, the cheetah immediately takes the lead.
01:41:11Reaching highway speeds in only 3 seconds, it's the fastest animal on this planet.
01:41:16But just after 20 seconds, covering a distance of 7 football fields in that time, the cheetah
01:41:22can't keep going.
01:41:24And the pronghorn takes the lead.
01:41:26The speediest animals in North America, they leave their natural enemies, coyotes and bobcats,
01:41:31in the dust.
01:41:32Now that's what I call fast food.
01:41:35But it's slowing down as well.
01:41:37At a lower speed, they can keep it up for miles.
01:41:40Close behind, look out!
01:41:42It's a blue wildebeest.
01:41:44Max speed aside, these animals travel over vast distances, trekking more than 1,000 miles
01:41:49during their yearly migrations.
01:41:51It would take you 20 hours to drive that.
01:41:54Up next, the king of the jungle himself.
01:41:57Like the cheetah, lions are built for short bursts of speed.
01:42:00They hunt by sprinting to their prey and pouncing on it with leaps of up to 36 feet,
01:42:05almost as long as a semi.
01:42:08More than a few seconds, though, and their muscles tire out.
01:42:12Down they go, one after the other.
01:42:14Cats, rabbits, bears, oh my, nearly all the sprinters are tuckering out in under a minute.
01:42:20Now we find out who can endure the longest.
01:42:23The fastest two-legged animal and the largest bird on the planet can't compete well enough
01:42:28with the sprinters.
01:42:29The tendons in an ostrich's legs are like springs, propelling the animal forward without
01:42:34expending too much energy.
01:42:36But after 45 minutes with its speed continuously falling, the ostrich is finally calling it
01:42:42quits.
01:42:44And there goes the pronghorn along with it.
01:42:46Fun fact, it gets its name from that unique split on each horn, like prongs in a fork.
01:42:52It's the only animal that sheds its horns each year.
01:42:56Usually, only antlers fall off yearly.
01:42:59At the one-hour mark, the camel taps out.
01:43:02It can easily transport large loads over 25 miles a day, but not while running.
01:43:08For windy days in the sand, camels have three eyelids protected by two rows of long, thick
01:43:14lashes.
01:43:15They can also close their nostrils completely.
01:43:17Boy, that would be handy.
01:43:19The sled dogs are still going strong.
01:43:22They have plenty of energy to keep up the stamina.
01:43:25Sled dogs eat five times more calories than your typical domestic pooch, taking in up
01:43:31to 10,000 a day.
01:43:33But uh-oh, at one hour and 20 minutes, the fluffy canines are done.
01:43:38The zebras are still hanging in there.
01:43:40As long as they can avoid a lion's quick pounce, they can easily outrun their predators thanks
01:43:45to their stamina.
01:43:46In fact, the lion doesn't get the zebra about 80% of the time.
01:43:51Their equine cousins keep galloping at a steady 10 miles per hour, even though horses
01:43:56can do more than five times that.
01:43:58A racehorse is built and bred to endure, as its spleen pumps out more red blood cells
01:44:03to keep those muscles oxygenated.
01:44:06But at the two-and-a-half-hour mark, the horse is out of the race.
01:44:11And with that, the human takes the lead.
01:44:14Blown in the dust at the start of the race, the fastest our species has ever done is 27.8
01:44:20miles per hour.
01:44:21And that was for a fraction of a second by Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt, not your average
01:44:27Joe.
01:44:28Speed is for the animal kingdom.
01:44:30Humans were built for long-distance running, and we top them all.
01:44:34The best we've got in that department is a man named Dean Karnazes, who jogged 350 miles
01:44:39across Northern California without stopping for 80 hours and 44 minutes.
01:44:46That's over three days of nonstop running.
01:44:49Really?
01:44:49He didn't even stop for... wow.
01:44:52Our species evolved for endurance running.
01:44:55We have a body covered not in fur, but two to five million sweat glands.
01:45:00We're aerodynamic and can cool off more efficiently than animals that pant instead of sweat.
01:45:06Our large, strong glute muscles keep us upright.
01:45:09This minimizes our center of gravity and the surface area being hit by the sun.
01:45:14We save energy, maintain balance, and don't get too overheated.
01:45:18Unlike the prey our early ancestors would hunt for, it took persistence, not speed.
01:45:24But any average Joe who's ever tried to run after the bus will know humans need to train
01:45:30to run super long distances.
01:45:33And the wear and tear on our muscles and joints is no joke.
