The Insane Evolution of: Flight

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Watch the first episode of Becoming Human on Nebula: nebula.tv/vide...
    Watch this episode ad-free on Nebula: nebula.tv/vide...
    Patreon: / realscience
    Instagram: / stephaniesammann
    Credits:
    Narrator: Stephanie Sammann
    Writer: Lorraine Boissoneault
    Editor: Dylan Hennessy (www.behance.ne...)
    Editor: David O'Sullivan
    Illustrator/Animator: Kirtan Patel (kpatart.com/il...)
    Illustrator: Elfy Chiang (www.elfylandst...)
    Animator: Mike Ridolfi (www.moboxgraph...)
    Sound: Graham Haerther (haerther.net)
    Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster ( / forgottentowel )
    Producer: Brian McManus ( / realengineering )
    Imagery courtesy of Getty Images
    References:
    [1]
    www.ncbi.nlm.n...
    [2]
    www.nps.gov/ca...
    [3]
    news.stanford....
    [4]
    www.sciencedir...
    [5]
    www.the-scient...
    [6] www.nature.com...
    [7] pterosaur.net/s...
    [8]
    www.sciencedir...
    [9]
    www.discoverma...
    [10]
    onlinelibrary....
    [11]
    www.science.or...
    [12]
    www.pnas.org/d...
    [13] asknature.org/...
    [14]
    onlinelibrary....
    [15]
    www.britannica...
    [16]
    onlinelibrary....
    [17]
    www.britannica...
    [18]
    www.livescienc...

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @cleanerben9636
    @cleanerben9636 Год назад +629

    I'm glad this includes insect flight because that is barely ever talked about and pretty much unknown

    • @youtubestudiosucks978
      @youtubestudiosucks978 Год назад +10

      Flies and misquitos are true flies as they only have 1 pair of wings unlike other flying insects

    • @bikesgoodgasbad
      @bikesgoodgasbad Год назад +30

      @@youtubestudiosucks978 their rear two are just extremely reduced in size making it appear like they only have two, they’re adapted to act as counter weight gyroscope for balance iirc

    • @bikesgoodgasbad
      @bikesgoodgasbad Год назад

      @@youtubestudiosucks978 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halteres?wprov=sfti1

    • @justincraig398
      @justincraig398 Год назад +14

      I knew that insects could fly since I was a little kid. Not unknown at all.

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Год назад +15

      @@justincraig398 you know what I meant

  • @MaikelRonnau
    @MaikelRonnau Год назад +962

    Could you add measurements in the metric system as well?

    • @Black.Templar_002
      @Black.Templar_002 Год назад +75

      yeah i always fing myself calculating the conversions in my head half the video

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Год назад +189

      Even better: instead of?

    • @char1211
      @char1211 Год назад +109

      @@peterfireflylund Why not both? Only using the metric system is more in line with the scientific praxis but it would make the video less accessible

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Год назад +5

      @@char1211 Qu’ils mangent de la brioche! ;)

    • @char1211
      @char1211 Год назад +5

      @@peterfireflylund Idk man, I don't think I'm strong enough to deal with ignorant peasants. At least they're tolerable if you educate them :/

  • @CountCocofang
    @CountCocofang Год назад +79

    Being able to condense such a complex and far reaching topic into a roughly 15 minute presentation is a phenomenal skill. Not a second wasted, every small tangent fits into the overarching theme and it all flows so naturally.
    Your incredible dedication and passion is awe inspiring. And you cultivated an increasingly amazing community with a wealth of knowledge where even minor mistakes get explained, so even reading through the comments on your videos is worthwhile.

  • @polymathpark
    @polymathpark Год назад +441

    This channel always puts out 10/10 content. Great production.

    • @Em4gdn1m
      @Em4gdn1m Год назад +11

      Always. Great video production, excellent narration, and fascinating topics.

    • @atmafj
      @atmafj Год назад

      I agree

    • @stefan_popp
      @stefan_popp Год назад +3

      I'd give a 9/10 for the inaccuracies, pointed out by others. I have spotted some in about 1/3 of their videos.

    • @polymathpark
      @polymathpark Год назад

      @@stefan_popp dang, oh well. I'll have to watch more scrutinously

    • @marekdg
      @marekdg Год назад

      @@stefan_popp ahhh thanks, already got a bit suspicious after seeing the credits list and not seeing a researcher or at least a fat checker role in the team 🤔🤷🏻‍♂️🤓

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Год назад +63

    I've struggled for so long to understand how breathing works with birds. Thanks to your animation now I finally understand.

