Small correction towards the end: flies don't do the metamorphosis IN rotten meat or poo, they tend to stop eating and craw away from food to pupate (otherwise the adult will immediately drown as soon as they eclose). I worked with both fruit flies and blow flies in the past and you always find the pupae far away from the food.
And another quibble, moths (11:20) do have a pupal skin--the silk cocoon is an additional layer over that. Also a few groups of moth do not make a cocoon--they just have a chrysalis.
@@pierreabbat6157 Right, at 11:43 he says "beetles and cicadas do it too, often buried in the ground". Beetles have complete metamorphosis like Lepidoptera, but not cicadas--they have gradual metamorphosis. Great video though, explaining a lot in a short format with excellent graphics.
Learned a cool new word today: eclose. Sounds poetic except it's about bugs. I only know one poem about a bug: The lord in his wisdom made the fly And then forgot the reason why. Ogden Nash He never realized how cool bugs are, I suppose. I understand because I dislike the vermin very much, too, myself.
Could you imagine if humans did this? "I'm sorry, but Johnny can't come to school today. He's locked himself in his room, and isn't coming out for the next two weeks." "That's exciting, Mr. Smith. I'm sure your whole family is very proud. Please remember that when he does emerge, he will be expected to make up the work."
@@raraavis7782 It isn't really puberty, it's more like if humans gave birth to 5 month old fetuses and then those fetuses foraged for food for few months then created their own womb to finish maturing into a baby.
I would argue that humans are more amazing. It doesn't seem so as we are just more familiar. Butterfly: "Watch me metamorphosize" Human: "Watch me create a noise with my armpit"
Preschool teacher: And from within the fat little caterpillar burst a writhing mass of wasp larvae that ate the caterpillar from the inside out and grew up and laid their eggs inside more caterpillars!
I actually had that occur with a Yellow Swallowtail caterpillar I pulled off my Dill plant years ago. Instead of a regular Crysalis forming after the caterpillar attached it self, it turned black and it's mouthparts fell off. It was the first time I had collected that type, so I was not sure if this was normal or not. I waited and was very shocked to later find a very large wasp in the jar. It was pretty scary opening the jar and releasing it.
@@kearstinnekenerson6676so so many, the insect kingdom has all kinds of horrors. Some birds even do a similar thing with their young, they lay their eggs in other species nests and push out or break as many of the host species eggs as they can when they do it, and just leave their eggs there for the host species to raise.
I feel like one factor for metamorphosis is energy - the amount of energy required in the egg to create a pupal stage vs a more complex adult. The pupal stage means the mother can expend a LOT less energy and instead make hundreds or thousands of eggs that then acquire their own energy. But im an engineer - its always energy XD
Lots of organisms have reproductive strategies that involve producing many eggs instead of investing more intensely in a smaller number of young, but also don't involve metamorphosis. How is metamorphosis specifically and separately from producing lots of eggs saving the parents energy?
@@marksando3082 it isnt. Nonetheless its still engineering as the field also covers costs. The amount of energy invested per egg is small so total energy invested by mother gives many eggs. Engineering considers business factors too. Since there are many competitors odds of survivability are small per unit but produce volume enough .... Lol you get the idea now
@@marksando3082 clearly metamorphosis isnt the only way to have many eggs, but it seems an efficient strategy to do so. Obviously there is more than one factor to why most of the world's animals use it.
That's been done repeatedly. There's a book called Brainboy and Bob in The very Hungry Maggot, another one called the Moderately Hungry Maggot, and a variety of "Very Hungry Maggot" merch, my favorite of which use a human skull and maggot in a parody of the Hungry Caterpillar cover.
As a matter of fact, no we didn't raise any butterflies in school. HOWEVER. The school I attended for 3rd grade and 5th grade (don't ask, Midland Texas has WEIRD school district lines) had a "caterpillar problem." Every year in spring there would be absolute hordes of itty slightly fuzzy pale green caterpillars, all over the ornamental plantings but also all over the walls!! A lot of the kids were freaked out by them but I was always fascinated since I knew they weren't going to bite or sting me, and finally one day in 5th grade, I caught one of the caterpillars and very carefully brought it home with me. My mother did not flip her lid, and instead gave me a glass jar to put the creature into, and told me to go outside and pick three stems off the ornamental bushes in the apartment complex, but ONLY the ones that looked just like the bushes at the school. (At that age I already knew my mother was smart, never even questioned it, ha) She fixed up the jar so that the caterpillar couldn't easily crawl out, and we gave it its food and it was chill! I would get it onto my finger for a few moments every day just because I could, and I'd bring home a new stem every day with more leaves. Then - the weekend. Saturday morning - and my caterpillar had vanished!!! I looked high and low (well, as "high" as a nine year old can look) and couldn't find it. Very sad. But SUNDAY morning I saw the pupa!! The caterpillar had managed to get out of the jar and made its little sack of magic on the curtain. Few days later - and there was a moth!!! A beautiful white moth with vivid tiger-orange on the inside of the wings. And though I know now as an adult that bugs don't exactly bond with anything or anybody, it seemed to me like the moth remembered me, and it flew over and landed on my shirt and just kinda sat there like "Welp. Outside now, please." So of course I took it outside, set it carefully on a bush, and watched it fly off to do whatever moths do. And at the school? Dozens and dozens of white-and-orange moths on Monday! So many! The grownups were all super annoyed but to me it was pure magic. To this day I have no bloody idea what kind of moth it was though. I've never found ANY picture that looks like my moth pal.
Wow, what a great story! Now I really want to know what kind of moths they were, but I did just go down a little google images binge looking at all of the different moths with white and orange wings. There are so many beautiful kinds! As for a moth bonding with you, I wouldn't rule it out! There's good science showing that adult insects retain memories from when they were in their larval stage, and there is also increasing evidence that insects have emotions! If nothing else, it sounds like the moth knew you were trustworthy!
Cool story, I would have loved to have raised moths as a child but my parents were squicked out by bugs lol. I really wanted an ant farm and wasn't allowed one 😂 By the way, they've done studies that show that memories made as a caterpillar do get retained as a butterfly / moth. So it's possible your moth friend did in fact remember you in some way.
Big and important correction: moths don't spin a silk cocoon INSTEAD OF becoming a hard-skinned pupa; they do it BEFORE becoming a pupa. Cut open a moth cocoon, and there's a pupa inside it. Also, cicadas are mentioned in the same breath as beetles, but cicadas don't have a pupal stage; they're hemimetabolous. They go straight from nymph to adult.
If you keep in mind that during the chrysalis stage that hard shell on the outside was once the exoskeleton of the caterpillar before metamorphosis, it makes sense that it has protowings and such.
I have a fear of butterflies and am trying to reduce it gradually by exposing myself (virtually) and learning about them. This was really cool to watch :)
Do you know where that fear originated? I've never heard of someone being afraid of butterflies before & I'm really curious. Sorry if that's a weird thing to ask lol
@@ForestFire369 I've seen it before. Sometimes as part of a larger fear of insects, but sometimes just independent "creepy flappy thing eugh" horrors. Not me, I get the horrors about slugs instead - I'm OK with pictures and video but I am NOT getting near one. Calvin said it best: "Living booger"
It seems to me that caterpillars are just a second stage of embryonic development, but external and more autonomous. Since the egg does not have enough nutrients, they must eat to continue their development. Once they secure enough food, the final transformation is done.
