Testing My Knowledge on the Tree of Life
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- Опубликовано: 16 окт 2022
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Check out my new channel Astro Pro here: / @astropro1
Now that I'm moving into my house, I've decided it's the perfect time to take a closer look at some of the posters that'll go on to decorate my future set. First up we have this amazing tree of life poster given to me by my mom last Christmas!
Find the poster here: fairhopegraphics.com/
The camera angle makes this feel like I'm a proud parent listening to their child excitedly explain what they got for Christmas. :')
I don’t know if that was the intention but it seems just that much more…adorable? ahaha
daddy's proud
Plus, Caelan is just so adorable 🥰 I felt the same way lol
Or some boyfriend ASMR
I wish my parents had any interest in my own interests when I was a child (or even as an adult) other than pushing me to have the same interests as them. The fact that his mother saw something in a shop and decided to buy it because she knew he would love it makes me sad about my own situation, but happy for him.
I thoroughly enjoy that this man who has taught me so much doesn’t know what a Hagfish or a Lamprey is
And yes they are jawless fish as far as I’m aware
No, they aren't fish
@@nihilanthropus Lamprey are fish but is on another lineage than jawed fish
I believe the mouth like structure of a lamprey is called a rasp. Leeches have that structure, too.
@@nihilanthropus Technically either we are all fish, or fish is meaningless as a concept. Whatever "fish-like" creature crawled on land and became the ancestor of all terrestrial animals was closely related to the "fish-like" ancestor of goldfish. Fish is not a scientific term, it's more like the culinary terms "fruit" and "vegetable."
@@user-nk8xg4rl2l I'd think a fish is an aquatic/marine vertebrate? I mean it's the most paraphyletic grouping there is haha
As a biologist i really enjoyed watching this video because i find all of the questions quite easy to anwser and just watching someone with little biological education struggle to answer these by using basic logic was really informative because things are not as straight forward and intuitive as one might think. Evolution never ceases to amaze me. Great job btw.
Looking forward to see your new channel!
As a biologist, while the video is interesting, I wouldn't recommand such a tree to learn phylogeny... It has such a 19th century vibe,. The fact that he said at the begining that sponges are related to jellyfish is quite the issue I have about this tree... I find the OneZoom tree of life (built as a fractal) way better (yes I know, you can't make a poster out of it)
Not a biologist but I'm studying it atm, and it's really fun to see him answer. The struggle reminds me of myself when I was starting and it's just relaxing. Though I did notice a small issue on the chart somewhat early on. Didn't chrdata evolve from a sponge? The tail of the mobile stage of the sponge eventually didn't go away and became a primitive cartilagenous backbone that then that evolved further into individual bones creating true backbones?
@@dreadpirateroberts1358 I believe you confused tunicates with sponges because some benthic adult tunicates look similar to sponges at first glance. Sponges (or maybe ctenophores, there is still a dispute) are the very basal lineage, the sister group to all other animals, while tunicates are a sister group to vertebrates.
I agree that this poster as any other phylogenetic poster gives way too much emphasis on vertebrate lineage and omit like 20 animal phyla alone, and almost all other non animal organisms. And for some anthropocentric reasons humans are always on the top center. But I get it, vertebrates are the most complex and most familiar organism around us.
@@Simon-np8bt That is what I was thinking of. I looked it up to be sure. I learned it from I don't even remember anymore and the word they used was sponge. I'm definatly glad to learn the correct origin of the backbone tho. But yeah this emphasizes vertebrates way too much. Same with animals and eukaryotes.
Same here
The fact that cephalopods are related to clams and snails, which branched off so early in animal evolution, is exactly why their intelligence is so fascinating. Most animals we consider "truly intelligent" are vertebrates, with similar brains to our own. Octopus have evolved their intelligence completely independent of this and done a few things differently along the way, like spreading their brain neurons all out in their arms with only 1/3 of them actually in the "brain". I'm an evolutionary biology student, and I love examples like this because they reveal a lot of interesting things about the flexibility and constraints on the evolution of things like brains and intelligence.