    • @robinsonray6766
      @robinsonray6766 Год назад +1

      Pterosaurs, and dinosaurs in the theropoda and sauropoda clade all had the same method of breathing, so they all had phenomenal stamina.
      Other dinosaurs [ornithischians] and crocodilomorphs [including todays crocodiles] all have the same breathing method but with no airsac.
      Yes: crocodiles have extremely efficient respiration. For this reason it is believed that the ancestors of crocodiles {from the triassic} were warm blooded terrestrial animals. Another characteristic that points to this is that crocodiles are the only ''cold blooded'' animals with a 4 chambered heart. Aside from crocodiles, only birds and mammals have 4 chambered hearts.

  • @khango6138
    @khango6138 Год назад +317

    Excellent video!
    Although I do have a correction for the section that compares the leg segments of insects, crustaceans, and "arthropods" represented by the horseshoe crab. This comparison is confusing, because both insects and crustaceans *belong* to the phylum Arthropoda. For the horseshoe crab, they are members of the subphylum Chelicerata (which includes arachnids, and also belongs to Arthropoda). I believe the video's creator meant to compare the legs of insects, crustaceans to those of more basal arthropods? Or to those of Chelicerates.
    Second correction: birds are still dinosaurs, nothing has stopped them from being dinosaurs. The asteroid did not kill all dinosaurs, but neither did it spare all birds as seen with the extinction of Enantiornithes (the 'Opposite Birds'). :)

    • @morkovija
      @morkovija Год назад +14

      thanks for sharing didn't know about the opposite birds :0

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood Год назад +16

      Also, birds don't beat their wings up and down, they beat them like swimming through the air. You can see a lot of videos slowed down so we can see how they move. It's like a butterfly stroke. like she described the old flying dinosaurs

    • @Ratty524
      @Ratty524 Год назад +6

      @@morkovija the K-6 extinction event was a blow to almost all life on earth. Even among mammals there was an entire lineage that was wiped out. Crocodile species used to be diverse but got reduced in the aftermath, and so on.

    • @peternyikos8020
      @peternyikos8020 Год назад +2

      ​@@Ratty524 Could you tell me to what lineage of mammals you are referring?. There were lots of individual species and probably families that got wiped out within Mammalia, but I'm not sure which ones they were. There were lots of lineages of mammals that thrived during the Paleocene, including the multituberculates, pantodonts, tillodonts, and taeniodonts but these got wiped out somewhere near the end of the Eocene.

    • @peternyikos8020
      @peternyikos8020 Год назад +1

      I might add that the iconic Hesperornis and Ichthyornis and their closest relatives (which were closer to living birds than the Opposite Birds) also got wiped out.

  • @christophhanke6627
    @christophhanke6627 Год назад +18

    8:00 when I was in my second-to-last-year in school I did a scientific Research paper in my biology class about this topic. There I also talked about the arboreal and cursorial theory and theropods. So this Video is such a blast to watch and to check in on this topic 6 years later

  • @xevious1538
    @xevious1538 Год назад +71

    Insects, crustaceans, myriapods, and horseshoe crabs are all arthropods. Horseshoe crabs, along with arachnids and sea spiders are in a clade called Chelicerata. And at 1:53, the family tree shows bats being closely related to rodents, and more related to primates than they are to dogs and horses. Primates and rodents are Euarchontoglires more related to eachother than to bats. Bats are in the clade Laurasiatheria, and are a sister group to Ferungulata (a group that includes hooved animals, whales, carnivorans like cats and dogs, and pangolins)

    • @unstoppableExodia
      @unstoppableExodia Год назад +2

      I appreciate the clarification. I had BVB read somewhere that bats are more closely related to carnivorans and pangolins than they are to rodents and primates

    • @Gustangela
      @Gustangela Год назад +3

      Thank you. I multiple instances they were referring to arachnids (chelicerata) as arthropods, and I was like "hmmm I I think they did a mistake here because they are all arthropods lol". Like at 6:15

    • @thatoneduck3875
      @thatoneduck3875 4 месяца назад

      It also didn't include beetles as animals that can fly 1:54

  • @iceboorg9737
    @iceboorg9737 Год назад +23

    Oh small criticism
    Id love to hear things like wingspan in meters as well
    I cant imagine anything when hearing feet

    • @craigb8228
      @craigb8228 Год назад +3

      But it seems petty like a correction of grammar.

