It's eerie being able to witness the whole process of how a prey is swallowed whole and digested alive... Even including the moments when fragments of it start circulating in its predator's body.
This is pretty cool. Also, I'm here because I was watching the Octonauts (cartoon about Marine biologist ) and I expected that watching this jellyfish eat was going to be neat
most comb jellies don't seem to put much effort into actually surviving case in point, the smaller one in this video apparently didn't even realize it was dying
MiltonPlayzGames jelly fish are one of the oldest living thing on earth meaning they did not evolve and stayed the same state, in that case they don't have brains so they don't think so they can't tell what's happening, instead they have other strategies to survive
At what level is canibalism intense? Specie? Genus? Family? I’m curious for articles that can explain my question. O know it varies for other groups, but Ctenophore is a fresh start.
Cannibalism specifically refers to eating the same species. Ctenophores belong to an extremely ancient lineage of animals, and the Beroe and Ocyropsis genera belong to separate lineages of ctenophores that likely diverged from each other at least a few hundred millions of years ago. So this ctenophore is no less cannibalistic than you eating fried chicken. That being said, even if a human eating a chimp isn't technically cannibalism since we are different species, it still poses some of the same risks associated with cannibalism, considering we are "relatively" closely related, and diseases can spread more easily between us, than say between us and a cow.
It was so sudden and violent.
Mr.Sviggels j
The struggling makes me hella uncomfortable
I'm sure the digestion was more uncomfortable
It's eerie being able to witness the whole process of how a prey is swallowed whole and digested alive... Even including the moments when fragments of it start circulating in its predator's body.
Vore, basically
@@Dieg0_Was_H3re Minus I'm not s*xually excited by it...
ASSIMILATE WITH ME, FELLOW JELLY
lmao
A N I M E
N
I
M
E
Prey: Hey! hey! Wtf? I have to get out of here. I don't wanna be on this flight!
Attendant: Sorry sir! Digestion is already in progress.
I get the feeling a lot of people weren't here for education and that is... concerning
Agar.io 2 looks lit
Imagine a bigger comb jelly and eats the comb jelly with a comb jelly in it.
Holy shit, that's crazy vore right there.
@Patrick Bentley Comb jelly-ception bro.
There's always a bigger comb jelly. - Qui-Gon Jinn
Me as a ctenephora: *eats BFF ctenephora*
Mom: Where's your friend? Isn't she having a play date here?
Me: Lol
this is some intense vore going on
i thought the same thing lmfao, it gave me weird vorish vibes
This is pretty cool. Also, I'm here because I was watching the Octonauts (cartoon about Marine biologist ) and I expected that watching this jellyfish eat was going to be neat
most comb jellies don't seem to put much effort into actually surviving
case in point, the smaller one in this video apparently didn't even realize it was dying
***** by not having a brain, apparently
MiltonPlayzGames jelly fish are one of the oldest living thing on earth meaning they did not evolve and stayed the same state, in that case they don't have brains so they don't think so they can't tell what's happening, instead they have other strategies to survive
@@icecreamsamwich Yet I can name plenty people who's IQ seems to be even lower than that of a jelly fish
Andreas Hoppe You promised not to tell anyone
@Gap yes.
That was absolutely insane.. I want more 🤲🏽
It's like reverse-pregnancy
You mean unbirth?
@@thunderfox53 We don't talk about that.
Very good, Alvaro! Great images, as usual! Saudades do CEBIMar. Abs, Fabio
Olá Fábio! Estamos esperando você aqui no CEBIMar. Um grande abraço.
a no-brainer getting eaten by a no-brainer…
Anybody else main the Comb Jelly in the game Outside? Nice to see them still viable in a meta revolving around intelligence builds
It's basically 'conscious' water inside a lot of water eating more 'conscious' water.
tbf, that describes pretty much all lifeforms
Seeing the small jellyfish moving inside is like watching a human fetus kicking its mother belly.
This looks so alien
just so you know those type of comb jellyfish glow in the dark when disturbed.
At what level is canibalism intense? Specie? Genus? Family? I’m curious for articles that can explain my question. O know it varies for other groups, but Ctenophore is a fresh start.
Cannibalism specifically refers to eating the same species. Ctenophores belong to an extremely ancient lineage of animals, and the Beroe and Ocyropsis genera belong to separate lineages of ctenophores that likely diverged from each other at least a few hundred millions of years ago. So this ctenophore is no less cannibalistic than you eating fried chicken.
That being said, even if a human eating a chimp isn't technically cannibalism since we are different species, it still poses some of the same risks associated with cannibalism, considering we are "relatively" closely related, and diseases can spread more easily between us, than say between us and a cow.
They’re like giant microscopic organisms
that escalated quickly
Looks like bacteria under a microscope
These dudes are like a big microscopic creature..
In 0:35 both of them launched themselves LOL I CAN’T STOP LAUGHING 🤣🤣🤣
the whole nature is like this basically
Aren't these the neonlight signs of the sea?
What’s the size of these things?
Typically around 2cm
My cousin Cletus swallowed one of these once, nothing happened to him but he died later from the poisen
Image if this happened to a human?
What a way to go...
How big are these?
Both were quite small, The large one (Beroe ovata) was about 1.5 cm long.
"Easy prey!"
*SNAP*
*FWOOMF*
"Now that I've blown you inside out, you *are* easy prey!"
are these the same type of comb jellies?
Two different species, Christina.
Wow! That guy slurps! Heh heh heh
holy shit what was the 2nd thing?
kashewz The big one?
CW: Vore.
Yeah
I know someone is going to be into this
Do jelly fish.. poop?
they have waited one year for this question come on
1. These are comb jellies, not jellyfish. Different phylum. 2. Yes.
0:38
*DEJA VU!*
Technically jellyfish can't think (no brain), but they don't know it, so they survive anyways.
Andreas Hoppe What an awesome comment
How! IT'S BREAKING THE RULES! HOW DID IT DO THAT! WHERE IT IT'S BRAIN! HOW DID IT FIGURE OUT WHERE IT WAS! HE'S HACKING! AIMBOT! BAN HIM!
*C A N N I B A L I S M*
It do be like that.
Science @_@