The fantastic anatomy of spiders - all you have to know
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- Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
- This video is about the fascinating and fantastic anatomy of spiders by means of a vivid 3D animation of a black widow. It is about the external structure with cephalothorax / prosoma and abdomen, chelicerae, pedipals and about the organs of the spider, such as the book lungs, the tubular heart or the spinning glands and the sucking stomach.
00:00 body of arachnoids
00:30 chelicerae - jaw claws with venom glands
00:58 eyes
01:33 brain of the spider - ganglia
01:46 book lungs
02:17 heart - blood circulation system
02:43 reproduction organ - ovaries
03:05 spinning glands
03:50 intestinals
04:09 how spiders eat
04:27 variety of spider species
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the most intresting part that is not mentioned here is that that open fluid system also helps the spider move around. It is basicly a hydrostatic system where the pressure caused by the heart strectches out the legs. Without pressure the legs fold themselfs under the spider due to natural spring tension of the ligaments involved. Thats why you almost never find a dead spider with its legs like its about to run away but underneath its body instead. Edit finally corrected the mistake by calling the thing "pneumatic" :D
Oh,very interesting fact. Thanks for mentioning, I didn't find that during my research..
How can I find more about this pneumatic system? Other beings have it?
So, in layman's terms.
A boner per leg.
@@andychilli most arthropods rely on hydro-static and hydro-dynamic pressure to move, it is pretty fascinating stuff
Totally ! I was expecting them to reach that interesting part of its physiology but didn’t 🤷♂️
For some reason I’ve never thought of spiders having organs but I DEFINITELY didn’t think they’d look like that! Absolutely fascinating, thank you!
Thanks a lot, you are welcome :)
Every spider l come across ends up with its organs on the outside in a pulp. Hate the buggers.
@@biggusdickus5986 :( username checks out
I'm not being facetious when I say that I also used to imagine that most insects were just super big bacteria animated by cosmic winds or something mystical. It's weird thinking that the small creatures have body complexities rivaling humans, and a striking similarity to humans in DNA! Or the other way around I guess...
You're not alone, dude! And I highly doubt even those who stopped to think about it imagined their heart looking like that, for example. Nature is freaking awesome!
good work getting the spider to stay in place for the video... especially for when his skin was turned off
XD
All you have to do is ask politely
They actually pretty nice insect if you get to know them better
@@ConanObrien22Spiders are arachnids, not insects
Someone put a tremendous amount of effort into this video, and I applaud them.
Teaching tools like this make comprehension and retention so much easier.
Thank you so much! Yes, much of passion, love and of course time went into this animation, but it was quite fun from the beginning till the end
It was really good of that spider to stand still while you filmed and scanned her. She walked straight to where she needed to be and even waited a moment to make sure you were done. Very good patient, 10/10 would scan again.
😂😂😂 So kind of that spider 😉
Pooter annamated😁
I was a bit worried when that large weight was dropped so close to the poor creature.
Paid actor.🙄
Some people here don’t realise the guy was joking about the spider’s unforeseen compliance
I'm terrified of spiders but can't help but admire the incredible biology.
Same. They are incredible creatures.
Knowledge is the pathway toward conquering your fears. If you know enough about your enemy, he will no longer be as such in your eyes.
To me, spiders are cute little creatures that are deathly afraid of me. Except jumping spiders, I feel like they just see me as a jungle gym.
@@D.H.1082 yeah I’m more afraid of stepping on a spider whenever I go outside at night and I have a hard time figuring what spider a particular one is.
(if it’s not a black widow or a daddy long leg I don’t know,since those two are very common in my area)
I also really don’t like the feeling of something small crawling on my skin, so it’d probably be hard to have one as a pet.
same, violently arachnophobic but I love biology so much
@@D.H.1082 I really hope so! Cheers.
I've never been so fascinated and creeped out at the same time. But the educational value is definitely worth powering through my arachnophobia.