This is, in fact, a decent summary of the prevailing model for how holometabolous development evolved. The pupal stage is believed to correspond to the nymph stage in non-metamorphosing insects like grasshoppers, while the larval stage is thought to correspond to a kind of mobile late-stage embryo called a pronymph.
That's exactly how I think about it. Kinda reminds me of how a lot of people call the first three months of a human baby's life the fourth trimester, the final trimester of development that happens outside the womb, before they really start becoming interactivec and learning how to human.
@erinm9445 the reason for this on humans is our huge heads. If babies were brought to "full term" based on mammal biology their heads would kill the mother almost 100% of the time (before modern medicine obviously). Most other mammals can at least walk and see when they are born (as with horses) or at most take 3 or so weeks before they can (as with dogs and mice)
Couple years ago I had a cabbage white in my living room and let it out. More than half a year later I found its crysalis hidden behind the door inside of my fridge, where it apparently ended up as caterpillar with the groceries. Despite the cold, it pupated and eventually hatched. I also found another one next to it, which didn't hatch yet, I could feel it bobbing around carefully shaking the crysalis. I assumed it dead, took both crysalises out and ordered some resin, colours and tools to make fake amber earrings with the crysalises inside. After a week of lying on a table in the warm living room, while I was waiting for the supplies, the 2nd one miraculously did hatch as well. I guess the cool environment inside the fridge basically told it to lay dormant and wait for spring before hatching, which then it did. I was amazed.
I also found mystery cabbage moths in my living room one day. Or rather, one one day, and another a few days later. I don't know why it never occured to me that they must have pupated right in my house! (I don't recall finding the chrysalis later, but who knows, it was quite a while ago now). Neat story!
I raised a monarch from caterpillar to butterfly last year, it was fascinating seeing them change. The end of the period they are in the chrysalis it turns clear
I know multiple people who are scared of insects, even “pretty” and harmless ones like butterflies, despite not having bad experiences with them. I’m sure you have a video posting schedule but it would be neat to explore what draws out the natural fear of these things in a future video :)
The definition of phobia is more or less a morbid fear of something that isn't dangerous. People with phobias are quite aware that their fear isn't rational. We have deep-seated mechanisms for developing fear of dangerous things as we encounter them, and sometimes this goes wrong. The good news is that treating phobia is probably the most successful psychotherapy there is. So if you have a phobia, know that you can get rid of it with known, successful methods.
13:54 Joe talking with his hand shaking the chrysalis back and forth 😂I was like, "you're going to shake it off the branch!" imagine the pupa going "ohmygod everything's shaking it's the end of the world!!!!!!"
I feel like the butterfly goo myth originated when somebody tried to open a pupa to look, its guts came out, and they just went "Welp I guess that's all there is in there!"
Omg I didn't know scientists had figured this out. The last thing I heard (long time ago) was that it wasn't known what happens. I always wanted to know this. Thank you so much!
Yeah, that's also a myth. It's been known roughly what goes on during metamorphosis since at least the first half of the 1900s, although with new tech like x-ray tomography we can get way better images of it now - earlier research relied heavily on things like dissection and transplantation of developing organs.
We had a bunch of caterpillars for a school project. Some metamorphosed just fine, some died before they had the chance, and some seem to never make a chrysalis and just turned to goo? We never found bodies but there was goo.
If I remember correctly, the goo is because after they die, the hormones and chemicals that were directing unneeded cells to recycle themselves are out of control, so the whole pupas corpse "recycles" itself. I'm having trouble finding confirmation, the internet just keeps giving me "caterpillars turn into soup" stuff. Vertebrates get attacked by our digestive acids, enzymes, and symbiotic bacteria after death too, but it's not as extreme because we're never in the middle of trying to completely redo our architecture.
Yeah a fair number die during the many molts that they have to go through as they grow. That and eclosing in to an adult are the riskiest times for them and when things tend to go wrong.
The goo ones are because of a viral infection, they liquefy and are picked up by other wandering caterpillars, continuing the cycle. The gypsy moth baculovirus is an especially ingenious version of the parasite.
Cool. Suggestion: for shots that are sped-up or slowed down, always add the speed in the corner (like "x100 speed"). It's science communication after all. Thanks.
Hi Joe, Bob here. Another amazing show. I also used to catch caterpillars and watch them pupate and emerge as butterflies. It was fascinating. And still is.
5:46 I’m sorry, who’s monarch caterpillar is eating 100 leaves a day?! I’ve seen one demolish a standard milkweed leaf in 6 hours but 100 leaves in 24 hours?! Please.
This is super interesting. Also a bit more approachable but on par in weirdness is that an egg containing of inconspicuous white and yolk that probably each of us ate on breakfast at some time... consists all ingredients to make a whole small bird. Given the egg is fertile it contains all the resource and bioengine to transform it into a bird, from some bio-mush. In that sense it's like chrysalis.
Not really. Butterfly species still lay eggs themselves which hatch to produce live young, which is perfectly conventional. They just pause at the end of the larval stage to undergo a second transformation into the adult reproductive stage, which is a less common reproductive approach. The genes for the butterfly are the same as the caterpillar that presages it, they're just being expressed differently until the hormonal triggers are released. The shell of an egg is (from a human viewpoint) much closer to being a self-contained external uterus than anything else. The resources needed for the embryo to develop are pre-loaded rather than being drip-fed over time the way things work in a mammalian womb, but otherwise the functions are essentially the same. Both approaches have their own biological advantages and drawbacks.
@@Delmworks Yea, but it could be fertilized given the chance. The contents are the same, except lacking few cells of biomachinery to start the process.
I wonder, did all these genera of pupating insects independently evolve their pupating strategies, or did they diverge from a common ancestor only after it adopted the pupating strategy?
I have raised butterflies for 15 years and I know what goes on inside a cocoon and it’s absolutely amazing. Its as close as we can get to true magic. It is mind boggling the way that metamorphosis can create a totally new creature. Imagine if that was possible for more complex animals. What would it morph into? The possibilities would be endless if we could somehow harness how exactly this process works. This is the first time I’ve seen this channel. AAAAAND SUBSCRIBE! 🥰 Oh wow! So i made this comment before I watched the video because I was so excited to finally see a video that delves into the metamorphosis process. And then when I get to that section of the video i see its called a “Sack of Magic”! Even this creator explains it the same way I do when I teach people about raising butterflies. Like MAGIC! (I also raise bees as well. Its so much fun! 🥰
Heh I taught myself that chrysalis are just another layer under the skin while reading my own caterpillars. Also moths do the the same, they just do it inside the cocoon. Certain ones like the gypsy moth will even just make a super lazy cocoon, just folding a leaf partially together.
It's an example of the Swiss Army Knife effect - if you have a tool that can do a bunch of different things, it will do them all but poorly, like a swiss army knife. By confining the eating and growth phase to one body plan, and the mating and reproduction phase to another body plan, each body is optimized to that task. All life forms and functions strive for maximal energy efficiency.