As a biology student who just finished learning about this topic about the phylum/clade/groups of animals, I had so much fun answering the questions and learning new things while watching the video!
yeah same
You've inspired me to buy a tree of life poster and put it on my wall. Thanks.
There’s a link in the description if you want the very same one!
Your mom nailed this gift and we all got to reap the benefits.
Thanks, Mrs. Pro!
32:06
Technically, all ants have the potential for wings given the right conditions and they all have the genes for wings.
All of the Queen ants has wings in some part of their life and all male ants as well.
All Hymenoptera, including ants has wings.
Hymenoptera literally means membrane winged
Some ant species, worth mentioning, don't reproduce the same way as most ants do so in some very rare cases a species might not have any winged members at all
Also because of certain weirdnesses between ants and wasps (the divide usually being determined by eusociality) you have wingless wasps too
Cool
Seeing a new Atlas Pro video pop up in my feed is always an amazing feeling, absolutly love your content.
Honestly, your videos on space stuff are extremely interesting to me, I had always thought of the space as a boring subject to study, and same goes for geology, but those videos have taught me that I'm wrong. It's a bit sad that they were underperforming, but I'm glad to see that you aren't giving up on them
I’m genuinely surprised you’ve never heard of a lamprey I guess we’re all learning something new every day
An interesting thing regarding the "Did Dinosaurs coexist with grass?" question. Piperno and Sues (2005) described fossilized Dinosaur dung from India, which had phytoliths consistent with grasses, more specifically something similar to rice or bamboo. Furthermore, Wu, You & Li (2018) described grass microfossils that were found associated with Equijubus from China from the Albian. So grass for sure coexisted with dinosauria a lot more than previously recognized! Also I love these unscripted videos, they show your personality and knowledge well.
Guessing along with you is so entertaining!! I'm only 12 minutes in, but I'm surprised by how much I knew, or could work out!
Ikr
I'm consistently mesmerized by that "ct" ligature in the font the cards use.
Yeah it makes a really nice touch
One thing I had to do for a fish biology course in college was memorize the entire line of scientific categorizations (kingdom, phylum, subphylum, all the way down to species) for a handful of species, one of those being lamprey which are indeed jawless. Surprised you’ve never heard of them; they’re infamous to me as the fish who attach themselves to a host and suck blood out to feed (although there are non carnivorous species too).
Corrections:
The ray-finned fish described as a “bass” on the card is a member of the Protacanthopterygii and most likely a trout of some type.
Skinks are not the only lizards with very small, two, or no legs.
Just an additional point about the Coelacanth/Lungfish question, it's also pointing out (famously) that lungfish are more closely related to cows than salmon.
Also, it's pronounced see-luh-canth
Also, also, just discovered your other channel, and am loving it! And I agree that I wish more people find it, too.
If this guy was my teacher I would probably learn more
I would turn gay
He has already taught me more than most teachers
@@Exist64 lmao
@@Exist64
😶
and, me here crushing hard on him
🌚
@Patrick Hudson Students not paying attention could also be teachers making horribly boring lessons.
I got to admit, I really love this style of video.
I really liked your space videos, I felt like they really fit with your style and other content. I totally understand making a second channel and I can’t wait for tomorrow’s episode, but I’m sad that people didn’t like them as much here : (
I am SOBBING watching you try to pronounce all the fish/marine names 😂😂
I want to give you a marine biology lesson so bad (not in a condescending way, but in a "I want to nerd out about my field of study" way 😅)
Funnily enough my mom got me the same poster for my birthday earlier this year. Love to see you showing it on your channel!
For the record lampreys are a type of jawless fish. They are also parasitic latching onto other larger sea creatures and feeding off them hence the many sharp hooked teeth to help latch onto the host
Happy to see you made it to the Nebula team. Well deserved and long overdue
Okay, I am shocked by the facts that you never heard of Lampreys before
I've heard of them before, but because of studying biology, not because they're a common or native fish.
You caught me, I’m a land lubber, always have been, always will be 😔
This felt like the equivalent of a nice game night with a friend. :)
Many members of the pterygota (winged insects) secondarily lost their wings. Examples include bat flies, lice, fleas, and some species of beetles. So not all members of the pterygota have wings either.