Ditto. I have not heard the word "spinneret" since the 80s. Videos like this take off enough of the creep factor so I can actually watch. :)
@@samuraiman7777Ok, Dr phil
ok bro keep talking
he's literally right
@@danielthecake8617 ok, Jerry springer
I'm taking care of a pair of jumping spiders that have moved in. They're the cutest. Tilting their heads up to look at me when I approach, sometimes walking around only to do a 180 and check up on me.
I let them catch flies for me and in turn I spray water near them a few times a day and make sure they don't get killed by the other people or cats living here.
I have a whole new appreciation for these creatures and you can tell there's a lot more intelligence than you'd expect from something so small.
what does spraying water do for them?
@@apo11o68... gives them water that would usually be given by nature?
@@Pureenergyrift oh ok. the response could’ve been given in a less passive aggressive tone but thanks anyway.
How tf do you get a pair of jumping spiders to move in 😢. Can these cute little predators be purchased as pets? I also need fly predators
The modeling and animation of this presentation are simply fantastic.
Thank you so much! It quite took some time, but it was a lot of fun to do this animation. So I am glad you liked it :)
big time skills
@@OliverEndehe means simply awesome😅😊❤
@@OliverEnde amazing quality
@@SToXC_. thanks!
Besides the video being simply amazing, HUGE shoutout to the animator. He did a FANTASTIC job with all this
Thank you so much!
@@OliverEnde your animation skills are crazy! Could i know how much it took you to animate at this level?
@@chals1117 Hey, thanks a lot!! Hm, I started with 3D in 2003.. so I had 20 years to work on my skills :-) I guess this is more than enough time to learn something well
@@OliverEnde fantastic animation, not criticism there! ... though on the subject of spiders i was hoping to see the hydraulic mechanisms that move the legs.
@@OliverEnde I started playing with 3D in 1992 on the Amiga 500 (AMOS 3D) and use various packages today to design the combat and weapon systems for naval warships (MoD and DoD). I can't hold a candle to what you do, I had to watch the video twice because the first time I spent the whole time thinking "how the hell did you model that!!!". Credit where credit is due, you have a phenomenal skill set. Peace from the UK mate.
Its so amazing how complex a small spider's internals can be, normally people don't think of such stuff.
it's pretty simple , pressure and release
like everything in this universe , even the universe itself
pressure builds up and needs to be released , which gives beings motion and room to grow in to their environment ...
people aren't made for sitting still either , things get backed up and you get used to pressure Without release ,
which is the cause of a Lot of mental and physical problems ...
@@ThermaL-ty7bw the concept of it is simple but the particularities of how said motion is achieved are what make it so complex.
Spiders scare me but it used to be so much worse. I spent a lot of time studying them, both with books and out in nature.
I never kill them, but my body still goes into panic mode whenever I see them.
I like the peacock spiders and the Jumping spiders. I like some of the smaller Crab spiders too. They do color changes.
I live in the southern Appalachians surrounded by woods. We have many, many Wolf spiders around here, like really large Wolfies.
They're scary, but fairly easy to get out of the house when they get in. I've gotten pretty good at catch and release.
You're fairly kind😅 ... I live in southern Ontario, Canada. And if I see one of those wolf spiders, they won't be alive if I can do anything about it😂😬😬 although, daddy long legs and jumping spiders don't bother me
Fear of spiders is in our DNA and for a good reason. A lot of them are venomous.
I honour you for working so hard to overcome such a primal phobia. I have always liked spiders but, like anyone, used to have a startle reflex to anything which can move so fast on so many legs. Then one summer, I had an absolute infestation in my then apartment. There were simply spiders everywhere! I'd be fixing my hair to go to work & three or four would always be coming down from the ceiling to the top of my head. It went on all summer, so many species! I finally just got absolutely numb to it. Overkill, I guess. Now, if I'm lying in bed & one drops onto my cheek, tucks up its legs, & rolls down onto my neck, it makes me laugh & laugh! I have a tarantula, BTW, & she is an excellent pet, low-maintenance & quiet. Would recommend, 11/10! 🕷 🕸
Short without any extra fluff, exactly what I was looking for, thanks man
hey HŌSEKI , you are welcome :-)
It's refreshing to find a video that hasn't been artificially bloated to a half-hour.