Eric Carle fan. He actually wanted to write a book about a bookworm. His publisher or editor wanted the change. He just wanted to make a book with fun holes in it. A lot of his books have fun tricks to them.
School taught me the version of Caterpillar -> Chrysalid -> ? -> Butterfly. I'm 33 and I'm ashamed of myself for never actually questioning "Huh, what does really happens to that caterpillar once inside"
One further interesting tiny point that I find fascinating and inexplicable is the very small period of time when the chrysalis, if it is one that hangs downward from the tail (not all do, some are suspended upward with a silk waistband, some are in cocoons such as with moths) has to shed the skin of the final instar of caterpillarness, which becomes a crinkled up bundle, and then the chrysalis (blind) has to walk with it's tail hooks (which are like hook&loop fastener) across the drying bundle of shed skin, and onto the silk pad onto which it hooks and stays - that’s not only amazing it can do this every time, but that it has ‘knowledge’ to do this specific one-time action, and seriously, how did that evolve, there must’ve been so many that fell off and didn’t survive? That’s certainly one for Darwin if you ask me
the genetic coordination involved, first evolving an organism like a caterpillar which itself has thousands of parts which have ireducible complexity, and then the whole organism , for one, how did the caterpiller movement spring forth out of.nowhere, one day no caterpillers, the next, a whole new organism with hundreds of different protiens. And the way they move, coordinating all their legs to.move at the right time, im sceptical of the scientiic theorys proposed about competition. Sometimes scientists want to be sound right becaise they dont like to appear to have an incomplete understanding How the butterfly completely changing shape and function 4 times could have evolved purely by chance. You can't tell me this process evolved by chance, It seems designed, like the cell. Irreducible c complexity. Ohh and it doesn't explain how these processes evolving by adaptation, mutation and competition, how ststistically its nearly impossible to have evolved by chance. Im not a creationist,im atheist, but this has always been a mystery to me.
Hi Joe, when I was a kid my granddad found a thumb-sized black caterpillar covered in hairs. He put it in a plant propagator box with a privet twig. Days later, it pupated. Turns out it was a beautiful Privet Hawk Moth, with magenta and lime green wings. It did its first crap on my thumb, and fed it with sugar water on a microscope slide. I never forget it warming up its flight muscles by vibrating. We released it shortly after, and it remains my fave childhood memory.
I got up close and personal with some butterflies while camping and even as an adult it’s just such a joy to see them! It’s like a welcome visit from a friend, and I always talk to them as they fly by. I’d always wondered what went on in there 😊
It's a little more horrifying to know the foundational elements of the butterfly are developing within the whole time. Its less you assuming a new form, and more your existence is fueling this second lifeform eventually taking over. Like it started with a parasite and they linked life cycles.
It's all one brain the whole time, so I think it's okay! Think of it more like permanent teeth vs baby teeth. The permanent teeth are in there forming long before you lose your baby teeth and the adult teeth come in, but all of it's you the whole time, the adult teeth aren't the foreign teeth of some weird organism living through you!
Tldr: the caterpillar turns into a production line, only retaining basic vital organs as the rest of the body turns into liquefied mini-factories, each "factory" tasked with manufacturing a different part - legs, wings, eyes, etc. Then all the parts are assembled together and voilá, butterfly! And somehow, they can RETAIN MEMORIES after this process, remembering information from when they were a caterpillar!
Well over 15 years ago as a child I would bring this up to family and teachers that I believed the inside of a chrysalis was liquid and I wanted to order some caterpillars and open them up mid metamorphosis to prove my theory.So you better believe I was so excited to learn the truth about them when I got older
Me too😊 Kung tao ganyan rin noh at magkakaroon ng wings hehe. Pero gusto ko ung mga axolotl or lizard na nagreregenerate ulit ang putol na part ng katawan nila. Pwede din ung mga jellyfish na habang buhay nabubuhay at umiikot lang cycle ng buhay nila. Daming kakaiba sa mundo
In the United States, students are typically taught about butterfly metamorphosis in elementary school, specifically during the early grades. The age at which students are taught this subject can vary by school district and state, but it is commonly covered in early elementary grades, such as kindergarten through third grade.
Thank you so much for this video! A few times now I've gotten really curious on what exactly is going on inside a chrysalis but had never been able to find anything remotely detailed enough. This not only provides some good detail into what's going on but also contains some really mind-blowing stuff, such as the imaginal disc starting to develop prior to the pupal stage.
I'm real curious as to how this process originated. It's such a drastically different life stage from what other species do it's hard to imagine how they might be related.
Here because my 4 year old daughter loves The Hungry Caterpillar so much so that we purchased for her a caterpillar habitat, replete with said caterpillars. They just shed their exoskeletons and are now in their chrysalid form. We are in the midst of their transformation. It is a omderful thing to watch. I needed some data to regurgitate to keep my daughters curious mind satisfied (mine too, I suppose). Thank you!
Love it that you address your audience as smart people ❤😊. You give yourself permission to talk at the level you want to, to people who are going to want to listen....if they don't want to, they won't stay on your page and you don't have to worry about how to address them! 😅
Very interesting video! We just became a Monarch Waystation about a year ago. Last fall was our first time rearing , tagging and releasing Monarchs. It was the most amazing process but watching them emerge was probably by favorite. It’s a lot longer process than I thought, they typically stay a good hour or so in the same position just swinging back and forth and pumping their wings. We have only had one bad chrysalis so far so not a bad record!
It is a very fascinating thing. It has been weirding us out, probably since we began to think about things abstractly. But while the various forms of complete metamorphosis are all very interesting, I have always considered the incomplete metamorphosis to be much more curious. Take the larva of a dragonfly. While not as completely different as a larva is to a butterfly, it is still remarkably different from the adult animal. But one day it simply says "I'll go up that talk and shed my skin and then fly away." As in for a while a fully adult dragonfly was running/swimming around in an insect version of an encounter suit. That has got to be among the most weird things. And yes, I did notice the part about the proto-wings in the larva. And that is probably connected to the dragonfly approach.
Two of my favorite forms of life. Caterpillars (most I believe) are always gentle, and I'm not sure how true it is but I was told as a young child that a butterfly chooses to land on you or not. Back then, I took that to mean that the caterpillar and eventual butterfly knew you had no desire to harm them. I think it was my first experience with respect in life. To this day, I will stop all movement if needed in order to prevent harming/disturbing either.
As an ex-preschool teacher I had A very ambivalent feeling about "the very hungry caterpillar." But I always told the children that not all of the story is scientificly accurate. Not only what happens in the pupa. I don't appreciate when people accuse preschool teachers of all the misconceptions people have when they grow up.
I thought the answer as to why was obvious. Monarch Butterflies consume milkweeds as caterpillars. If it didn't turn into a flying animal, it would be difficult to reach more milkweeds. This is the reason the Mayfly only lives one day as a flyer, because it's an algae eater and if you are in a river and want to reach another river, or a pond not connect to anything, the flying form can do it. While the monarch stays butterfly long enough to justify flying south for the winter, most moths and butterflies live shorter lives and are more focused on reproduction.