    • @nyko921
      @nyko921 Год назад +8

      @@craigb8228 No, not really. It would be more like asking someone to stop using foreign words because they don't understand them.

    • @theflyingdutchguy9870
      @theflyingdutchguy9870 Год назад +1

      1 meter is like 10 centimeters longer than 3 foot. this makes it a little easier over time

    • @teej008
      @teej008 Год назад

      Do you give these small criticisms to male RUclipsrs? Seems like a dick move to me.

    • @iceboorg9737
      @iceboorg9737 Год назад +1

      @@teej008 just women obv
      Male youtubers can not describe something in a way i wouldnt understand (:
      Brooo what are u thinking

  • @heidirabenau511
    @heidirabenau511 Год назад +11

    Congratulations on 1M Subscribers, I have watched the first episode of the Nebula Original and can't wait for the next one!

  • @brandophiri3618
    @brandophiri3618 Год назад +23

    I learn a lot from this channel. Keep up the good work

    • @yahdonisrael3883
      @yahdonisrael3883 Год назад +1

      Well u learning wrong she said land animal to sky animal, evolution evolved from sea ta sky den land🤦🏾‍♂️Dis world is dun 🔥

    • @alexfox2038
      @alexfox2038 Год назад +6

      @@yahdonisrael3883 Dude, where are your citations at? Any basis for your claims?

    • @nighteule
      @nighteule Год назад +1

      @@alexfox2038 Either a bot or a troll, don't give it attention

  • @Brambrew
    @Brambrew Год назад +13

    I heard a theory that insect flight originally evolved from swimming paddles
    Insects evolved wings to help them escape water by paddling or gliding across the surface
    Some insects, like stoneflies, still somewhat show this behavior
    But evolving wings further for flight has much more utility than skimming across the surface of ponds or lakes

    • @BlessingsMate
      @BlessingsMate Год назад

      EVOLUTION designed this?? A basic summary of what that means...
      In the beginning was nothing but then it somehow became as big as the universe. Then there was dirt and water but then somehow it became alive. Then there was an organism but somehow it had the structure and information to reproduce. Then one decided to be a male and somehow another organism became female and somehow at the same time, with fully functioning structure and information, they reproduced. Then they grew branches, then arms, then fins, then legs, then wings, and breathed water and then air and now we see them all perfectly mutated to flourish in their ecosystems!
      Seriously, Have you considered how a butterfly came to be? What came first, the egg? caterpillar? chrysalis? butterfly? What mutation could cause a crawling creature to suddenly hang upside down, dissolve its organs and appendages and 2 weeks later emerge as a flying creature? And then find another butterfly to reproduce? Truly a fairy tale!
      How did the grub get these incredible organs? Mutations don't give new information, they corrupt existing information.
      It is glaringly obvious we are part of creation. The world around us is so incredibly complex that design is the obvious, logical and scientific conclusion. Jesus was a real historical figure who claimed to be God. He also confirmed that he created the world and was coming back a second time to reward and judge the world. He proved this by rising from the dead and fulfilling many prophecies. He also foretold what would happen before he would come again. These things have been coming to pass more and more. He loves his creation and has a purpose for everyone of us! But the evil we see in the world is not from God. We have a cruel enemy and you can see the devil's handiwork more and more. Please look into this urgently and with honesty. God is not a policeman in the sky, nor is he a genie that grants wishes, he is a loving Father who is caring and merciful and rewards those who seek him. Do not decide who God is by looking at religious people, you must decide who God is by reading what he says about himself in the bible. Then you would have judged fairly. Start with John or Luke. These are eyewitness accounts of what Jesus said and did. There are many resources to answer your many questions. Especially on creation and evolution see creationdotcom.
      Seek the LORD while he may be found, call upon him while he is near (Isaiah 55)
      For since the creation of the world, God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse. (Romans 1:20)
      To realise that your life is precious, you are loved, and you have a purpose, is real freedom and responsibility. There is an epic heavenly battle for your soul! You're never alone, reach out from wherever you are, Jesus is there, trust Him.

  • @Mike-oz4cv
    @Mike-oz4cv Год назад +8

    Small creatures have such a high surface to mass ratio that flight is actually quite easy for them. On a breezy day it can actually be hard for them to stay on the ground.

