The Animal That Wouldn't Die (w/Robert Krulwich) | SKUNK BEAR

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 145

  • @Theadventurebox3
    @Theadventurebox3 10 лет назад +58

    Everything else: Eventually you must pass on
    The Hydra: I don't wanna

  • @seandmello3793
    @seandmello3793 8 лет назад +54

    Really liked the narrators way talking makes me want to hear him more

    • @TimSheehan
      @TimSheehan 8 лет назад +4

      He (Robert Krulwich) is a regular host on NPR's RadioLab series, their podcasts are much like audio-only versions of this video so I'd highly recommend checking them out www.radiolab.org/series/podcasts/

    • @MelaneyBAnatomy
      @MelaneyBAnatomy 7 лет назад +2

      Radiolab is an amazing podcast, science made into relevant, engaging narratives!

    • @rashminthaker3197
      @rashminthaker3197 2 года назад

      @@TimSheehan .

  • @bannerbomb8693
    @bannerbomb8693 8 лет назад +33

    he was curious so he cut it in half XD

  • @user-xk2st7fd1f
    @user-xk2st7fd1f 8 лет назад +15

    1: this video was cute, relaxing and informative 2: marvel's hydra is scary so every time you said hydra I pictured Steve Rogers cutting the plants a million times over

  • @Andrea-xs4ny
    @Andrea-xs4ny 3 года назад +5

    There's a jellyfish that has been dubbed the only immortal creature (it can revert from sexually mature to sexually immature at any time, effectively resetting the clock each time, and it can do this forever and a day). Check out the Turritopsis dohrnii, aka the "Immortal Jellyfish" (more here: www.amnh.org/explore/news-blogs/on-exhibit-posts/the-immortal-jellyfish). I guess we've got another contender with the hydra.

  • @headfangs
    @headfangs 10 лет назад +100

    So what I'm hearing is we should eat hydras and steal their powers.

    • @sketchyspudley
      @sketchyspudley 6 лет назад +10

      So what you're saying is we should do a Kirby.

    • @hypnozpie4071
      @hypnozpie4071 5 лет назад +3

      wait if they don't die what happens if you eat them? do they multiply in your stomach? does the acid melt then kill them? i need to find out

    • @charleystarks5972
      @charleystarks5972 4 года назад +1

      thicc glucose god they don’t die in their natural environment, take them out and they die

    • @MrKittycattwenty
      @MrKittycattwenty 4 года назад

      @@hypnozpie4071 they can still die but they just don't die naturally, if you ate them they would die.

    • @ameer.a_r
      @ameer.a_r 4 года назад +1

      Man you can not just eat them hydras has nematocyte that jellyfish has if you eat them they will just sting your mouth

  • @iamfuturetrunks
    @iamfuturetrunks 9 лет назад +27

    Hmm what iv gotten from this is... if I don't have kids ill never die. :D
    Sounds good! lol

    • @egg-bert1735
      @egg-bert1735 6 лет назад +6

      gg

    • @piotrkowalski3869
      @piotrkowalski3869 4 года назад

      What the narrator said was that after having offspring living being dies faster. It means with no offspring you will live longer nad will have noone to pass your illogical theories onto.

  • @Naked_Snake
    @Naked_Snake 10 лет назад +12

    Love your voice. It's presented so soothingly :)

  • @AveryDelMiller
    @AveryDelMiller 8 лет назад +3

    Hydras are so cool, and they're all over the place. Great video 👌

  • @teacher.claire
    @teacher.claire 9 лет назад +1

    I love this channel!!
    Thank you to all those who have come together to produce these vids :)

  • @Koppelya
    @Koppelya 7 лет назад +1

    excelente, gracias por hacer estos vídeos!!

  • @benracer
    @benracer 10 лет назад

    When I saw the channel name, I thought it was some non-npr channel but then I saw Robert Krulwick's name. So I'm glad I found this.