01:45:36Regular marathon runners need weeks, even months, of prep before and rest after a competition.
01:45:43The racers have slowed down to a walking pace, and now the animal kingdom can finally
01:45:48impress with its endurance.
01:45:51The Arctic lemming spends most of its day trotting around looking for grub.
01:45:56The tiny 3-ounce creature travels 10 miles a day, just like you walking the distance
01:46:01of 40 Grand Canyons in 24 hours.
01:46:04A polar bear usually covers 20 miles a day, but some have been tracked traveling 50 or
01:46:10even hundreds of miles.
01:46:12Polar bears are actually considered marine mammals since they spend their lives on the
01:46:16sea ice and depend on the ocean for food.
01:46:20Packs of wolves travel up to 30 miles a day in search of food.
01:46:24Loners looking for a new pack or a mate can travel much further, up to 500 miles.
01:46:30That'd be like going up and down Mount Everest 50 times.
01:46:34And why would you want to do that?
01:46:37During their yearly migrations, caribou can cover over 3,000 miles, more than the distance
01:46:42from San Francisco to New York.
01:46:45The eye color of Arctic caribou changes from gold to blue in the winter.
01:46:50It makes their vision more light-sensitive during these months of little sunlight.
01:46:55But what's this?
01:46:56Up in the sky, it's the endurance flyers.
01:46:59Grab your binoculars and have a look at that ruby-throated hummingbird.
01:47:04Weighing not much more than a penny, some of them cross the Gulf of Mexico, a distance
01:47:08of 500 miles, in about 22 hours of non-stop flight.
01:47:14Not bad for the smallest bird on our planet.
01:47:16Whoa, watch out little guy!
01:47:19It's a peregrine falcon, zooming by at 125 miles per hour.
01:47:23These birds can travel up to 800 miles a day and reach speeds of close to 190 miles an
01:47:29hour when diving.
01:47:31It's the fastest endurance flight among birds, and technically, the fastest animal on Earth.
01:47:37Ooh, a looming shadow covers the peregrine falcon from above.
01:47:42Here comes the biggest flying bird in the world.
01:47:45With its mighty 11-foot wingspan, the wandering albatross can travel 10,000 miles, almost
01:47:51halfway around the world in a single journey.
01:47:55They spend most of their time in flight, coming to land only when it's time to breed.
01:48:00Ah, here we have a globe-trotting dragonfly that recently dethroned the monarch butterfly
01:48:06for the number one spot among massive insect migrations.
01:48:10Monarchs make an annual 3,000-mile trip from Canada to Mexico.
01:48:15But the globe-skimmer dragonfly crosses oceans and flies up to 11,000 miles.
01:48:21If you're looking to set a world record for the longest walk in the world, you'd need
01:48:25to start on the most southern tip of Africa and trek to the furthest northeastern tip
01:48:29of Russia.
01:48:30It's 14,000 miles, more than half the circumference of the Earth.
01:48:35The Arctic turn covers about 18,500 miles.
01:48:39That's three-quarters of the Earth's circumference in three-week-long flights.
01:48:44If you tried to hike that, it would take you four years to complete such a trip.
01:48:48Still, nothing compared to the bird that can fly nonstop for 200 days in a row.
01:48:55Dragon swifts can be airborne for 10 months at a time, which means they cover the distance
01:48:59to the moon and back several times in their life.
01:49:03Like many migratory birds escaping winter, they eat and sleep while flying.
01:49:08Switching to X-ray mode, you'll see these birds switch off half their brain for rest,
01:49:13while the other half keeps the flight going.
01:49:16Now don't be so impressed, humans can do that too.
01:49:19Well, sort of.
01:49:21It's why you sleep so lightly in unfamiliar places.
01:49:25If your brain is on alert and not entirely sleeping.
01:49:29Humpback whales swim over 6,000 miles every year during the migration season.
01:49:34They hold the record for the longest migration among marine creatures.
01:49:38Fun fact, each humpback's whale tail is as unique to it as a fingerprint.
01:49:43There's even a picture catalog of all the known ones.
01:49:47Yet many sharks would sit back and laugh at all of them, if sharks could laugh.
01:49:52Species like great whites and makos, contemporary relatives of the megalodon, by the way, don't
01:49:59stop swimming their entire lives.
01:50:01If they stop, they won't be able to breathe.
01:50:04Continuous movement allows water to flow through their gills, and that's how they get oxygen.
01:50:10But most of their muscles don't need oxygen to function.