    • @JesseP.Watson
      @JesseP.Watson Год назад

      Interesting point, so rather than developing flight, in their case it may have been more a question of a means to control flight.
      With that said, to be quite honest, I do think there is something missing in the theory of evolution as it currently stands, much as I try, I find there are just too many cases where an incomplete mutation will give no advantage or actually act as a hindrance against selection and no more so than in development of the wing. Add to that the behavioural changes that must accompany those physical mutations and, aye, there's just too many very serious issues there without any satisfying answer for us to be able to treat evolution as a working theory that describes how species are created in its current form.

  • @anaran4811
    @anaran4811 11 месяцев назад +2

    I just love this channel. As someone who's into science but doesn't have a background in biology, it's a great starting point to satisfy my curiosity.

  • @toast_on_toast1270
    @toast_on_toast1270 9 месяцев назад +3

    I really like your scripts for these videos: they always get a great balance between accessibility and interest, never feeling too dumbed down just to be relatable, nor too technical and difficult to follow for the average listener.
    For instance: "if you look out the window today, you'll see many different creatures, who have taken to the skies to exploit new sources of prey". Its a subtle thing, but a lesser writer would have stopped after the first two clauses, leaving only a blindingly obvious statement only for the purpose of moving the script along, but adding nothing and unintentionally insulting the listener's intelligence (I've seen it many times on RUclips). You, however, use it as a way to introduce a main idea for your video, priming your audience to think about the core questions it will attempt to answer. Well done.

  • @kaitlynboss3497
    @kaitlynboss3497 Год назад +7

    Thank you for finally explaining how air sacks in the bones helps birds fly. It’s because with them they can constantly take in air which makes sense why that would help.

    • @BlessingsMate
      @BlessingsMate Год назад

      EVOLUTION designed this?? A basic summary of what that means...
      In the beginning was nothing but then it somehow became as big as the universe. Then there was dirt and water but then somehow it became alive. Then there was an organism but somehow it had the structure and information to reproduce. Then one decided to be a male and somehow another organism became female and somehow at the same time, with fully functioning structure and information, they reproduced. Then they grew branches, then arms, then fins, then legs, then wings, and breathed water and then air and now we see them all perfectly mutated to flourish in their ecosystems!
      Seriously, Have you considered how a butterfly came to be? What came first, the egg? caterpillar? chrysalis? butterfly? What mutation could cause a crawling creature to suddenly hang upside down, dissolve its organs and appendages and 2 weeks later emerge as a flying creature? And then find another butterfly to reproduce? Truly a fairy tale!
      How did the grub get these incredible organs? Mutations don't give new information, they corrupt existing information.
      It is glaringly obvious we are part of creation. The world around us is so incredibly complex that design is the obvious, logical and scientific conclusion. Jesus was a real historical figure who claimed to be God. He also confirmed that he created the world and was coming back a second time to reward and judge the world. He proved this by rising from the dead and fulfilling many prophecies. He also foretold what would happen before he would come again. These things have been coming to pass more and more. He loves his creation and has a purpose for everyone of us! But the evil we see in the world is not from God. We have a cruel enemy and you can see the devil's handiwork more and more. Please look into this urgently and with honesty. God is not a policeman in the sky, nor is he a genie that grants wishes, he is a loving Father who is caring and merciful and rewards those who seek him. Do not decide who God is by looking at religious people, you must decide who God is by reading what he says about himself in the bible. Then you would have judged fairly. Start with John or Luke. These are eyewitness accounts of what Jesus said and did. There are many resources to answer your many questions. Especially on creation and evolution see creationdotcom.
      Seek the LORD while he may be found, call upon him while he is near (Isaiah 55)
      For since the creation of the world, God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse. (Romans 1:20)
      To realise that your life is precious, you are loved, and you have a purpose, is real freedom and responsibility. There is an epic heavenly battle for your soul! You're never alone, reach out from wherever you are, Jesus is there, trust Him.

  • @cesarvidelac
    @cesarvidelac Год назад +45

    We live in times when information is widespread as never before, yet ignorance reigns as never before. People openly believe in such things like plain earth and creationism. We need this science to be shared more than ever. Thanks so much for sharing. Subscribed.

    • @theflyingdutchguy9870
      @theflyingdutchguy9870 Год назад +6

      awesomely religion is declining. wich is logical sinds we know from history that religion isnt a good way to explain things. much better to ask questions instead of just assuming things. first step towards knowledge is realising what you dont know something.