  • @NOSfusion
    @NOSfusion 10 лет назад +51

    Hail Hydra!

  • @Kuraakka
    @Kuraakka 10 лет назад

    this is one of those videos you just want to share to every one so i did

  • @kwarrior2895
    @kwarrior2895 10 лет назад

    Wow just found this accidently.This is amazing!

  • @mianruwu3280
    @mianruwu3280 9 лет назад +2

    so if we eat it, if they still alive in our bodies?...

  • @-_o_o_-
    @-_o_o_- 10 лет назад +3

    What about mutations?

  • @darthvader6533
    @darthvader6533 6 лет назад

    "Hmmm, what an interesting creature, what should I do with them?
    Oh I dont know...
    *HOW BOUT CUT EM IN HALF!*

  • @joshuarosen6242
    @joshuarosen6242 10 лет назад

    I am scientifically literate and normally don't learn a great deal from popular science videos, even if they are interesting. This video, on the other hand, was both interesting and informative.
    Hydras are clearly jolly interesting little chaps.

  • @birdies417
    @birdies417 8 лет назад +1

    Is the link between reproduction and life expectancy also observed within a species or only between species?

  • @user-uc5xc5sb9z
    @user-uc5xc5sb9z 7 лет назад +1

    vox recommended you. u r really interesting and fascinating
    thx

  • @JetSetDiva
    @JetSetDiva 7 лет назад +1

    Hi. Forgive the question if this has already been asked, but what software was used to make this video? I'm making a documentary and would love to have animation like this for some scenes. Thanks! Oh, and you gained a sub! :)

    • @skunkbear
      @skunkbear  7 лет назад +5

      I animated this video in Adobe After Effects using watercolor illustrations.

    • @JetSetDiva
      @JetSetDiva 7 лет назад

      Wow. That is impressive! That must have taken you quite some time. Thanks for the quick reply.

  • @JinKee
    @JinKee Год назад

    We were looking at the wrong biological unit for human immortality: you know what clump of human cells can be split in half, and becomes two of itself and continually replaces old cells with new ones? A human nation.

  • @Aerba54
    @Aerba54 9 лет назад +1

    I wonder if there are ways to integrate these immortal's cells with dead cells in humans.

  • @MrShinta786
    @MrShinta786 2 года назад

    we want more

  • @JacksonHollo
    @JacksonHollo 5 лет назад

    Wow... this is a good video

  • @andrevu3996
    @andrevu3996 10 лет назад

    One question.. Is this the same guy from the podcast freakanomics

  • @user-vc8yx2hm9r
    @user-vc8yx2hm9r 10 лет назад +2

    What happens if we eat the hydra?

  • @marleighwhitman8313
    @marleighwhitman8313 4 года назад +1

    k its been 5 yrs how r they now?

  • @radhamadhabpathi512
    @radhamadhabpathi512 6 лет назад

    It would be great if you can post the link of the published paper in the description.

  • @r3n736
    @r3n736 4 года назад

    he was curious so he cut it in half,
    wonder what he would do to people he was curious about...

  • @sanicthehedgehog1260
    @sanicthehedgehog1260 10 лет назад

    I wonder why they're like this, it reminds me of the jellyfish. It's sad we're very underdeveloped in comparison or very flawed in design.

  • @ericafleming5197
    @ericafleming5197 6 лет назад

    Don't all animals do this in some way? They difference is that the stem cells that produce new cells become less efficient and die off, while in a hydra the stem cells don't age?

  • @helema23
    @helema23 10 лет назад

    look up the squishy bear they can survive drought and extreme freezing along with several other things. they are tiny little animals with a simple cell structure bu tthey can survive conditions that would kill us.

  • @Zincink
    @Zincink 10 лет назад

    I enjoyed this - thanks :)

  • @noldyn8930
    @noldyn8930 10 лет назад

    Music? It sounds really relaxing (my opinion I always liked melody music)

  • @reddsophia8100
    @reddsophia8100 7 лет назад

    RADIOLAB!! Can we just get Robert Krowlich and Morgan Freeman to narrate everything please?