I've heard about the "caterpillar soup" many times, but when watching an actual caterpillar transform, I thought that this definitely does NOT look like a soup, and either some people have a weird definition of "liquify", or something is quite wrong about the "soup" explanation.... my 2 year old is very interested in watching caterpillars metamorphose - now I'll make sure to tell her about the REAL way they do it 😊
Have you tried joining nebula? It’s a streaming platform like RUclips but it was made by a bunch of educational youtubers without an algorithm I think you might fit in quite well I really enjoy the channel thanks for the information joe!
When I was a child, I wanted to go to university to be the first person to figure out how catapillars become butterflies because it seemed like no one knew.
I was so excited at the start, it felt like i was about to watch pbs be smart, pbs eons, & just keep thinking in a single episode. Please check the last one too. I hope scientists would discover how holometabolous development evolved soon.
It was very interesting to look inside the cocoon, thank you. I never thought that magic happens there. I was about right in imagining that a caterpillar grows new limbs while it is in a sleep-like state.
0:59: 🦋 The process of butterfly metamorphosis is much more complex and fascinating than commonly believed. 3:02: 🦋 Butterflies and other insects go through a process called holometabolism, where they live different phases of life as completely different forms. 5:56: 🦋 Caterpillars go through multiple molts and develop internal proto-wings before entering the chrysalis stage of metamorphosis. 9:12: 🦋 The process of metamorphosis from caterpillar to butterfly involves cell death, recycling of proteins, and the growth of new body parts. Recap by Tammy AI
This video blew my mind multiple times. Sitting here with my mouth wide open. The little proto-wings inside the caterpillar. They shed their caterpillar skin to emerge as a pupa underneath. Why are we not teaching kids the actual stuff caterpillars and pupae do, this is AMAZING.
The Very Hungry Caterpillar is teaching young children language skills and about growing up at a critical age for that 😅 how did Joe react to If You Give a Mouse a Cookie 😂
I think you missed out on the most interesting aspect: Butterflies remember things from their caterpillar days. Let me remind you they turn into insect goop while inside the chrysalis and then re-assemble.
Your first sentence is true. But this video shows that your second--though widely believed and taught--is an oversimplification at best. There's no reason to think that the brain of the organism is turned to goop during metamorphasis. But I still agree that butterfly/caterpillar memory is super cool!
Two weeks ago I started asking myself questions about this very topic, but did no research it at all. So why does this one year old video suddenly appear in my recommendations ??? Spooky. But informative - thank you !
I'd imagine that this all started to have smaller eggs. So the original ancient bug this adaptation comes from had the larval stage still in egg. But then a mutation caused one to hatch early and eat up the surroundings. So if they break out early and eat stuff outside the egg, the egg doesn't need that "food" and can be smaller. Kind of like human babies. They are born early, and have to be raised outside. This keeps everything small. So instead of laying one big egg that becomes a butterfly, you lay a bunch of tiny ones.
2nd grade teacher here: My classes always did a unit on silkworm moths. Something I noticed but never found documentation on was the caterpillars' behavior just prior to starting their cocoons. They would chose a spot - a stick or a corner of the box - then rear up, remain motionless for a time and begin to sway back and forth. Then they'd give a little start, begin madly spinning silk and form it into a figure eight around themselves. It looked like they were receiving instructions via radio transmission! 🙂
By far the best and most comprehensive video on metamorphosis I have ever seen! Possibly the best on the internet! ❤️🦋❤ Not to mention entertaining! "Eric Carle didn't mention that part did he!?!" 🤣
It's me! I'm that guy too! Butterfly grower! 😊 Also, you're an absolute legend! I've been waiting for this video my whole life! 🎉 I'm always racking my brain to work out how this soup transformation happens!😅
Small correction towards the end: flies don't do the metamorphosis IN rotten meat or poo, they tend to stop eating and craw away from food to pupate (otherwise the adult will immediately drown as soon as they eclose). I worked with both fruit flies and blow flies in the past and you always find the pupae far away from the food.
Also, cicadas are bugs; they don't turn into pupae.
@@pierreabbat6157 Neither do cockroaches shown at 3:08
And another quibble, moths (11:20) do have a pupal skin--the silk cocoon is an additional layer over that. Also a few groups of moth do not make a cocoon--they just have a chrysalis.
@@pierreabbat6157 Right, at 11:43 he says "beetles and cicadas do it too, often buried in the ground". Beetles have complete metamorphosis like Lepidoptera, but not cicadas--they have gradual metamorphosis. Great video though, explaining a lot in a short format with excellent graphics.
Learned a cool new word today: eclose. Sounds poetic except it's about bugs. I only know one poem about a bug:
The lord in his wisdom made the fly
And then forgot the reason why.
Ogden Nash
He never realized how cool bugs are, I suppose. I understand because I dislike the vermin very much, too, myself.
Could you imagine if humans did this? "I'm sorry, but Johnny can't come to school today. He's locked himself in his room, and isn't coming out for the next two weeks." "That's exciting, Mr. Smith. I'm sure your whole family is very proud. Please remember that when he does emerge, he will be expected to make up the work."
I laughed so loud while reading this lol
If only puberty actually worked like this 😂
@@raraavis7782 It isn't really puberty, it's more like if humans gave birth to 5 month old fetuses and then those fetuses foraged for food for few months then created their own womb to finish maturing into a baby.
I would argue that humans are more amazing. It doesn't seem so as we are just more familiar.
Butterfly: "Watch me metamorphosize"
Human: "Watch me create a noise with my armpit"
Getting COVID being like:
Preschool teacher: And from within the fat little caterpillar burst a writhing mass of wasp larvae that ate the caterpillar from the inside out and grew up and laid their eggs inside more caterpillars!
I'd read that book
I actually had that occur with a Yellow Swallowtail caterpillar I pulled off my Dill plant years ago. Instead of a regular Crysalis forming after the caterpillar attached it self, it turned black and it's mouthparts fell off. It was the first time I had collected that type, so I was not sure if this was normal or not. I waited and was very shocked to later find a very large wasp in the jar. It was pretty scary opening the jar and releasing it.
That sounds like a fun book is there other type of parasitic children
Isn't nature magical?
@@kearstinnekenerson6676so so many, the insect kingdom has all kinds of horrors. Some birds even do a similar thing with their young, they lay their eggs in other species nests and push out or break as many of the host species eggs as they can when they do it, and just leave their eggs there for the host species to raise.
I feel like one factor for metamorphosis is energy - the amount of energy required in the egg to create a pupal stage vs a more complex adult. The pupal stage means the mother can expend a LOT less energy and instead make hundreds or thousands of eggs that then acquire their own energy. But im an engineer - its always energy XD
Lots of organisms have reproductive strategies that involve producing many eggs instead of investing more intensely in a smaller number of young, but also don't involve metamorphosis. How is metamorphosis specifically and separately from producing lots of eggs saving the parents energy?
Energy plays a HUGE part in every animal's biology, so you're not far off by thinking of it that way
@@marksando3082 it isnt. Nonetheless its still engineering as the field also covers costs. The amount of energy invested per egg is small so total energy invested by mother gives many eggs. Engineering considers business factors too. Since there are many competitors odds of survivability are small per unit but produce volume enough .... Lol you get the idea now
@@marksando3082 clearly metamorphosis isnt the only way to have many eggs, but it seems an efficient strategy to do so. Obviously there is more than one factor to why most of the world's animals use it.