    • @cesarvidelac
      @cesarvidelac Год назад +6

      @@theflyingdutchguy9870 True! It's a shame spirituality doesn't work that way. A faith without question is just fanaticism.

    • @thegameranch5935
      @thegameranch5935 Год назад

      What is plain earth?

    • @7inrain
      @7inrain Год назад +6

      @@thegameranch5935 A translation issue. He probably meant flat earth.

    • @baraamando8115
      @baraamando8115 9 месяцев назад

      It’s so funny how people can watch this video and believe in evolution. Literally every single thing that was said disproved it lol. Oh yea wings developed randomly and it happened on 4 different occasions.

  • @zy9662
    @zy9662 Год назад +4

    This video is truly amazing, honestly I didn't expect you will cover so much depth and breath since you also covered pterosaurs, whose info is not so easy to find. Would be interesting to research which kind of breathing they had. The insect segments part was also a nice inclusion as was the microraptor mention and the nice touch on the timing of the Archeopterix discovery and Darwin's book. Congratulations

    • @thewisefool4049
      @thewisefool4049 Год назад +2

      "Would be interesting to research which kind of breathing they had"
      They had unidirectional breathing like birds. All archosaurs use the same breathing system outlined in this video, so that includes pterosaurs, dinosaurs (including modern birds) and crocodilians.

  • @danielrose2146
    @danielrose2146 Год назад +19

    I'll bet the feathers on the raptors are used for sharp turns and braking....and perhaps that eventually led to smaller raptors that expanded on those early concepts. 🤔

    • @SillyNep
      @SillyNep Год назад +3

      that and probably temperature regulation the same way mammals have! Like Yutyrannus which lived in colder regions and was covered in like a feathery fuzz.

    • @Andianco
      @Andianco Год назад

      @@SillyNep That´s probably right since pterosaurs had some type of feather covering as well, so they probably evolved in some ancestor for temperature regulation.

  • @kowloonbroadcast
    @kowloonbroadcast 9 месяцев назад +1

    seriously y’all, this is probably the channel with the best accompaniment music in all of RUclips

  • @sneedfeed7204
    @sneedfeed7204 11 месяцев назад +3

    Extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs* Avian dinos are still thriving

  • @Subfightr
    @Subfightr Год назад +5

    Omg, my beautiful pterosaurs. How incredible it would be to see them today.

    • @Subfightr
      @Subfightr Год назад

      That mega finger just kills me

    • @theflyingdutchguy9870
      @theflyingdutchguy9870 Год назад

      @@Subfightr 😂😂 yeah bat wings seem very normal compared😂

    • @theflyingdutchguy9870
      @theflyingdutchguy9870 Год назад +2

      would be pretty scary tho. maybe we would have never made it out of the jungle then. altho giant eagles did hunt our children in the past

  • @differentfins
    @differentfins Год назад +3

    Very well done! Entertaining and educational. BTW my favorite part was the dragonfly casually getting out of the way from the frog. Swing and a miss lol.

  • @Shaggleforder
    @Shaggleforder 10 месяцев назад +2

    I would include also the family of flying fish... I've read that they can glide for distances of few hundreds of meters spending close to 1 minutes outside of the water, and I find that amazing for a creature unable to breathe air!

  • @dondraper3871
    @dondraper3871 Год назад +18

    For f**** sake... Can someone give the Real Science team a pulitzer prize for the insane clear and insightful work they do on such complex questions I did not know I had!

    • @alexisgrey6469
      @alexisgrey6469 Год назад +2

      True. I think i learned more here than my 6 yrs in highschool.

    • @robkirchhof133
      @robkirchhof133 Год назад +2

      absolute full endorsement 💯

  • @Crakinator
    @Crakinator Год назад +11

    I think it’s so cool that a group of dinosaurs survived the mass extinction event and still fly among us. Some of them bare a striking resemblance to dromaeosaurs, which makes sense since the two families are closely related.

  • @asjenmensink2740
    @asjenmensink2740 Год назад +4

    One thing though horseshoecrabs are arthropods but so are insects and crustacheans, chelicerate is the word for the subgroup.

  • @chheinrich8486
    @chheinrich8486 Год назад +2

    now that i think about it, maybe pterosaurs got so large because birds drove them out of the smaller niches

  • @jimmij3894
    @jimmij3894 Год назад +6

    So did spiders start making webs to catch flying insects or were they catching something else like pollen?