Thanks! I was certain there were some secondary wingless ones but couldn't put my finger on which
It makes me feel very smart that I was able to answer all these questions correctly, instinctually, and immediately upon hearing them lol. Especially since I feel like many of Atlas Pros' videos go over my head. But that would mainly be the geography ones
Biology and Geography are two entirely different beasts 😅
@@AtlasPro1 that's definitely true. And I think this is very down to earth content for the people that aren't nerds about biology
@@AtlasPro1 one begets the other
Great to know about the second channel! I'm super into both geography and astronomy so I always enjoyed the space videos and totally agree that they are some of your best work. Already subbed to Astro Pro, I hope it grows quickly
As a 15 year old who learned alot from your channel in the past few years it quite surprised me that I know more about the tree of life than you because I literally knowed all the answers I am quite happy and confused but it definitely give me a confidence boost
You should do a livestream where people can ask you questions and you can try to figure it out with just the resources close to you.
Excited about the new channel! Your videos on astronomy are some of my favorite. Subscribed!
That is one gorgeous image! Good pick on Mom's part.
Regarding ants, since reproductive ants like queens and drones are winged, they're counted among the winged insects. Even if they didn't have wings, they are descended from a winged branch so they are considered "winged" insects.
Atlas pro te mereces más reconocimiento
15:10 "are related to... ...whatever these things are.." 🤷♂️ it sounds so much like me, I'm still chuckling about it. Very entertaining and educational. 🙏✌️🌏☮️ AstroPro is on my subs 👍
This is such a cool poster. Also really sorry/ surprised to hear your space videos under performed so much. I'm a lover of all things science so I'm just as excited about space as I am about the earth sciences. Definitely following you over there.
This is fun. Like a quiz but u have to find the answer via an investigation love that
I'm so glad you're making more space videos! I can't wait to check out your new channel
I was always a hardcore fan of your astro-geography videos, super excited about the new channel!
this is a realy cool concept, i have thought about it a lot but never saw a way to do it, so im quite happy this came out
Quick pauze in the video to tell you the space video's are awesome please know that you are a pioneer!
2:45 Hope it's not an hour long video.
Becomes an hour long video.
I discovered your Channel through your Space related Videos and im stoked for more of that kind of content!
Good luck moving into the new place! I'll be sure to check in on Astro Pro.
Hey Atlas Pro, just wanted to tell you how much I love all the content you make on this channel, it is honestly amazing and some of my favorite to watch on all of RUclips. Because of your videos, I actually decided to go to University to persue a career in Geosciences! Biogeography is such an incredible topic, and I love it so so so much. Thank you for making some of the best videos out there on island biogeography, there's nobody else on the platform like you. I do have 2 video ideas for you if you are interested, the biogeography of Greenland, and the biogeography of New Zealand. I am actually going to move to New Zealand soon, as it is where I've wanted to live my whole life, and I can't wait to finally be able to start fresh there and make a future for myself in a land I love. Keep it up the amazing videos
Blows my mind how many things you got wrong! Not as a personal slight, I guess it highlights even more how much talent you have for great research, condensing information, great narrative exposition etc...
Your videos are truly top of the shelf
Thanks for the video, glad you are still planning more
No problem atlas pro, information you provide is so valuable we can wait for it
Plants and Archaea always get the short end of the stick on trees
you don´t have time? no worries your videos are highly rewatchable as i can personally attest to. plus the amount of effort in each one is clear to see and you also started another amazing channel. so don´t worry we´ll be rewatching the oldies until your comfortably settled in.
Wow. This was way more interesting than expected. Thank you for sharing!
You should make a video about sociological structures in nature and maybe collab with Second Thought since he does really interesting videos about the topic.