One of the downsides of RUclips removing time limits on videos is that many RUclipsrs want to monopolize their viewers' time with excessively long videos.
Speaking as someone who suffers from arachnophobia, I gotta say it's kind of soothing to look at a spider and realize it's not malicious by nature. It only LOOKS malicious by nature.
Thats not arachnophobia, arachnophobia is being scared of its shape, not whether if its dangerous or not
@@diogopereira1475 it's a strange fear yeah, most arachnophobes know perfectly well most spiders aren't dangerous. It still doesn't affect their fear one bit.
Maybe their was some really dangerous venomous spider more than 10k years ago and arachnophobia is still a lingering fear because of that. It has been proven to be innate and in part unconnected to experiences with spiders.
@@diogopereira1475 nah, you can have fear of both, the shape and whether or not it'll bite you or not, some people are afraid of that
@@GhostSwiss thats not arachnophobia, because fear of danger is normal and every human being has it, arachnophobia is fear of spiders regardless if they dangerous or not, the spider could be the most cute and friendly looking one and even in an alternate universe able to speak to you, but if you have arachnophobia youd still be terrified regardless, because its their shape that terrifies, not whether they dangerous or not
Im not afraid of snakes for example, if i know they dont bite im not afraid, but if i know they poisonous and bite then obviously ill be afraid, does that mean i have a phobia of snakes? No, means im a perfectly healthy human being with fear of danger in general
They're not malicious. They just want to inject you with flesh-dissolving fluid and eat you. If you were a spider, wouldn't you want to do that?
Thank you so much! I've been overcoming my arachnophobia and this informative video helped me quite a lot being less frightened and more interested ❤️
They're just like me and you.
nothing cures arachnophobia like knowing spiders liquify their preys insides
Beautiful graphics and animation . And very informative . It’s amazing that spiders have such complex behaviors with so little of what could be considered a brain .
@No follow Jesus and you won’t have to think critically again .
The elongated heart is pretty interesting.
I knew the heart differs from species to species, but had no idea it could differ to such an extent.
There’s a SciShow video on how blood circulation evolved more than once. Hence the difference in circulatory systems and composition of blood.
I didn't even comprehend that bugs could have a need for hearts, but it makes a hell of a lot of sense.
Dito. I seem to remember that we had spiders in biology class, but i cant remember if we ever went into that much detail. I knew that they (like insects) dont have red bloodcells and that their respiratory system works a lot different than our lungs (which also restricts their size, becaus its not very efficient in comparrison to lungs).
next time you see a spider look closely at their abdomen. On some you can see their heart beat.
@@skycloud4802 Insects have crude blood sacks, ditto oxygen diffusion by branching tubes, spiders are more complex like mammals.
We are privileged to live in a time when such incredible graphics and animations happen. It makes the subject so much more informative and understandable. Thanks. 👍
Most certainly. It's an absolute amazing and wonderful time to be alive but also a traumatic one
U said that right
Exactly 💯 but I'm in my late 30s and if you realize folks like me grew up in a time era when cell phones were barely just coming out or not out at all In most areas... There was no graphics like this or RUclips or any videos unless if it was on a VHS tape on TV in some science class room.. nowadays you can sit at home and watch this in your yard or in your house or in your pretty amazing how things have changed in the past 25 or 30 years 😮
@@athensboy123 Yeah, I know. I'm 6️⃣3️⃣ year's old. I remember steam trains in Sydney that were not a tourist attraction, just regular service. I've experienced a world without internet for a few decades, and I prefer this. Thank you for your comment. 👍
You nerds are just manipulated by the music, try watching without sound and you won't pop off so honky dory. 🤓
Great animation, not a bunch of cuts, smooth transitions between opaque and solid. 10/10
Thank you so much!!! Are you a 3d Artist as well? Greetings from Hamburg
Great animation, I was fascinated by the complexity of the spiders before, but this unique presentation was perfect and very enlightening.
Thanks for your kind words and great that you learned something 🤙
It's kind of mind-blowing in itself that we know what the organs of such tiny animals look like.