  • @thomaswade3072
    @thomaswade3072 Год назад +2

    "where no creature had gone" Bacteria beat your birbs by a few hundred million years.

  • @louisrobitaille5810
    @louisrobitaille5810 Год назад +4

    11:40 Birds are dinosaurs. Dinosaurs didn't go extinct.

  • @thenaiam
    @thenaiam Год назад +2

    I was thinking of what to listen to next. Reached the end of the video, and I'm opening up the Nebula app now to listen to the Becoming Human series.

  • @mrtianflo7728
    @mrtianflo7728 Год назад +6

    I can hear Meg Griffin

    • @joel12398
      @joel12398 3 месяца назад

      Thanks for that

  • @mathmusicandlooks
    @mathmusicandlooks Год назад +1

    Fascinating content, but it also makes me grateful I’m not an archaeologist or paleontologist. It seems that all of our best hypotheses for most creatures’ origins necessarily rely on correlation implying causation and are fully vulnerable to survivorship bias. It might be the best we could do in those particular fields for now, but I’d find that insanely frustrating.

  • @cleanerben9636
    @cleanerben9636 Год назад +9

    also on birds and maybe even Pterosaurs; perhaps sexual selection of the best jumpers played a part? Higher jump=more attraction so staying in the air longer to transmit the display could be beneficial.

  • @ChrundleTGreat
    @ChrundleTGreat Год назад +3

    To be an insect it has to have six legs, a head, a thorax and an abdomen. Duh

  • @MrEnte3000
    @MrEnte3000 Год назад +6

    Why is the Horseshoe Crab labeled as Arthropod when all three of them are Arthropods?

  • @mostlyokay
    @mostlyokay Год назад +2

    Please include metric units as well, even if just in a graphic. I can't picture 11 feet

  • @Dionyzos
    @Dionyzos Год назад +6

    Would be cool if you would at least show metric dimensions in the video if you don't mention it.

    • @leonstevens1382
      @leonstevens1382 Год назад +1

      flight is flight whether self-propelled or not. Again I refer you to Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary p. 1023, which defines “wing” among many other things as “any of various organic structures esp. of a flying fish”. Don’t try to reinvent the English language. There is no such thing as a “true wing.”

  • @keith8554
    @keith8554 Год назад +2

    Love when you and real engineering drop on the same day

  • @Anuchan
    @Anuchan Год назад +14

    Excellent content. I'm looking forward to your next series on humans.

  • @averageoutdoorsman9342
    @averageoutdoorsman9342 Год назад +2

    Why isn't predation a reason for consideration in terms of evolutionary pressures to fly? We see many species of animals from snakes, to squirrels, to flying fish that all benefit from the evasiveness of "flight".

    • @chickenfist1554
      @chickenfist1554 Год назад +2

      It's probably based on the specific areas they inhabit. In trees there are going to be less predators than on the ground. In my opinion anyway

    • @averageoutdoorsman9342
      @averageoutdoorsman9342 Год назад

      @@chickenfist1554 the only flaw with your opinion, I didn't mention trees. In fact, fish never live in trees. So the predatory pressure of the ocean have forced them to take to the air as an evasion technique. So I say again, Why aren't predatory pressures a consideration for the evolutionary development of flight? We can actively observe it happening right now.

    • @averageoutdoorsman9342
      @averageoutdoorsman9342 Год назад

      @@chickenfist1554 furthermore even, the majority of predators of insects (birds), reside in trees. So the idea of predation being less in trees, is subjective to the species being discussed.

    • @chickenfist1554
      @chickenfist1554 Год назад +2

      @@averageoutdoorsman9342 It was a general comment, not a scientific thesis. I figured you'd grasp that although it's understood that fish don't live in trees, it's generally understood that a lot of other gliding and flying animals do.
      Fish, birds, gliding mammals, marsupials, bats, insects, snakes, frogs and lizards all have different selective pressures. So while Flying fish, Hatchet fish and Butterfly fish will all leap out of the water, sometimes it's done to avoid predation, sometimes it's done due to parasites or polluted water and sometimes it's done to capture prey. Flying snakes usually leap/glide to avoid predation, but with a flying Squirrel for example they leap from tree to tree as an affective way of getting around while avoiding predators on the ground, more so than they do to avoid predation in the trees.
      Flight can also be an effective way of spreading genetics further afield, especially by insects and smaller animals.
      Essentially predation will be one of the reasons but not the only reason.