I've always been interested in space. I had no idea, until I found your channel, how interested I would be in earth. Finding out that you're making a space channel called astro pro is pretty awesome. I'm going to smash the like button and then go cozy up to the new subscribe button. :D
I loved watching you look for the coelacanths/lungfish... while staring at them under your wrist because you were leaning on them lmao
you always make me enjoy your channel. Can't wait for your new content
Wanted to just put this video as background noise while I fall asleep, but I ended up just actively watching the entire thing. Goos job!
I feel so smart knowing the vast majority of these answers. I wish I had that poster, I'd love it
Cool that you're making a second channel. I loved your space-related/non-Earth related videos are great as your regular content, so no complaints from me.
Amazing video. Great to be learning with you.
Lampreys are tasty! They are good both fried on coals or smoked. The first inch or so of the fish is normally not eaten, it contains the liver and most other internal organs, and of course the hard teeth which it uses to latch on to bigger fish in order to feed on them. The inedible part is easy to see as it is a kind of a bump when the rest of the fish is sleek, and it comes off easily when cooked. Lamprey is served whole and as is, and eaten by hand like it was rope licorice, the kind you can get from festival candy stalls. 2022 hasn't been a good year to catch lamprey at my location, as water levels remained low so far and the lamprey can't get upstream in local rivers because of that.
Oh and lampreys definitely don't have jaws. Their mouths are circular holes lined with teeth. It is quite interesting really, to know that teeth evolved before jaws.
you just gave me the perfect christmas present idea for my nephews!
U should do another biogeography video man, those were awesome
mannnn i love your videos where you beeen i miss the knowledge you spread
Life Finds a Way.
Just as in idea for one possible future video: If you Ever wanna Do a video on carnivorous plants, the majority of wild venus flytraps can be found in the Carolinas. Might a neat spot for some footage
I remember once learning elephants have internal testes as do dugongs and it is an aquatic trait the evolved and probably comes from their common ancestor.
I sub to an absolute bunch of space channels already, I came here as I was looking to add some geography channels to my feed. I've subbed to the new channel and will check out a few vids. Having not seen one of yours yet, I will say you've got your work cut out, there's a lot of well researched, high quality channels out there; but from how you sold them, maybe yours are too. Good luck to you, I welcome discovering itches of knowledge the other channels are not scratching.
"Yeah i had a good Christmas too, thanks for asking..."
Full metamorphosis is basically: egg -> larvae -> cocoon -> "adult" insect
21:50 OH MY GOD!! A WHOLE SPACE CHANNEL?? YEEEEES!!!! I had no idea it existed until now! wonder why youtube never recommended it to me but I'm so happy to have found out about it!
FYI from a Vermonter: Recent genetic studies indicate that the sea lamprey may acytually be native to Lake Champlain.
8:45 Pinnipeds are in the order Carnivora, and of course they still have the ability to go back on land.
Algae is not actually a monophyletic group, so some are more related to plants and some are not.
I'm subbed to Astro Pro and looking forward to your next video. Thanks
I discovered this channel through your "space" videos and stayed for the "earth" videos. Will subscribe to your second channel asap. Keep up the good work and good luck with organizing your new place.
This is the only time, bar none, that I've felt I knew a bit more than you did. Even with the other biology videos, I've felt a huge knowledge gap.. in both breadth and depth.
Admitting what you didn't know, that I thought were basic high school stuff, shows great humility and honesty!
Coelacanth is pronounced see-lo-canth. A great RUclips series about evolution is Aaron Ra’s Systematic Classification of Life.
Really cool poster! I might have to buy one for myself!
This is actually a really fun video. It's neat to do some unscripted stuff every now and then. It's like when you went to the creek to look for fossils.
I appreciate the update. This is a fun idea. It might be neater if you had played along on a live stream.
Also I'm Italian and it's seriouly funny to see how you are struggling reading Latin names. I love the way you like to challeng yourself.
Great video!!! It's worth noting that the cephalopodes also have shells, but they are internal to their bodies
loving the content keep it up
I love your space videos
I've been following a few biogeography channels, so it was fun to quiz myself. The only question I wasn't sure about was the different lobe-finned fish, although I knew that they were the predecessors to tetrapods.