Spiders might not be popular with most people (I mostly tolerate smaller ones in my home), but one can't deny that they are immensely fascinating creatures. Well, all animals are, but creatures this small and almost "alien" to humans have a special fascination.
There's probably one of them reading this over my shoulder right now. Every room of every house in Japan has a resident jumping spider. We don't charge them rent because they get rid of mites, and sometimes even mosquitos. Our cat takes care of the cockroaches, and the occasional lizard. We don't have mice, unfortunately for him :)
@@DieFlabbergast So you only have to worry about the Mukade and the Japanese Hornet?
I wonder when people will understand that official science lies and all organisms are on a similar level of complexity. Intended only for other tasks. Man and spider use the same "components". The information is in the DNA. It's all based on the same design. It's like the current smartphones. They may differ in individual components, but they are devices based on the same technology.
Of course, evolution exists, but at the level of adaptation to changes in the environment and the needs of survival. You can transform a cow into a dolphin, but it's still the same project, only the software is extremely flexible and able to adapt to the conditions.
However, they are still the same organisms in terms of the building materials and DNA software used.
@@nnnnnn3647 _"I wonder when people will understand that official science lies and all organisms are on a similar level of complexity. "_
That is exactly what Science is saying, so where are you getting your idea from, that it is any other way?
@@h.a.9880 📍
I am absolutely terrified of spiders and was apprehensive even while clicking on this video, but towards the end I relaxed a bit and started finding it fascinating rather than scary.. Great video!
thank you! It had the same effect on my while I was doing the research about spiders :-) Now I look at them and think: great and fascinating creatures :-)
we have been feeding jumping spiders to our African bullfrogs when we find them in the house, they love them as a healthy snack lol
archana is pretty close to arachnid :)
@@yvandaniel8050 you wouldn't believe the number of times I've heard that lol
Yea, it's actually a pretty established/recognized fact that it is DNA-level for us to be born with a natural instinctive fear of snakes and spiders, because historically they were a FAR more significant threat to young ones (what with all the medicines, antivenoms, means of generally keeping other animals away from our sleeping quarters, etc nowadays). As a kid I LOOOOOVED insects........but was still TERRIFIED of spiders. Around 8th grade, my friend showed me how cool it was to watch jumping spiders take bees out of the air on the bushes in his yard, and told me if you put them in a container with prey you could watch them do so.
So......even though it was somewhat terrifying -especially with jumping spiders moving so quickly and unexpectedly.......I decided to try keeping a couple different spiders (simple grass spiders and jumping spiders), and very quickly found they really were just simple, peaceful fellows and lasses. Biggest change of all probably came when I decided to try keeping a black widow spider........I've kept I think 4 now over the years, and each was the PINNACLE of docile -after only a couple feedings and the 1st cleaning of the container, they become SUPER chill and not disturbed by things -no drastic fearful reaction like running away rapidly. Because, like any animal, all they want to feel a certain level of safeness.
And while they ARE pretty amazing in a lot of ways: the incredible silk and all its variations, the ability to sense vibration so effectively, etc..........they're also HYPER vulnerable in a lot of ways; take the black widow, for example; it's a pretty good example of most spiders in how it SEEMS, on the surface, like a threatening villain........but actually turns out to be SUPER vulnerable and just accordingly scared:
Black widows (like most spiders) are almost COMPLETELY blind (can basically only distinguish between "really light area" and "really dark area"s of vision), they have basically NO exoskeleton like most arthropods have (so they're basically just big vulnerable water balloons waiting to get popped), and black widows in particular can even die from just over-eating and then falling from their web a short distance. These little creatures that ARE so deeply scary to pretty much ALL of us........I won't say I don't still get a little fear/startle when I see one unexpectedly near me, but I don't really fear them in general anymore.
Just keeping the spider and getting to watch it when it doesn't seem like it's somehow menacing us............when it doesn't feel like any kind of threat and you're simply watching it without that dread.....you quickly see that, they're really just simple peaceful, very vulnerable and thus kinda easily scared, decent fellows. 🙂
Outstanding!