It's mostly about organisms at different stages of development not competing for same resources.
When I finish writing/illustrating "The Very Hungry Maggot", I'll expect you to review/endorse it. Love your work.
I believe Gary Larson already tried that.
That's been done repeatedly. There's a book called Brainboy and Bob in The very Hungry Maggot, another one called the Moderately Hungry Maggot, and a variety of "Very Hungry Maggot" merch, my favorite of which use a human skull and maggot in a parody of the Hungry Caterpillar cover.
Username checks out
As a matter of fact, no we didn't raise any butterflies in school. HOWEVER. The school I attended for 3rd grade and 5th grade (don't ask, Midland Texas has WEIRD school district lines) had a "caterpillar problem." Every year in spring there would be absolute hordes of itty slightly fuzzy pale green caterpillars, all over the ornamental plantings but also all over the walls!! A lot of the kids were freaked out by them but I was always fascinated since I knew they weren't going to bite or sting me, and finally one day in 5th grade, I caught one of the caterpillars and very carefully brought it home with me. My mother did not flip her lid, and instead gave me a glass jar to put the creature into, and told me to go outside and pick three stems off the ornamental bushes in the apartment complex, but ONLY the ones that looked just like the bushes at the school. (At that age I already knew my mother was smart, never even questioned it, ha)
She fixed up the jar so that the caterpillar couldn't easily crawl out, and we gave it its food and it was chill! I would get it onto my finger for a few moments every day just because I could, and I'd bring home a new stem every day with more leaves. Then - the weekend. Saturday morning - and my caterpillar had vanished!!! I looked high and low (well, as "high" as a nine year old can look) and couldn't find it. Very sad. But SUNDAY morning I saw the pupa!! The caterpillar had managed to get out of the jar and made its little sack of magic on the curtain.
Few days later - and there was a moth!!! A beautiful white moth with vivid tiger-orange on the inside of the wings. And though I know now as an adult that bugs don't exactly bond with anything or anybody, it seemed to me like the moth remembered me, and it flew over and landed on my shirt and just kinda sat there like "Welp. Outside now, please."
So of course I took it outside, set it carefully on a bush, and watched it fly off to do whatever moths do. And at the school? Dozens and dozens of white-and-orange moths on Monday! So many! The grownups were all super annoyed but to me it was pure magic.
To this day I have no bloody idea what kind of moth it was though. I've never found ANY picture that looks like my moth pal.
Wow, what a great story! Now I really want to know what kind of moths they were, but I did just go down a little google images binge looking at all of the different moths with white and orange wings. There are so many beautiful kinds! As for a moth bonding with you, I wouldn't rule it out! There's good science showing that adult insects retain memories from when they were in their larval stage, and there is also increasing evidence that insects have emotions! If nothing else, it sounds like the moth knew you were trustworthy!
@@erinm9445 There ARE so many pretty moths with those colorations! I've gone down that image path a few times too hehe, it's never disappointing.
Cool story, I would have loved to have raised moths as a child but my parents were squicked out by bugs lol. I really wanted an ant farm and wasn't allowed one 😂
By the way, they've done studies that show that memories made as a caterpillar do get retained as a butterfly / moth. So it's possible your moth friend did in fact remember you in some way.
@@erinm9445😊 ❤❤❤
Oh, wow! What a special event to witness up close and personal thanks to your mom. I bet you had other fun adventures with her over the years.
Big and important correction: moths don't spin a silk cocoon INSTEAD OF becoming a hard-skinned pupa; they do it BEFORE becoming a pupa. Cut open a moth cocoon, and there's a pupa inside it.
Also, cicadas are mentioned in the same breath as beetles, but cicadas don't have a pupal stage; they're hemimetabolous. They go straight from nymph to adult.
If you keep in mind that during the chrysalis stage that hard shell on the outside was once the exoskeleton of the caterpillar before metamorphosis, it makes sense that it has protowings and such.
I’m genuinely surprised the chrysalis is inside the caterpillar and they just reveal it. Somehow more disturbing.
You've brought back a memory from my 5 yr old self where I squished a cocoon to see what it was all about. I buried the pulp and cried.
It had no mouth, but it had to scream.
You're a good person. No sarcasm. Sense of responsibility and regret and morality to bury a blob and cry for a little creature that never was.
@@Jroc3578precisely 😢
@@Jroc3578idk this is kinda poetic and beautiful somehow. The human condition explained
My sibling worked at a neurology department in their moth lab. They used the metamorphosis of sphinx moths to study neural development!
this is sooo niche omg ur sibling has a very cool job
Dude that’s so metal whoaa
Sounds really awesome, do you remember which lab it was?
@@VoidTempests OHSU!
Moths are better than many people.
I have a fear of butterflies and am trying to reduce it gradually by exposing myself (virtually) and learning about them. This was really cool to watch :)
...Not sure this video is gonna make your fear go away though.😅
I do the same with spiders! However, I can still only do it with pics or videos. Irl I wanna die 😅😅
Butterflies do nothing, is from wasps that you have to fear.
Do you know where that fear originated? I've never heard of someone being afraid of butterflies before & I'm really curious. Sorry if that's a weird thing to ask lol
@@ForestFire369 I've seen it before. Sometimes as part of a larger fear of insects, but sometimes just independent "creepy flappy thing eugh" horrors. Not me, I get the horrors about slugs instead - I'm OK with pictures and video but I am NOT getting near one. Calvin said it best: "Living booger"
It seems to me that caterpillars are just a second stage of embryonic development, but external and more autonomous. Since the egg does not have enough nutrients, they must eat to continue their development. Once they secure enough food, the final transformation is done.
Yep, that's exactly it.
This is, in fact, a decent summary of the prevailing model for how holometabolous development evolved. The pupal stage is believed to correspond to the nymph stage in non-metamorphosing insects like grasshoppers, while the larval stage is thought to correspond to a kind of mobile late-stage embryo called a pronymph.
What's even weirder is the life cycle of the malaria parasite.
That's exactly how I think about it. Kinda reminds me of how a lot of people call the first three months of a human baby's life the fourth trimester, the final trimester of development that happens outside the womb, before they really start becoming interactivec and learning how to human.
@erinm9445 the reason for this on humans is our huge heads. If babies were brought to "full term" based on mammal biology their heads would kill the mother almost 100% of the time (before modern medicine obviously). Most other mammals can at least walk and see when they are born (as with horses) or at most take 3 or so weeks before they can (as with dogs and mice)
"This isn't kids book stuff, this is more like Silence of the Lambs." I wonder how Joe teaches his kids about the facts of life😂
"Now bedbugs, BEDBUGS do something called 'traumatic insemination', are you paying attention?"
Imagine parents consuming all the resources in an ecosystem and blaming the children for not having enough.
Oof
shots fired!
Maybe my grandchildren will be able to afford a house as long as I don’t spend anything on healthcare
Damn, shots fired!