  • @harsharya545
    @harsharya545 2 года назад

    But I have heard every cell in human body also replaces itself every 7 year. (Source Vsauce)

  • @StaryEyesxxx
    @StaryEyesxxx 8 лет назад

    Where did you find the study relating maternal age and life span? I have been trying to find it (or something similar) in multiple places but with no luck. Is there any chance you still remember the researchers? I know this is a long shot but all help is really appreciated. Thank you.

    • @itzel6698
      @itzel6698 2 года назад

      did you ever find the study?

  • @jameslee1145
    @jameslee1145 10 лет назад

    Hey, I'm from Long Island too!

  • @scarves4evanoregano
    @scarves4evanoregano 10 лет назад

    this made me emotional... NOTCOOLBRO! xD

  • @kitteav
    @kitteav 8 лет назад +1

    If the cells are recycled ever 20 days, ish, can we really call it the same animal after 20 days? if 0 part of the original animal is there, is it still the same animal?

    • @skunkbear
      @skunkbear  8 лет назад +6

      You're in good company asking that question, because Plato, Thomas Hobbes and John Locke had a similar one (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_of_Theseus). Taking this further - YOUR cells are mostly recycled over time (even your neuronal connections are constantly reshaped ruclips.net/video/Nwfg157hejM/видео.html) ... do you remain the same person? I think some would argue that because today's hydra is genetically identical to the hydra from 4 or 8 years ago (barring an occasional mutation) it IS the same.

    • @KineticPassion
      @KineticPassion 7 лет назад

      calling it a different animal would also make it fit the curve. babies in 2 days, death in 20.

  • @Rytonic69
    @Rytonic69 5 лет назад

    Oh this is cool.
    DECAPITATIOOOOON!!!

  • @jimweaver3315
    @jimweaver3315 10 лет назад

    Hmm, so if somehow you get us to do the same with our cells we could also be immortal. Something to think about.

    • @jorgemtzb9359
      @jorgemtzb9359 5 лет назад

      Yes, but the problem is that our cells are really specialized. A cell specialized in something can't reproduce and it's offspring would go to make a different function .

  • @davidjames666
    @davidjames666 8 лет назад +3

    Can i eat hydra?

  • @fockyoumang
    @fockyoumang 10 лет назад +2

    But is that still the same hydra he took out of the pond after having every cell replaced? Is that really immortal? They aren't the same ones he originally had when he started his experiment

    • @JOblyJoobly
      @JOblyJoobly 10 лет назад +4

      i don't know if you know or not but you just made a HUGE doctor who reference

    • @fockyoumang
      @fockyoumang 10 лет назад +3

      The Spectator I had no idea. That seriously was the first thought that popped into my head after watching this. Same goes for the human body, all skin and nails and bones die and get replaced till it can no longer make efficient cells and the dying process begins. The body we had as infants to toddlers all the way up to 80 years if your lucky, are not the same and brain cells die and don't get replaced. All life's experiences change you constantly, so are we the us we still the same person when we die? That's was my initial thought which made me think of that to ask that question about them because it's a so much more easy example to use

    • @jonkirby6327
      @jonkirby6327 10 лет назад +3

      People regenerate cells, are they the same person once all cells have been regenerated? Or is it some other person?

    • @yakojjy
      @yakojjy 10 лет назад +6

      ***** Skin cells live about two or three weeks. Colon cells have it rough: They die off after about four days. Sperm cells have a life span of only about three days, while brain cells typically last an entire lifetime This stuff is pretty cool, and kind of related to to the anti cancer properties of weed. They're recently discovered that THC makes your cells die and recycle themselves faster, with shorter cell life, the chances of a cell developing a cancerous mutation are lowered. On another note, you are not a single entity, in fact most of the cells in your body aren't even human cells

    • @kurtcobain6886
      @kurtcobain6886 10 лет назад +2

      Wilbur Jenkins Oh cells recycle about every 8-10 years depending on your size its really quite amazing this is why I love science

  • @duolingo6702
    @duolingo6702 6 лет назад

    Why does everything else get to die but not the hydra?!?