What a grand tour of the anatomy of our tiny fellow travelers!! I put this on the level of the Inner Life of the Cell animation, that must be over 10 years old by now, for its capacity for education through fantastic animations. What a treat! The difference from the charts and simple drawing we had through the 1900s to these incredible tours you have produced are profound. Keep up this magnificent and inspiring work, can't wait to see what's next!!!
Glory to the One who created this complex perfection!
and of course, thanks for the amazing video
aren't they just fascinating
Its impressive how they managed to learn of those organs, how delicate of an autopsy must be carried out to not damage such minute organs is beyond me.
Countless sacrifices.
@@bltzcstrnx Meanwhile on some alien spaceship...
I'm guessing they used an x-ray to map out the spider so it would be easier to cut into it without damaging anything
It's the same on all spiders so just go for the largest spider you can find and then it's actually a lot less difficult. ^^
@@jatinore4626 yeah, that makes sense tbh. Dont know why i didnt think of it xD
Splendid animation, a well-written script, and professional voice talent. I do believe I shall watch more of your videos, if such is their expected quality.
@No There is no need for shame if one is honest in all things, confident in oneself, and ever-improving. Only you can provide these things for yourself, no one else, even God, can do it for you.
Also, injecting religion in a discussion that has nothing to do with such is rude, godmonger.
Lastly, I am a warlike secular humanist. If gods existed, humanity would have to conquer/exterminate them or enter a state of mutually assured destruction to ever be truly free - that includes the Judeo-Christian God. At the very least, we'd have to strive for such, regardless of threats or divine punishments. Slavery to a god, even a benevolent one, is as undesirable as slavery to another human, even a benevolent one.
Thankfully, humans made up _all_ gods to facilitate control and for emotional support; to compensate for their own weaknesses and lack of knowledge of the Universe that surrounds us. This support/control is necessary for some people - may those that need such believe in whoever makes their lives easier - but many of us do not need such crutches.
_Humankind above all._
PS: Speaking of shame, you somehow managed to misspell your own god's name. "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain." applies, as you made that mistake because you were careless with His name.
I am impressed that so much really important organs fit into so little space. When counting the inside of things down I always wonder just how it all finds place in such tiny animals
It is so fascinating that even the tinnier we get the complexity of things never seem to decrease
Right? The World of the small is so fascinating
@@lkx5257 there is a universe in a raindrop
God formed even the spider with love.
@@C.K.MillerPoet_Extraordinaire She really did
@@metageist666 She?
I think that an argument could be made that spiders are the most technologically advanced creatures in nature. Not just for their incredible morphology but for the strategies they have in catching prey. For examples: There are diving bells attached below water, harnessed with silk and filled with air bubbles, Spiders that lasso their prey like a cowboy, spiders that infiltrate ants nests and have learnt ant language to steal the ants food. Spiders that hide within flowers and wait for insects to collect nectar. They use their silk to fly if they are small enough. And there are many more of these examples. Love 'em or hate 'em, one has to be in awe of these facts.
This video was amazing to watch. The detail that was put into this was nothing short of top notch imo. Great job!
Thank you so much for your kind words! Great, that you appreciate my work :-)
The moddeling and the great narration,made this so easy to understand.
One of the most fascinating things I've witnessed is a spider spinning its web. It is so delicate, careful, patient. It's truly a wonder to watch. I've let them stay in the corners of my house or set them free because they are excellent pest control.
I'm with you on that. I decided long ago that while spiders are creepy, they kill mosquitos which I hate with a passion that burns hotter than the sun. The enemy of my enemy is my friend, and we shall stand united in our divine mission to rid the world of the pest known as "the Mosquito"! 😂
Very very few creatures in nature exist that could make a disposable trap from its body. Or even a disposable home from its body.
Chez moi, il n'y a ni araignées, ni insectes. Je ne suis pas une terre d'immigration.
@@felix25ize 🕷😄
something a spider would say
Of course jumping spiders have excellent vision; they've all heard the wise phrase, "look before you leap."
Thank you. Simply a magnificent animation and description. The wonder of spiders emerge as the story progresses.
And we think we would be missed!
Wow, I loved the detail, thank you for this post!