Did dinosaurs roam in grass? Well, there is a magpie on my lawn right now...
prehistoric plants would make a cool video
For The AtlasPro wizard we just need to hear or see your videos, it doesn’t matter if you have a room or a background. What matters is your videos are awesome and engaging as always. Love the content and the creator as always!!!
What a cool poster! I can't believe he's never heard of coelacanth or lampreys
This is such an amazing video. Issac Asimov has a couple books which go through the history of human discovery and invention, and I do the same with that book. In fact whenever friends come over we turn it into a drinking game to guess which events came before which
this is amazing, do you mind if I steal this idea and implement it with my friends?
"Phylum and Xylum, one goes up and one goes down"
So like Stalagtites and Stalagmites then?
Well now I need this poster
Dinosaurs, grass - I saw a cockatoo (bird, dinosaur) eating grass seeds yesterday
Thumbs up for curiosity and the pursuit of knowledge with humility.
I respect your openness and ability to admit ignorance in front of a camera. I am surprised to find you, a talented naturalist, struggling a bit with the taxonomy in this way, but I guess it just shows we all have very specialized knowledge, and we don't know what it is that we don't know. Some of this stuff is intuitive to me, but you have taught me things through this channel that I didn't even have the first inclination toward understanding. Your video, "What is a nebula?" would be a great example: I thought I knew so much more about nebulae than I actually did before you released that one lol. I had a lot of misconceptions. Not to mention my lack of skill and experience in exactly this: acknowledging how little I actually know in the grand scheme of things.
Just a fun fact, I'm pretty sure the next-closesnt extant relative to elephants and sirenians is the hyraxes. You'd never think so just from looking at them.
Also, 30:39 Did you say "I guess it is the first arthropod, I guess other than water bears?" Do you care to elaborate on that? Because AFAIK, tardigrades are in their own phylum, not Arthropoda. Wikipedia says they are closely related, at least as far as phyla go, and some have proposed a clade called "Panarthropoda," which includes Arthropoda, Tardigrada, and Onychophora (velvet worms). So technically the first arthropod would be the first species to diverge from water bears, right? Or perhaps it's the other way around, the first Tardigrade was the first species to diverge from from the ancestor of arthropods. Or was your statement simply what you briefly inferred based on the branches of the poster? In either case, it appears to me that tardigrades and onychophorans both diverge before the label of Arthropoda on the poster. Maybe the distinction is bordering on semantic, but I have always suspected that in the highly technical realm of phylogeny, that kind of pedantry might be necessary and non-trivial lol
Again, this isn't like a "gotcha" or a criticism so much as just a discussion; I'm not here to put you down for having the nerve to upload nearly an hour of you admitting/realizing what you don't know in real time and staying open to the process of learning, on camera, in front of thousands of people-in my opinion, that ability, and the desire to keep educating oneself, will always be more admirable than simply knowing a lot of things. I sincerely feel inspired by that. I want to be more honest with myself and others about how much I still have to learn, instead of playing things off like I have it all figured out (when I so clearly don't).
47:20 "I'm kinda surprised, they didn't really ask a lot about plants . . . plants take up a very small part of this tree of life, even though in reality they make up at least an equal aspect of the life on Earth, if not... honestly, definitely, more than all the animals."
If we're talking about number of extant species, there are just SO many insects out there though.
One estimate I found of the makeup of 7.2M total living plant and animal species (presumably excluding bacteria, archaea, fungi, etc.):
total plants - 390,800
vertebrate animals - 80,500
invertebrate animals - 6,755,830 !!!!!
Five million of which are insects.
Another estimate I found (Mora et al. 2011) puts total animals at 7,770,000 species and plants at 298,000 species
The names are weird, one simple thing you can think about with the ‘ii’, anytime you see that as a suffix, it is 2 syllables, the first is ‘ee’ (like see) and the 2nd is “I” (like eye).
Well, since you asked for it, here goes new subscription. Keep up the good work!
this is such a nice chill video
This video for the lack of a better word feels very intimate? Like we're friends hanging out just playing a game. Im really enjoying it :D
New personal best: subscribed to a channel after zero views. Good luck Astro Pro!