    • @averageoutdoorsman9342
      @averageoutdoorsman9342 Год назад +1

      @@chickenfist1554 I agree. I was being a smartass about fish in trees. Yes I completely it would be ONE evolutionary pressure. I just wonder why it's never seemed to be considered to be as heavy a pressure as the others. It almost seems to me that any advanced form of locomotion in the animal kingdom, is more likely a result of such pressure. Falcons chasing down ducks at 200+mph through the air, cheetahs chasing prey at 65+mph across the land, marlins chasing down fish at 55+mph through the water. And these creatures fail more often that they succeed. So the evasion of such extreme predation has evidently been a huge pressure in terms of how prey move. ✌🏼

  • @shannonmcdoobins3105
    @shannonmcdoobins3105 Год назад +6

    I feel like bats are the mammal versions of pterosaurs

  • @sadwest1
    @sadwest1 Год назад +3

    wild that they were able to find the homologous structures between insects, arthropods, and crustaceans through observing phenotype +investigating genotype

  • @mux2000
    @mux2000 Год назад +10

    Please add verbal or on-screen metric equivalents when mentioning measurements in usian units. The internet is international and some of us don't know what a foot is, or it takes us a while to calculate what it means and makes it hard to follow the narrative. Thanks!

    • @dancingnature
      @dancingnature Год назад +1

      A foot is about 1/3 of a meter . An inch is about the length of your longest fingertip . A yard is about the same as a meter but a meter is longer by about the length of your index finger. To convert Fahrenheit to Celsius. Subtract 27 from the F temperatures and cut the remainder in half. This only works between or 32F - 104F and isnt completely accurate but will tell you if you need to take a sweater ( jumper) with you😊

    • @mux2000
      @mux2000 Год назад +5

      @@dancingnature see, this is exactly the sort of thing that doesn't help. If I have to stop the video and take out a calculator I've already lost the plot

  • @deivclayton
    @deivclayton Год назад +2

    Great video. I wish it would have done a better job with answering the question of how mutations adapting for flight can go from the awkward and not helpful stage of evolution to the advantageous stage. It's always been my biggest question about evolution. But it is amazing the various adaptations for flight that do exist.

    • @columbid7309
      @columbid7309 10 дней назад

      In theory, there wouldn't have been an awkward, unhelpful stage. Even developing traits like a lighter body, a more aerodynamic shape, the ability to glide or even a slight increase in air time would have helped depending on the environment the animal lived. Think of things like flying fish, flying squirrels, and some of those frog and snake species that can jump and glide great distances with the help of gravity. Those are all unable to fly but the "awkward inbetween" isn't unhelpful at all

  • @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667
    @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667 Год назад +6

    Awesome channel. I love this kind of content. 🌍💯 Good job

  • @tylerdixon5629
    @tylerdixon5629 Год назад +1

    It's crazy how we see things like a bird, insect, or bat flying a don't think anything of it it. What a lot of us do not realize how much trial and error they had to through to perfect flight. The story of flight is so interesting to me.

    • @BlessingsMate
      @BlessingsMate Год назад

      EVOLUTION designed this?? A basic summary of what that means...
      In the beginning was nothing but then it somehow became as big as the universe. Then there was dirt and water but then somehow it became alive. Then there was an organism but somehow it had the structure and information to reproduce. Then one decided to be a male and somehow another organism became female and somehow at the same time, with fully functioning structure and information, they reproduced. Then they grew branches, then arms, then fins, then legs, then wings, and breathed water and then air and now we see them all perfectly mutated to flourish in their ecosystems!
      Seriously, Have you considered how a butterfly came to be? What came first, the egg? caterpillar? chrysalis? butterfly? What mutation could cause a crawling creature to suddenly hang upside down, dissolve its organs and appendages and 2 weeks later emerge as a flying creature? And then find another butterfly to reproduce? Truly a fairy tale!
      How did the grub get these incredible organs? Mutations don't give new information, they corrupt existing information.
      It is glaringly obvious we are part of creation. The world around us is so incredibly complex that design is the obvious, logical and scientific conclusion. Jesus was a real historical figure who claimed to be God. He also confirmed that he created the world and was coming back a second time to reward and judge the world. He proved this by rising from the dead and fulfilling many prophecies. He also foretold what would happen before he would come again. These things have been coming to pass more and more. He loves his creation and has a purpose for everyone of us! But the evil we see in the world is not from God. We have a cruel enemy and you can see the devil's handiwork more and more. Please look into this urgently and with honesty. God is not a policeman in the sky, nor is he a genie that grants wishes, he is a loving Father who is caring and merciful and rewards those who seek him. Do not decide who God is by looking at religious people, you must decide who God is by reading what he says about himself in the bible. Then you would have judged fairly. Start with John or Luke. These are eyewitness accounts of what Jesus said and did. There are many resources to answer your many questions. Especially on creation and evolution see creationdotcom.
      Seek the LORD while he may be found, call upon him while he is near (Isaiah 55)
      For since the creation of the world, God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse. (Romans 1:20)
      To realise that your life is precious, you are loved, and you have a purpose, is real freedom and responsibility. There is an epic heavenly battle for your soul! You're never alone, reach out from wherever you are, Jesus is there, trust Him.