I hate spiders but this has provided me with an excellent overview of my enemy, and all the weak spots and tactical advantages as well as being explained in a straightforward and understandable manner
(I live in Australia and just barely under 5 feet tall with extreme arachnophobia, so daily life is basically doom eternal but with spiders instead of demons for me)
We got the Intel now let's get out of here
@@BallinBeyondBelife agreed
@@THEOGJOR64
Your Aussie spiders are very weird. Here in the States, our most infamous venomous spider is the Black Widow, but only the female can be fatal, the male is harmless. Your Sydney Funnel Web is the exact opposite, the female’s venom isn’t potent while the male’s is potentially deadly. Even the freaking spiders are backwards in Australia…
@@THEOGJOR64 🕷
Heh, the spiders you have down there could knock you out with a punch then eh
for a person like me who is scared of spiders, this was still a dope video. :)
Dope = stupid person.
- Miriam Webster dictionary.
🕷
It was an EXCELLENT video!
@@midloran AA
Such an amazing view; Great video.
Man , that was amazing brother!! 🕷
What makes spiders creepy to most people is the fact they don't have faces. Even on insects, there are two clear eyes set above a mouth, forming the semblance of a face. Spiders generally don't have that; they just have eight unmoving eyes set all around their head. Confronted with that, our facial recognition instincts fail spectacularly, and generally classify it as "kill it with fire".
This is also why jumping spiders, with their flat face and a pair of large inquisitive eyes set in its centre, look absolutely adorable.
@HeavenThird Did you stop reading halfway through? That's exactly what I said in the last line.
Imagine Charlotte's Web but jnstead Charlotte has an actual spider face lol
i think its just because they move unpredictably. people can even find plants cute, and they do not have eyes. flies and wasps have two large eyes, and people don't find them cute. spiders are just small, fast, and are capable of causing pain. also we are hardwired to fear them through evolution, like we fear snakes and heights.
@@monica012077 Alas, jumping spiders don't actually build webs :p
I miss my pet jumping spiders. They escaped and starved to death. 😭
This made them more relatable than ever. They deserve more respect than they get.
Wow, the info and specially the 3d animation is STUNNING!
Thanks a lot
Fantastic video. Instant subscription.
As someone with Arachnophobia this was a bit hard to watch even as a 3D model, but I am glad I did because I knew absolutely nothing about how these creepy little creatures function until now. All I knew is the dissolving it's prey's insides part.
yes, I also was kind of a little bit arachnophobic before creating the animation, but now I look at them with a totally new and much more interested view. So I am glad, you watched it and maybe it helped a little bit to switch your phobia into fascination :-)
@@OliverEnde I've always taken to heart the simple saying "know thy enemy" but in this case it's more complicated as I've never quite considered spiders my enemy but the phobia it's self.
It's very hard to understand a phobia as they are by nature irrational fear of something.
I doubt I could ever eliminate a phobia, but I don't want to be crippled by my fear or cause it to let me hate such a marvelous little organism. I think the same thing that makes them scary makes them fascinating.
They are such alien like creatures with highly efficient ways of hunting and or trapping.
Spider silk alone is a marvel scientists cannot match.
Sorry to write a book here. I only hope that anyone like me who has at one time slammed a book shut in response to seeing a picture of a spider or who has wished there were no spiders in their youth, will read this and face their fears a little at a time till it becomes more manageable.
@@OliverEnde did you do the model as well? It's all fantastic!
I went through two years of video game design school and loved 3D modeling but never got this good at the models or animation. Keep up the great work!
@@ALCvideoprofile yes, I did all the modeling on my own.. thanks a lot, I will do :-)
@@OliverEnde - In my brain, I'm not scared of spiders but my heart is a bit scared, and my eyes even more so.
That animation was incredible. Would love to see more stuff like this. Amazing that I just casually watched this. What a time we live in
Thanks a lot! Yes, the possibilities nowadays with getting information from the www, 3d Software and highend computers that help creating these animations is incredible. Did you watch my animation about snakes and birds as well? Greetings from Hamburg
Learned more about the anatomy of a spider now than I ever cared to know. Thanks.