01:50:13That's their white muscle tissue.
01:50:15It's for long-distance endurance swimming.
01:50:18White muscle tissue, which needs oxygen from the blood, is only used during short bursts
01:50:23of speed.
01:50:24Fail.
01:50:25Ah, what a waste of an hour, running around with a rolled-up newspaper, trying to get
01:50:33that fly that keeps buzzing around your head.
01:50:36Well, three things.
01:50:37Why isn't it afraid of you?
01:50:39And why won't it just fly away?
01:50:42And how is it so incredibly fast?
01:50:44Flies actually have a pretty normal speed for their size.
01:50:47You're just a bit too slow.
01:50:50A tiny fly brain reacts several times faster than yours to what it sees.
01:50:55One second to the fly feels like 5 or 6 to you.
01:50:59When a fly looks at you, it sees you as if you're hanging out at the bottom of your
01:51:03local pool, moving around really slowly.
01:51:07What if you dropped a balloon from your bedroom window and watched it fall to the ground?
01:51:12That's how slow a fly sees regular things fall.
01:51:15So it has ninja reaction speeds, but it also has special eyes.
01:51:19They're divided into thousands of receptors that capture light all at the same time.
01:51:25You use small muscles to turn your eyes and head around to look in different directions.
01:51:30Flies don't have these muscles, they don't need them.
01:51:33They can see in every direction at the same time almost.
01:51:36No matter what side you attack from, that fly's almost definitely gonna see it coming.
01:51:43You've probably seen supersonic planes in the movies, turning and flipping around at
01:51:47warp speed.
01:51:48A fly's kinda like that, but with way cooler wings.
01:51:52It can change directions mid-flight, stop, and dodge any obstacles.
01:51:56It can even calculate a flight strategy before it takes off.
01:52:00Well, this time you're really gonna swap that fly.
01:52:04As you raise your rolled-up paper, the insect's brain calculates where it's gonna land.
01:52:09The fly immediately puts its body in the perfect position, ready to perform an evasive maneuver.
01:52:15If your hand moves in front of the insect, its legs immediately tilt backwards to help
01:52:20it fly off in the other direction.
01:52:22Wow, that fly would make a great boxer.
01:52:24Or soccer goalie.
01:52:26So why does that fly even bother sticking around?
01:52:29You're always trying to squish it.
01:52:31Well, because your body is a 5-star feast, and your skin is the buffet table with row
01:52:37upon row of tasty treats.
01:52:40As you move about your day, your skin releases sweat, proteins, carbs, salt, sugar, and all
01:52:46other chemicals that flies are crazy about.
01:52:50Imagine you're hungry and thirsty, walking through a desert.
01:52:53You come over a tall sand dune and see it.
01:52:56Free food, tables of fruit, candy, sandwiches, and the world's biggest soda fountain.
01:53:02The bouncer looks big, tough, round.
01:53:05It's a giant slow turtle!
01:53:07Now you know why the fly sticks around.
01:53:10You're the turtle.
01:53:12You actually do have a chance to get that fly.
01:53:14But it's still going to get away 8 times out of 10.
01:53:18Say a fly's sitting on your kitchen table.
01:53:20Here's what you do.
01:53:21You need to aim a few inches in front of where you think it's gonna fly to.
01:53:26The fly brain will think you're aiming right at it, so you can actually outwit the fly
01:53:30and take it by surprise.
01:53:32The problem?
01:53:33It's really hard to predict the fly's escape route.
01:53:36So you're too slow.
01:53:38How about calling in some backup?
01:53:40Meet the tiger beetle.
01:53:42Speed – 8 feet per second.
01:53:44It can't fly, but that doesn't matter.
01:53:47This beetle runs so fast, it loses the ability to see while it's moving.
01:53:52It aims itself at a target and then runs.
01:53:55It's not a ninja like the fly, and it can't change directions mid-sprint.
01:53:59It has to stop before each run.
01:54:02You walk at around 4.5 feet per second, so the beetle goes like twice your speed.
01:54:08But for its size, it's incredibly fast.
01:54:11It runs 125 lengths of its body in one second.
01:54:15Say you're 6 feet tall.
01:54:17You have to run 750 feet in one second.
01:54:21As long as it's on the same surface as that pesky fly, the fly doesn't stand a chance.
01:54:27Or maybe it's time to call in air support.
01:54:30The dragonfly is the fastest flying insect in the world.
01:54:34This little creature can reach 35 miles per hour.