Average boomer
Couple years ago I had a cabbage white in my living room and let it out. More than half a year later I found its crysalis hidden behind the door inside of my fridge, where it apparently ended up as caterpillar with the groceries. Despite the cold, it pupated and eventually hatched. I also found another one next to it, which didn't hatch yet, I could feel it bobbing around carefully shaking the crysalis. I assumed it dead, took both crysalises out and ordered some resin, colours and tools to make fake amber earrings with the crysalises inside. After a week of lying on a table in the warm living room, while I was waiting for the supplies, the 2nd one miraculously did hatch as well. I guess the cool environment inside the fridge basically told it to lay dormant and wait for spring before hatching, which then it did. I was amazed.
I also found mystery cabbage moths in my living room one day. Or rather, one one day, and another a few days later. I don't know why it never occured to me that they must have pupated right in my house! (I don't recall finding the chrysalis later, but who knows, it was quite a while ago now). Neat story!
That is amazing😮
The butterfly wings are kinda like our 2nd set of teeth.. already there but just under the surface where we can't see it.. pretty cool
X rays of small kids are terrifying for this reason
Nice way of putting it
I raised a monarch from caterpillar to butterfly last year, it was fascinating seeing them change. The end of the period they are in the chrysalis it turns clear
It's always clear, it's the butterfly's forming body that's changing. Amazing the fine scales on the wings can form in just a day or two.
I know multiple people who are scared of insects, even “pretty” and harmless ones like butterflies, despite not having bad experiences with them. I’m sure you have a video posting schedule but it would be neat to explore what draws out the natural fear of these things in a future video :)
My BIL is one of those people. If it has 6-8 legs he ain't dealing with it 😂
It all started with that one scene in Spongebob.... God it was awful.
for me, at least, it tends to be a combination of unpredictable/fast movement and small fragile bodies (i.e. i’m afraid i might hurt it by accident)
The definition of phobia is more or less a morbid fear of something that isn't dangerous. People with phobias are quite aware that their fear isn't rational. We have deep-seated mechanisms for developing fear of dangerous things as we encounter them, and sometimes this goes wrong. The good news is that treating phobia is probably the most successful psychotherapy there is. So if you have a phobia, know that you can get rid of it with known, successful methods.
@@TheMunchkinita2509That's exactly my problem with spiders and centipedes. Too many legs.
i love how much comedy effort is put into making into all of yours videos
13:54 Joe talking with his hand shaking the chrysalis back and forth 😂I was like, "you're going to shake it off the branch!" imagine the pupa going "ohmygod everything's shaking it's the end of the world!!!!!!"
I feel like the butterfly goo myth originated when somebody tried to open a pupa to look, its guts came out, and they just went "Welp I guess that's all there is in there!"
Maybe, or they couldn't explain it
Omg I didn't know scientists had figured this out. The last thing I heard (long time ago) was that it wasn't known what happens. I always wanted to know this. Thank you so much!
Yeah, that's also a myth. It's been known roughly what goes on during metamorphosis since at least the first half of the 1900s, although with new tech like x-ray tomography we can get way better images of it now - earlier research relied heavily on things like dissection and transplantation of developing organs.
We had a bunch of caterpillars for a school project. Some metamorphosed just fine, some died before they had the chance, and some seem to never make a chrysalis and just turned to goo? We never found bodies but there was goo.
Odd
missed a step
If I remember correctly, the goo is because after they die, the hormones and chemicals that were directing unneeded cells to recycle themselves are out of control, so the whole pupas corpse "recycles" itself. I'm having trouble finding confirmation, the internet just keeps giving me "caterpillars turn into soup" stuff.
Vertebrates get attacked by our digestive acids, enzymes, and symbiotic bacteria after death too, but it's not as extreme because we're never in the middle of trying to completely redo our architecture.
Yeah a fair number die during the many molts that they have to go through as they grow. That and eclosing in to an adult are the riskiest times for them and when things tend to go wrong.
The goo ones are because of a viral infection, they liquefy and are picked up by other wandering caterpillars, continuing the cycle. The gypsy moth baculovirus is an especially ingenious version of the parasite.
I haven't thought about this in 10+ years, so thinking about it seems like magic how a bug turns into a butterfly
Does that mean a butterfly isn't a bug?
What's even weirder is the life cycle of the malaria parasite.
Cool. Suggestion: for shots that are sped-up or slowed down, always add the speed in the corner (like "x100 speed"). It's science communication after all. Thanks.
3:09 Gonna have to point out cockroaches are NOT holometabolous, they do not pupate and the nymphs look like smaller wingless paler adults
Hi Joe, Bob here. Another amazing show. I also used to catch caterpillars and watch them pupate and emerge as butterflies. It was fascinating. And still is.
5:46 I’m sorry, who’s monarch caterpillar is eating 100 leaves a day?! I’ve seen one demolish a standard milkweed leaf in 6 hours but 100 leaves in 24 hours?! Please.
This is super interesting. Also a bit more approachable but on par in weirdness is that an egg containing of inconspicuous white and yolk that probably each of us ate on breakfast at some time... consists all ingredients to make a whole small bird. Given the egg is fertile it contains all the resource and bioengine to transform it into a bird, from some bio-mush. In that sense it's like chrysalis.
Not really. Butterfly species still lay eggs themselves which hatch to produce live young, which is perfectly conventional. They just pause at the end of the larval stage to undergo a second transformation into the adult reproductive stage, which is a less common reproductive approach. The genes for the butterfly are the same as the caterpillar that presages it, they're just being expressed differently until the hormonal triggers are released.
The shell of an egg is (from a human viewpoint) much closer to being a self-contained external uterus than anything else. The resources needed for the embryo to develop are pre-loaded rather than being drip-fed over time the way things work in a mammalian womb, but otherwise the functions are essentially the same. Both approaches have their own biological advantages and drawbacks.
By that logic a 'woman of the night" has consumed half the ingredients for a civilization.
In fairness, your eggs you eat at breakfast are not fertilized. Now, Salut on the other hand…
@@Delmworks Yea, but it could be fertilized given the chance. The contents are the same, except lacking few cells of biomachinery to start the process.
Why children books doesn’t have these stages explained because i think they still don’t have the age to understand that deeply.
2:00 - 2:03
"It's me, hi, I'm some people, it's me"
sound awfully similar to
"It's me, hi, I'm the problem it's me"
I wonder, did all these genera of pupating insects independently evolve their pupating strategies, or did they diverge from a common ancestor only after it adopted the pupating strategy?
Me too! Anybody know?
What are you talking about? Evolution is false.
It evolved once. The insects with a pupal stage form a single branch on the insect family tree, called the Endopterygotes.
I have raised butterflies for 15 years and I know what goes on inside a cocoon and it’s absolutely amazing. Its as close as we can get to true magic. It is mind boggling the way that metamorphosis can create a totally new creature. Imagine if that was possible for more complex animals. What would it morph into? The possibilities would be endless if we could somehow harness how exactly this process works. This is the first time I’ve seen this channel. AAAAAND SUBSCRIBE! 🥰
Oh wow! So i made this comment before I watched the video because I was so excited to finally see a video that delves into the metamorphosis process. And then when I get to that section of the video i see its called a “Sack of Magic”! Even this creator explains it the same way I do when I teach people about raising butterflies. Like MAGIC! (I also raise bees as well. Its so much fun! 🥰
Heh I taught myself that chrysalis are just another layer under the skin while reading my own caterpillars. Also moths do the the same, they just do it inside the cocoon. Certain ones like the gypsy moth will even just make a super lazy cocoon, just folding a leaf partially together.