It's so complete and comprehensive at same time!!! Brillianttttt👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼💯💯💯
First video of yours that I've seen.
I love the way the content is rendered and narrated.
Excellent work, friend!
Hey, thanks a lot! Yes, I also like the narrator very much :) it is one of my first Unreal engine rendered Projects, next one will be about king cobra and how snakes can eat such big animals
The first video about spiders that didn't immediatly scar me with scary spider images. And then you also made it interesting, well done!
Fascinating. Thanks! Spiders are so cool.
I had no idea that they had such a fascinating type of heart, honestly never even really contemplated the organs of a spider, but it's quite interesting that their legs are basically using the haemolymph to extend joints, like a pump.
About 10 to 15 years ago, I was curious about the anatomy of a spider myself, so I attempted to find information on them. It was extremely difficult to find, and what I did find wasn't nearly as clear as this! Such a good video on the topic! Thank you!
Thanks to modern technology
That was super cool, thanks! 👍🏼
This was far more impactful on my views of spiders than I was prepared for.
I really love spiders and this is truly amazing to see such animation. I wish people would get to learn/informed more before killing things they are afraid of! Understanding why we fear and to be more logical would be so beneficial. Thank you for your work!
Alright now i can kill spiders knowing something about them at least
I love your comment Isabelle - very sensible. In reality, spiders are one of mankind's best friends, so it is truly sad that the (irrational) fear has developed at all.
@@JacoWium Thank you! I never understood why as a kid, everyone were killing spiders so I researched and I found no explanation other than people found them ugly. Granted, I live in Europe so there is no deadly species here so, it sure helps get less scared. And knowing more about them it just made me love them more!
I’m not afraid of them, I just prefer to kill them. One was in my garage the other night looking all sinister. I got a can of adhesive spray and sprayed that ungodly creature then set fire to the glue it was trapped in 😎👌
@@JacoWium I wouldn't go as far as to say that arachnophobia is irrational. People have been killed by them. A fear of ducks would be much more irrational.
One of the most feared, yet fascinating creatures on Earth. Awesome animations!
Thanks a lot!
Amazing video! Thank you!
This is very well done. thank you for making this video! It deserves millions of views
Thank you so much :)
I’m the biggest arachnophobe out there, and I’ve just recently tried to cope with this fear by simply just learning more about arachnids, the way they eat, the way they live, and now their anatomy. I still do have a very strong fear of them, but I cannot lie when I say I am deeply interested in them
I think that's a fantastic approach as we are most often afraid of the unknown.
@@wethepplwhorblackerthanblu6442 Disagree. First of all it's an insect. Arachnophobia works on the fact that you don't know which spider is venomous, which are the minority in Europe, but you still avoid all of them right?
Amazing work, bro!🕷️🥰
Watching this amazing, superbly animated, highly educational video has shifted my views on spiders. So, from now on I´ll make sure to go out of my way to step on as many of them as possible.
Here I am, 2 and half AM watching spider anatomy
I loved the animation and the information was absolutely fantastic. Stellar work, please do more.
Best animation yet
Fascinating! Preparing for my lessons has never been so fun. Thank you for putting this video together
You are so welcome, great that my work helped you preparing your lessons.
I'm often called weird for finding spiders to be cute lol. I mean, I'm not about to go poke one and risk getting bitten, but I like just watching them chill out and go about their business.
Jumping spiders definitely are. I get the same for alligators.
@@TheCyber416 I've petted a baby alligator before at a reserve
@@TheCyber416 Jumping spiders are friend shaped.
Ignorant people are often scared of things they don't understand. I always tell people to not kill spiders. They're so beneficial to us. They catch the annoying bugs that are actually pests... like flies, mosquitos,etc.
@@HP-in8pl Even flies have their purpose. They are a part of the cycle of decay, which in turn creates the materials that help flush through more life.
Mozzy's though... Ehhhh not so sure about them 😂
This is amazing! Over the years, I've read about insect and arachnid internals, trying to wrap my head around it. Unfortunately, I have trouble creating a cohesive idea in my head when anatomy is described in words or even diagrams. Your video explained things I've wanted to understand for as long as I can remember. Thank you.