01:54:37That's faster than you riding your bike down a steep hill.
01:54:40The dragonfly's wings also allow it to fly back, right, left, up, and down, just like
01:54:46a helicopter.
01:54:47Doesn't matter how fast the fly moves, it's pretty much game over.
01:54:53Flies, dragonflies, and tiger beetles are fast because they don't want to spend a
01:54:58lot of extra time out in the open.
01:55:00There are a lot of hungry creatures around.
01:55:03But there's one insect that runs fast because if it stopped…
01:55:07Ouch!
01:55:08To meet a speedy silver ant, you need to go to the Sahara Desert.
01:55:12The sand here is so hot, you could fry an egg on it.
01:55:16Mmm, sandy.
01:55:17That's why the silver ant speeds at around 2.5 feet per second.
01:55:22It doesn't want to burn its feet.
01:55:24It also has triangle-shaped hair that reflects heat, helping the ant escape the scorching
01:55:29sun.
01:55:31If that ant were human-sized, it could run at 400 mph, faster than the fastest car in
01:55:36the world.
01:55:37There's another ant that holds a speed record.
01:55:40The dracula ant can't run as fast as the silver ant, but it has the fastest mouth in
01:55:45the world, um, other than me.
01:55:48It can open and close its jaws 5,000 times, all in the blink of an eye.
01:55:53Literally.
01:55:54How about another fast one, this time a bit closer to home, or in it?
01:55:58The American cockroach can hide in the walls, behind the stove, pretty much anywhere.
01:56:03It's almost impossible to catch.
01:56:06It can run 5 feet per second.
01:56:08That's because of its 6 legs.
01:56:10Each one has 3 knees.
01:56:12Its legs are covered with small hairs that sense any change in the air.
01:56:17That's why it reacts so fast when you walk into the kitchen and turn the light on.
01:56:23And the world record for fastest creature on land is the size of a sesame seed.
01:56:28It's a type of mite, and it can move at 322 body lengths per second.
01:56:34If you zap the mite to turn it to human size, it could go almost two times faster than the
01:56:39speed of sound.
01:56:41The mite can even change direction while moving.
01:56:44That makes it the fastest, most elusive creature on the planet.
01:56:48But let's find some animals that actually make us feel good about ourselves.
01:56:52The garden snail.
01:56:54It belongs to the mollusk family, and it likes to take its sweet time.
01:56:59If you were moving at snail speed, you'd take two steps every two hours.
01:57:04But snails don't care.
01:57:06They have been around for hundreds of millions of years.
01:57:10Snails use their shell for protection, but they have other tricks too.
01:57:14Some snails give off a nasty smell so that no one bothers them.
01:57:19If it gets too hot and dry, snails hide in their shells and seal themselves in using
01:57:24that cool slime they make.
01:57:26That slime also helps them climb up trees.
01:57:30Sloths are the slowest mammals on the planet.
01:57:33Thanks to their slow metabolism, food can take up to 16 days to get digested.
01:57:38Wouldn't be that hard to catch up to one of them.
01:57:41But their slowness actually helps them.
01:57:43You know how in the movies they say, stop, don't make any sudden movements?
01:57:48Well a sloth has that part down cold.
01:57:50Other animals simply don't notice them up there among the leaves.
01:57:55Manatees are one of the slowest sea creatures, but they're not too worried about anyone
01:58:00messing with them, except for humans in motorboats.
01:58:03They are huge and they have thick, thick skin.
01:58:06It's like a sea tank, but way cuter.
01:58:10Another slow swimmer is the Greenland shark.
01:58:12It swims at less than 1 mile per hour.
01:58:15Like the manatee, it's large and in charge.
01:58:19No one's likely to challenge it face to face.
01:58:21But this all leads to the most hilarious snacking technique ever.
01:58:26The Greenland shark is basically slower than every single fish in the water.
01:58:30The only chance it has is to wait for some of those fish to fall asleep.
01:58:35Then it's snack time.
01:58:37The cool thing is that their easygoing lifestyle actually prolongs their life.
01:58:42The average lifespan of a Greenland shark is 300 to 500 years.
01:58:47They live in the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans.
01:58:51Imagine you're on a cruise and you see one of these slow-motion giants.
01:58:55It might be 400 years older than you!
01:58:59That's it for today!
01:59:01So hey, if you pacified your curiosity, then give the video a like and share it with your
01:59:06friends!
01:59:07Or if you want more, just click on these videos and stay on the Bright Side!

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