  • @currysues
    @currysues 10 лет назад

    So, if hydra never die, and hydra also reproduce, why aren't we up to our eyeballs in hydra?

    • @skunkbear
      @skunkbear  10 лет назад +8

      scurry_away Hydra can die if they are eaten, or if they starve, or if they are taken out of water -- the idea is they won't die of old age.

    • @blackdraco28
      @blackdraco28 10 лет назад +6

      it's elf immortality old man time can't touch them a sword can

    • @Elluem
      @Elluem 10 лет назад +2

      blackdraco28
      I love how you call it "elf immortality" brilliant.

  • @chrisirwin34
    @chrisirwin34 8 лет назад +1

    I can't like this more than one time! NO!!!!

  • @bellacutie25
    @bellacutie25 10 лет назад

    They are their own babies...

  • @eurenton99
    @eurenton99 10 лет назад +1

    But how many times can it's own DNA be split in half before there are problems?

    • @joshuarosen6242
      @joshuarosen6242 10 лет назад +3

      I think you need to read up on cell divison. DNA isn't "split in half" during cell division, it is copied. It is not the case that, when a cell splits, each new cell gets half the DNA.
      The copying of DNA does inevitably result in errors and mutations on occasions but that's how we arrived on the scene. Such mutations wouldn't necessarily cause a problem and may even lead to increased fitness.

    • @IIGrayfoxII
      @IIGrayfoxII 10 лет назад +1

      Joshua Rosen
      These errors have ways of correcting themselves in animals.
      A terminate command is sent to the cell with bad DNA and it should die, but if it doesn't get terminated cancer happens

    • @joshuarosen6242
      @joshuarosen6242 10 лет назад +2

      IIGrayfoxII
      That is indeed true. Although errors occur, it is far from a bad thing. It it weren't for such mutations, we'd all still be bacteria or worse.

    • @rpm2004
      @rpm2004 10 лет назад

      IIGrayfoxII
      He was referring (I think) to mutations in the games (sperm and egg cells) that cause random mutations between generations that may help or hinder the individuals' survival, which in turn acts upon the evolution of said species.

  • @4tumuch135
    @4tumuch135 10 лет назад

    Maybe we can make regenarative medicin out of these things

  • @crazyburkey3677
    @crazyburkey3677 Год назад

    Would we increase our lifespan if we'd start ingesting hydras,

  • @bjnslc
    @bjnslc 10 лет назад

    How many cells do you need to replace before you consider yourself a different person? askanaturalist.com/do-we-replace-our-cells-every-7-or-10-years/

  • @makaronishenouda6413
    @makaronishenouda6413 9 месяцев назад

    seems the channel wasn't immortal

  • @ellifedash663
    @ellifedash663 6 лет назад

    Where do I get a hydra?

  • @cworks1245
    @cworks1245 10 лет назад

    What would happen if u dipped the in acid

  • @Zappyguy111
    @Zappyguy111 10 лет назад

    I had aptasia once, and injected them with vinegar....

  • @DerangedOctopus
    @DerangedOctopus 8 лет назад

    What is the song that begins at 0:34???

  • @reneebaran616
    @reneebaran616 6 лет назад

    What is the animal that lives the longest (or forever)🙂🤩🤪🐻🦄please like I’m going to guess it is from the sea maybe a jellyfish yeah I think they might live forever

  • @rulofmg
    @rulofmg 9 лет назад +2

    but can it melt steel beams?

  • @xboxonegaming3602
    @xboxonegaming3602 10 лет назад

    Now if only humans could do this

    • @Fahrenheit4051
      @Fahrenheit4051 10 лет назад

      Some people think we might within this century. I'm a bit skeptical, but I definitely thing we should strive for it. The critics would say that it would offset the birth-death balance, but researchers are developing methods of long-term, reversible birth control that could help maintain this balance.