Great video, straight to the point, amazing graphics, well done indeed
Thanks
Fascinating and super graphics
I was making a Spider Anatomy Project and this video helped me very much. Thank you!!
you are welcome, glad, it helped you
What an amazing informative video!! People learn so much better with visual aids and your modelling and animation was so wonderful here! I learned so much about spiders I didn't know :00 so awesome!
thank you so much for the kind words :-)
Awesome video and incredible work by the 3D modelist and animator. Spiders are simply the coolest!
Thanks a lot for your great comment! 👍
That was really awesome. Now I'm fascinated, but still terrified. 😮
That was absolutely fascinating! Thank you. I always wanted to understand the internals of a spider.
Thank you for making this video! I really hope you go on to make many more exactly like this! There are so many animals that most people have no clue how interesting and cool they are such as Komodo Dragons and their saliva and Platypus!!
Incredible animation. Very well done!
Wow! amazing video, such complex creatures
Excellent presentation in such a short video, really high information density and wow, very well animated! It makes me curious to know more about spiders now!
Thank you so much! Great that you like my work! 😊
i love videos like this, teaching us more about spiders with out making them out to be monsters. i used to have arachniophobia bad growing up but with the help of videos like this i soon overcame my fears. hell im now able to pick up jumping spiders to let them outside.
Great! While doing the research I became more and more fascinated by these great creatures.. nowadays I look at spiders and think: Wow..
I love spiders so much. This video is so impressively animated.
Excellent animation and information. Definitively we are so lucky that anyone can access this amazing animations and educate themselves with the assistance of great animators like yourself. Thank you from Australia.
Hey, thanks a lot! Great that you like my work and also thank you for taking the time to write such kind words:) greetings from Hamburg, Germany to Australia ☺️🤙🏼
@@OliverEnde ☺☺
Thank you for your work in making this interesting video. I have a natural emotional revulsion to spiders, but I also have a strong logical gratitude for the part they play in the world.
genuinely impressed with the quality of this video. everything from the modeling, to the short but very detailed narration of the anatomy was simply immaculate. you know its quality content when the first 10 seconds alone earn you a sub. great work sir o7
Everytime, when I learn something about anatomy or evolution of the species I am always impressed and invested in learning more
that was a really good animation :)
Most easy to understand anatomy video of any animal I have ever watched. Thanks for keeping it simple. I'm sharing this with my students.
Thank you so much. I always try to explain things in a way, that everybody can understand. Have a nice weekend
@@OliverEnde ❤️
Very useful. Thank u. Also amazing animation!!
Great, thank you for your kind words!
@@OliverEnde 🕷 🕸
Amazing video, thank you so much :)
i am shivering watching and hearing this why cant i stop
The revelation of the heart’s size and position was very interesting. Great presentation overall!
Thank you so much
I am currently fascinated with jumping spiders, they are simply amazing the way they track prey and plan routes. Can't believe you didn't mention they can climb up things with their little hooked feet (tarsi).
This was amazing!! I learned so much! Thank you
You are welcome 😀
Thats was a really good presentation. And i enjoyed learning about this as it adds a bit less fear for me and a bit more wonder om how these creatures live.
Brilliant delivery of facts!!! 🕷🖤
Thank you so much, I am glad, that you enjoyed it :-)
Great video! Wish we would've had such a video back in my school days. 😁 Amazing creatures 🕷🕸
Haha, yes, during school, we had only some super old funny movies and a lot of books but no animations.. great what is possible today with Web as a research tool and all the technologies 🤙
This was awesome. I'm subbing.
Thank you
hauntingly beautiful
This is so cool. It’s amazing how sometimes I forget even insects have hearts, lungs blood and brains. I feel though it’s natures cruel joke to give one 8 eyes and make them practically blind 😂
Arachinid lungs fascinate me. They are a cross between the insect breathing tubes and a more prehistoric book gill found in semi aquatic invertibrates like silverfish, pill bugs and land crabs. It literally allows arachinid species to survive for prolonged periods under water as much as 7 hours.