It's an example of the Swiss Army Knife effect - if you have a tool that can do a bunch of different things, it will do them all but poorly, like a swiss army knife. By confining the eating and growth phase to one body plan, and the mating and reproduction phase to another body plan, each body is optimized to that task. All life forms and functions strive for maximal energy efficiency.
Eric Carle fan. He actually wanted to write a book about a bookworm. His publisher or editor wanted the change. He just wanted to make a book with fun holes in it. A lot of his books have fun tricks to them.
School taught me the version of Caterpillar -> Chrysalid -> ? -> Butterfly. I'm 33 and I'm ashamed of myself for never actually questioning "Huh, what does really happens to that caterpillar once inside"
Not just cannibalistic caterpillars. I had some shaped like inch worms preying on aphids, on some umbelliferous plants one year.
One further interesting tiny point that I find fascinating and inexplicable is the very small period of time when the chrysalis, if it is one that hangs downward from the tail (not all do, some are suspended upward with a silk waistband, some are in cocoons such as with moths) has to shed the skin of the final instar of caterpillarness, which becomes a crinkled up bundle, and then the chrysalis (blind) has to walk with it's tail hooks (which are like hook&loop fastener) across the drying bundle of shed skin, and onto the silk pad onto which it hooks and stays - that’s not only amazing it can do this every time, but that it has ‘knowledge’ to do this specific one-time action, and seriously, how did that evolve, there must’ve been so many that fell off and didn’t survive? That’s certainly one for Darwin if you ask me
the genetic coordination involved, first evolving an organism like a caterpillar which itself has thousands of parts which have ireducible complexity, and then the whole organism , for one, how did the caterpiller movement spring forth out of.nowhere, one day no caterpillers, the next, a whole new organism with hundreds of different protiens. And the way they move, coordinating all their legs to.move at the right time, im sceptical of the scientiic theorys proposed about competition. Sometimes scientists want to be sound right becaise they dont like to appear to have an incomplete understanding
How the butterfly completely changing shape and function 4 times could have evolved purely by chance. You can't tell me this process evolved by chance, It seems designed, like the cell. Irreducible c complexity. Ohh and it doesn't explain how these processes evolving by adaptation, mutation and competition, how ststistically its nearly impossible to have evolved by chance. Im not a creationist,im atheist, but this has always been a mystery to me.
Hi Joe, when I was a kid my granddad found a thumb-sized black caterpillar covered in hairs. He put it in a plant propagator box with a privet twig. Days later, it pupated. Turns out it was a beautiful Privet Hawk Moth, with magenta and lime green wings. It did its first crap on my thumb, and fed it with sugar water on a microscope slide. I never forget it warming up its flight muscles by vibrating. We released it shortly after, and it remains my fave childhood memory.
I got up close and personal with some butterflies while camping and even as an adult it’s just such a joy to see them! It’s like a welcome visit from a friend, and I always talk to them as they fly by. I’d always wondered what went on in there 😊
Flight, forage, fornicate, futile.
It's a little more horrifying to know the foundational elements of the butterfly are developing within the whole time. Its less you assuming a new form, and more your existence is fueling this second lifeform eventually taking over. Like it started with a parasite and they linked life cycles.
It's all one brain the whole time, so I think it's okay! Think of it more like permanent teeth vs baby teeth. The permanent teeth are in there forming long before you lose your baby teeth and the adult teeth come in, but all of it's you the whole time, the adult teeth aren't the foreign teeth of some weird organism living through you!
Tldr: the caterpillar turns into a production line, only retaining basic vital organs as the rest of the body turns into liquefied mini-factories, each "factory" tasked with manufacturing a different part - legs, wings, eyes, etc. Then all the parts are assembled together and voilá, butterfly! And somehow, they can RETAIN MEMORIES after this process, remembering information from when they were a caterpillar!
Well yeah the brain clearly doesn’t change much at all in the process just by the fact that’s true at all.
Well over 15 years ago as a child I would bring this up to family and teachers that I believed the inside of a chrysalis was liquid and I wanted to order some caterpillars and open them up mid metamorphosis to prove my theory.So you better believe I was so excited to learn the truth about them when I got older
Me too😊 Kung tao ganyan rin noh at magkakaroon ng wings hehe. Pero gusto ko ung mga axolotl or lizard na nagreregenerate ulit ang putol na part ng katawan nila. Pwede din ung mga jellyfish na habang buhay nabubuhay at umiikot lang cycle ng buhay nila. Daming kakaiba sa mundo
In the United States, students are typically taught about butterfly metamorphosis in elementary school, specifically during the early grades. The age at which students are taught this subject can vary by school district and state, but it is commonly covered in early elementary grades, such as kindergarten through third grade.
Thank you so much for this video! A few times now I've gotten really curious on what exactly is going on inside a chrysalis but had never been able to find anything remotely detailed enough. This not only provides some good detail into what's going on but also contains some really mind-blowing stuff, such as the imaginal disc starting to develop prior to the pupal stage.
I love the closed captions, especially towards the end
The Anti-Hero reference did not go unnoticed.
You know it
I'm real curious as to how this process originated. It's such a drastically different life stage from what other species do it's hard to imagine how they might be related.
And here I thought the transformation my wife goes through before we go out was miraculous.
Here because my 4 year old daughter loves The Hungry Caterpillar so much so that we purchased for her a caterpillar habitat, replete with said caterpillars. They just shed their exoskeletons and are now in their chrysalid form. We are in the midst of their transformation. It is a omderful thing to watch. I needed some data to regurgitate to keep my daughters curious mind satisfied (mine too, I suppose). Thank you!
Great video! I was trying to research that exact things a while ago but I couldn't find it in a way that I would understand, now I did!
Love it that you address your audience as smart people ❤😊. You give yourself permission to talk at the level you want to, to people who are going to want to listen....if they don't want to, they won't stay on your page and you don't have to worry about how to address them! 😅
Very interesting video! We just became a Monarch Waystation about a year ago. Last fall was our first time rearing , tagging and releasing Monarchs. It was the most amazing process but watching them emerge was probably by favorite. It’s a lot longer process than I thought, they typically stay a good hour or so in the same position just swinging back and forth and pumping their wings. We have only had one bad chrysalis so far so not a bad record!
11:44
Correction: Cicadas are actually hemipterans and have partial metamorphosis like the rest of their order.
It is a very fascinating thing. It has been weirding us out, probably since we began to think about things abstractly.
But while the various forms of complete metamorphosis are all very interesting, I have always considered the incomplete metamorphosis to be much more curious. Take the larva of a dragonfly. While not as completely different as a larva is to a butterfly, it is still remarkably different from the adult animal. But one day it simply says "I'll go up that talk and shed my skin and then fly away." As in for a while a fully adult dragonfly was running/swimming around in an insect version of an encounter suit. That has got to be among the most weird things.
And yes, I did notice the part about the proto-wings in the larva. And that is probably connected to the dragonfly approach.
Why do some bugs not have a pupae phase? Eg dragonflies seem to split out of their juvenile form and just flie off immediately?