  • @avalasialove
    @avalasialove 10 лет назад

    ?

  • @shadowdance4666
    @shadowdance4666 10 лет назад

    Immortality ?

  • @generaltso656
    @generaltso656 8 лет назад

    Why could human just evole from them?

  • @ItsRiskyyTTV
    @ItsRiskyyTTV 10 лет назад

    Call it piccolo lol

  • @KanyeTroll
    @KanyeTroll 8 лет назад

    does it have a brain? or at least a nervous system?

    • @GandalfTheTsaagan
      @GandalfTheTsaagan 7 лет назад +1

      Apparently it's a web of nerves arround the body:
      www.google.ie/imgres?imgurl=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia1.britannica.com%2Feb-media%2F35%2F73335-004-2425FA69.jpg&imgrefurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.britannica.com%2Fscience%2Fnervous-system%2Fimages-videos&docid=rDkP2CXLKxKsOM&tbnid=43Rz9z14K96HJM%3A&vet=1&w=358&h=260&bih=638&biw=1366&ved=0ahUKEwiAt_figdTQAhUmJMAKHQo5CLkQMwg-KBcwFw&iact=mrc&uact=8

  • @Talltrees84
    @Talltrees84 10 лет назад

    Send in Nick Fury and the Avengers. Then watch them die. Lol.
    Good vid.

  • @ewmcd
    @ewmcd 10 лет назад +3

    and might I add.... HAIL HYDRA!!!

  • @azitadgreat7412
    @azitadgreat7412 6 лет назад

    Hydras is just a Myth...

    • @azitadgreat7412
      @azitadgreat7412 6 лет назад

      It FREAKIN Exist ?! Thanks for the info...

  • @user-bo1bp1jz5i
    @user-bo1bp1jz5i 3 года назад

    How did i get here

  • @shoyuramenoff
    @shoyuramenoff 8 лет назад +2

    Hail Hydra! Anybody.....?

  • @lordbaba9649
    @lordbaba9649 10 лет назад

    Im getting educated like a mothafucka

  • @tenletters5889
    @tenletters5889 4 года назад

    2:10 so you're saying the key to living long lives is to gradually raise the age of consent

  • @MSPula
    @MSPula 6 лет назад

    Cut off one head...two more shall take its place... *HAIL HYDRA*

  • @The900428
    @The900428 10 лет назад

    isn't that a plant?

    • @skunkbear
      @skunkbear  10 лет назад +8

      It looks a bit like a plant, but it's actually an animal! It's motile, it kills prey with poisonous tentacles and it ingests them, and of course it has animal cells.

    • @OlleLindestad
      @OlleLindestad 10 лет назад

      It belongs to the animal group known as cnidarians - same as corals, anemones and jellyfish.

  • @Huntress_Hannah
    @Huntress_Hannah 4 года назад

    Can you imagine you’re in the middle of making love and he goes “WAIT!......gotta make sure my babies are ok first”

  • @reginafelli9146
    @reginafelli9146 10 лет назад

    Iioooo
    besteira

  • @Kaioshin9000
    @Kaioshin9000 4 года назад

    Hail hydra

  • @ktktktktktktkt
    @ktktktktktktkt 5 лет назад

    Hail Hydra

  • @FrolkaScience
    @FrolkaScience 7 лет назад

    gretings from Russia

  • @shiro4370
    @shiro4370 4 года назад

    *HAIL HYDRA*

  • @Iohannes_the_Orthodox
    @Iohannes_the_Orthodox 5 лет назад

    The man who wouldn't die :- Rasputin

  • @chiqui1006
    @chiqui1006 6 лет назад

    Hail Hydra!

  • @Regnberg
    @Regnberg 9 лет назад

    Hail Hydra!