I have a zoology exam tomorrow (the subject name is Fauna and Ecology but it's like 50% insects, I got catfished lmao. Bugfished?) and this is a genuinely great study resource, ty
i thought i was the only one in the world to describe the petiole on hymenopterans as a "snatched waist" but i have been very gladly proven wrong about it
As to continue from my previous comment (on the preceding video): -The reason why the larval stages of Thysanopterans are not regarded as instars is due to the fact that they exhibit hypermetamorphism, likely a precursor stage that led to the evolution of holometabola, which has just been conveniently left for us to observe in thrips. They aren't instars, since there is a lot of different developmental activities going on that is not found in most other hemimetabolous insects. -Hemiptera could honestly be its own video, considering historically they were divided into two orders and not until recently have they been united. -Hymenopteran suborders have a strong relational pattern observed in their genetic information which links them together, and also a lot of internal anatomy that they share, so it is not the same as what happened within Psocodea. -I am confused on the evolutionary life history you present in this video (or that seems to be presented), as Hymenoptera is presented as the premier order within Holometabola. -Not all members in Apocrita possess modified ovipositors.
I put the source I took the phylogenetic tree from in the description, it purports to be some sort of combination of other sources, so it figured I could get away with using it as my only source, although it is outdated.
1:13 She pierce and suck on my labium until I Phthiraptera
i didn't have to read this today.
you have a labia?
@@eightbitfeline1415 labia's already plural
I can't wait for the spiders and scorpions in this series! Two of the most interesting insects I've ever seen!
Jk, i know spiders and scorpions are not insects(they're arachnids btw)
@@arthurgabriel2625 An arachnid series would be sick tho
you should continue on this path where you don't speak chinese im really enjoying the video
oh buddy you're REALLY not gonna like my next video
You say you dont watch regular show but i dont believe you, becuase editing that slide was more work than it was shown. And thats dedication
I need to stop half insulting you every video, these are good!
I have a zoology exam tomorrow (the subject name is Fauna and Ecology but it's like 50% insects, I got catfished lmao. Bugfished?) and this is a genuinely great study resource, ty
i thought i was the only one in the world to describe the petiole on hymenopterans as a "snatched waist" but i have been very gladly proven wrong about it
This is absolutely one of my new favorite channels lol I love your editing style :)
what about Scale Insects, they are cool and sessile members of hemiptera
As to continue from my previous comment (on the preceding video):
-The reason why the larval stages of Thysanopterans are not regarded as instars is due to the fact that they exhibit hypermetamorphism, likely a precursor stage that led to the evolution of holometabola, which has just been conveniently left for us to observe in thrips. They aren't instars, since there is a lot of different developmental activities going on that is not found in most other hemimetabolous insects.
-Hemiptera could honestly be its own video, considering historically they were divided into two orders and not until recently have they been united.
-Hymenopteran suborders have a strong relational pattern observed in their genetic information which links them together, and also a lot of internal anatomy that they share, so it is not the same as what happened within Psocodea.
-I am confused on the evolutionary life history you present in this video (or that seems to be presented), as Hymenoptera is presented as the premier order within Holometabola.
-Not all members in Apocrita possess modified ovipositors.
I put the source I took the phylogenetic tree from in the description, it purports to be some sort of combination of other sources, so it figured I could get away with using it as my only source, although it is outdated.
ayo what was that ending?
This was hype! You should check our forgotten-languages, i really wonder what kinda video it would inspire
The dread as you almost didn't talk about the scorpion tail
Absolute mogger
amogus
Order Hymenoptera here. Godbless
and the hearts around wasps. godbless. i love wasps so much. shoutout to superorder ichneumonidea
Mwah. Perfection.
I love bug types
Bug factory