Fascinating video! Though, cicadas go through INCOMPLETE metamorphosis. I loved collecting their shed skins as a kid! Lol
Two of my favorite forms of life. Caterpillars (most I believe) are always gentle, and I'm not sure how true it is but I was told as a young child that a butterfly chooses to land on you or not.
Back then, I took that to mean that the caterpillar and eventual butterfly knew you had no desire to harm them. I think it was my first experience with respect in life. To this day, I will stop all movement if needed in order to prevent harming/disturbing either.
As an ex-preschool teacher I had A very ambivalent feeling about "the very hungry caterpillar." But I always told the children that not all of the story is scientificly accurate.
Not only what happens in the pupa.
I don't appreciate when people accuse preschool teachers of all the misconceptions people have when they grow up.
This is my favorite video of this week 😊
Very cool, everything I saw here. I always wondered about the pupa stage 🤔🙏🏾
I thought the answer as to why was obvious. Monarch Butterflies consume milkweeds as caterpillars. If it didn't turn into a flying animal, it would be difficult to reach more milkweeds. This is the reason the Mayfly only lives one day as a flyer, because it's an algae eater and if you are in a river and want to reach another river, or a pond not connect to anything, the flying form can do it. While the monarch stays butterfly long enough to justify flying south for the winter, most moths and butterflies live shorter lives and are more focused on reproduction.
Monarchs didn't evolve complete metamorphosis independently from its butterfly relatives.
I've heard about the "caterpillar soup" many times, but when watching an actual caterpillar transform, I thought that this definitely does NOT look like a soup, and either some people have a weird definition of "liquify", or something is quite wrong about the "soup" explanation.... my 2 year old is very interested in watching caterpillars metamorphose - now I'll make sure to tell her about the REAL way they do it 😊
I actually feel validated that Joe pronounces the e in winged when just the other day I was corrected for doing just that.
I think they have slightly different meanings
Have you tried joining nebula? It’s a streaming platform like RUclips but it was made by a bunch of educational youtubers without an algorithm I think you might fit in quite well I really enjoy the channel thanks for the information joe!
When I was a child, I wanted to go to university to be the first person to figure out how catapillars become butterflies because it seemed like no one knew.
I was so excited at the start, it felt like i was about to watch pbs be smart, pbs eons, & just keep thinking in a single episode. Please check the last one too.
I hope scientists would discover how holometabolous development evolved soon.
yes i know this fact because theres this visual novel game thing titled butterfly soup. its definitely about butterflies and arthropods trust me
12:20 I rhink what you meant to say was, "That's SCIENCE! But, here's some hypothesi.
I remember this 'parents not competing with children' thing was used to describe T-rexes
It was very interesting to look inside the cocoon, thank you. I never thought that magic happens there. I was about right in imagining that a caterpillar grows new limbs while it is in a sleep-like state.
Ok…. I can’t be the only one ready for Joe to publish a children’s book “The very stinky maggot.”
0:59: 🦋 The process of butterfly metamorphosis is much more complex and fascinating than commonly believed.
3:02: 🦋 Butterflies and other insects go through a process called holometabolism, where they live different phases of life as completely different forms.
5:56: 🦋 Caterpillars go through multiple molts and develop internal proto-wings before entering the chrysalis stage of metamorphosis.
9:12: 🦋 The process of metamorphosis from caterpillar to butterfly involves cell death, recycling of proteins, and the growth of new body parts.
Recap by Tammy AI
Most insects go from larva to the final form, but somehow butterflies have a better PR
“It’s me. Hi. I’m some people. It’s me.” : Anti-Hero (Joe’s Version)
I never heard of the goo myth. It was obvious that there was a morphing, a metamorphosis if you will, that happened.
I am so glad you recovered!
I have loved butterflies all of my life and this video was the best explanation of metamorphosis I have ever seen. Thank you.
They taught us in 80s/90s in school that caterpillar turns to bug soup in chrysalis and then reorganizing and forms a butterfly. Can't believe it
This video blew my mind multiple times. Sitting here with my mouth wide open. The little proto-wings inside the caterpillar. They shed their caterpillar skin to emerge as a pupa underneath. Why are we not teaching kids the actual stuff caterpillars and pupae do, this is AMAZING.
I literally googled this yesterday and got distracted before I could find out the process 😂😂😂 this video is just what I needed
The Very Hungry Caterpillar is teaching young children language skills and about growing up at a critical age for that 😅 how did Joe react to If You Give a Mouse a Cookie 😂
Feel so sad for butterflies that they never are nurtured by their parents, they are just left to "go figure out"
I think you missed out on the most interesting aspect: Butterflies remember things from their caterpillar days.
Let me remind you they turn into insect goop while inside the chrysalis and then re-assemble.
Your first sentence is true. But this video shows that your second--though widely believed and taught--is an oversimplification at best. There's no reason to think that the brain of the organism is turned to goop during metamorphasis. But I still agree that butterfly/caterpillar memory is super cool!
I’m obsessed with the way you said “Like a JACKET” 😆😆😆
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15:18 is so true especially when the thumbnail is like "Is this yellow banana really yellow" and I'm like 😬
The truth about butterfly metamorphosis is that all caterpillars actually have a 1% chance of turning into humans.
Heh? More context?
Yeah, I don't get it
.........A man by the name of Zhuangzi.
Faeries?
What😮
You are one of the channels that dig the secrets of the universe keeping people curious 👍
I was so unsatisfied as a child with the explanation that they were bug soup. Thank you for this amazing revelation!
I literally asked myself about this and now I see this upload. I love this channel
Two weeks ago I started asking myself questions about this very topic, but did no research it at all. So why does this one year old video suddenly appear in my recommendations ??? Spooky.
But informative - thank you !
Maybe they metamorphosize to take on a more mobile form to initiate mating easier
5:50 the caterpillar pooping was something pretty obvious and yet unexpected 😂
I have been wondering about this in particular for quite some time, thank you for uploading this.
I'd imagine that this all started to have smaller eggs. So the original ancient bug this adaptation comes from had the larval stage still in egg. But then a mutation caused one to hatch early and eat up the surroundings. So if they break out early and eat stuff outside the egg, the egg doesn't need that "food" and can be smaller. Kind of like human babies. They are born early, and have to be raised outside. This keeps everything small. So instead of laying one big egg that becomes a butterfly, you lay a bunch of tiny ones.
2nd grade teacher here: My classes always did a unit on silkworm moths. Something I noticed but never found documentation on was the caterpillars' behavior just prior to starting their cocoons. They would chose a spot - a stick or a corner of the box - then rear up, remain motionless for a time and begin to sway back and forth. Then they'd give a little start, begin madly spinning silk and form it into a figure eight around themselves. It looked like they were receiving instructions via radio transmission! 🙂
By far the best and most comprehensive video on metamorphosis I have ever seen! Possibly the best on the internet! ❤️🦋❤
Not to mention entertaining! "Eric Carle didn't mention that part did he!?!" 🤣
It's me! I'm that guy too! Butterfly grower! 😊
Also, you're an absolute legend! I've been waiting for this video my whole life! 🎉 I'm always racking my brain to work out how this soup transformation happens!😅