  • @highasheaven9239
    @highasheaven9239 Год назад +63

    Really looking forward to the human series! Keep up the amazing work!

    • @danielsee1
      @danielsee1 Год назад

      While you wait. McDonalds.

  • @Awakeandalive1
    @Awakeandalive1 Год назад +2

    I'm curious as to why your evolutionary chart showed crustaceans & ticks as forming their own off-shoot while other arachnids were lumped in with insects...

  • @theflyingdutchguy9870
    @theflyingdutchguy9870 Год назад +6

    flight has evolved such a crazy amount of time. its such a succesfull adaptation.

  • @jamiepender6667
    @jamiepender6667 Год назад +1

    I love this channel

  • @beinleif524
    @beinleif524 Год назад +4

    Why not mention flying fish? Seems highly relevant and yet another branch

  • @IzUrBoiKK
    @IzUrBoiKK Год назад +1

    Aaah, a new vid. Thanks guys, I've always loved your videos.

  • @cupriferouscatalyst3708
    @cupriferouscatalyst3708 11 месяцев назад

    I love the clip at 0:30, because I like to imagine that it's actually real footage of the first creature casually skipping onto land 440 million years ago (and then immediately becoming a frog).

  • @Davethreshold
    @Davethreshold Год назад +3

    The macro shots in this video are just GORGEOUS. If only they had fossils for every 50-100,000 years, I bet they would know exactly how everything evolved. I have Nebula and Curiosity. Guess what I'm going to watch next?❤

    • @BlessingsMate
      @BlessingsMate Год назад

      EVOLUTION designed this?? A basic summary of what that means...
      In the beginning was nothing but then it somehow became as big as the universe. Then there was dirt and water but then somehow it became alive. Then there was an organism but somehow it had the structure and information to reproduce. Then one decided to be a male and somehow another organism became female and somehow at the same time, with fully functioning structure and information, they reproduced. Then they grew branches, then arms, then fins, then legs, then wings, and breathed water and then air and now we see them all perfectly mutated to flourish in their ecosystems!
      Seriously, Have you considered how a butterfly came to be? What came first, the egg? caterpillar? chrysalis? butterfly? What mutation could cause a crawling creature to suddenly hang upside down, dissolve its organs and appendages and 2 weeks later emerge as a flying creature? And then find another butterfly to reproduce? Truly a fairy tale!
      How did the grub get these incredible organs? Mutations don't give new information, they corrupt existing information.
      It is glaringly obvious we are part of creation. The world around us is so incredibly complex that design is the obvious, logical and scientific conclusion. Jesus was a real historical figure who claimed to be God. He also confirmed that he created the world and was coming back a second time to reward and judge the world. He proved this by rising from the dead and fulfilling many prophecies. He also foretold what would happen before he would come again. These things have been coming to pass more and more. He loves his creation and has a purpose for everyone of us! But the evil we see in the world is not from God. We have a cruel enemy and you can see the devil's handiwork more and more. Please look into this urgently and with honesty. God is not a policeman in the sky, nor is he a genie that grants wishes, he is a loving Father who is caring and merciful and rewards those who seek him. Do not decide who God is by looking at religious people, you must decide who God is by reading what he says about himself in the bible. Then you would have judged fairly. Start with John or Luke. These are eyewitness accounts of what Jesus said and did. There are many resources to answer your many questions. Especially on creation and evolution see creationdotcom.
      Seek the LORD while he may be found, call upon him while he is near (Isaiah 55)
      For since the creation of the world, God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse. (Romans 1:20)
      To realise that your life is precious, you are loved, and you have a purpose, is real freedom and responsibility. There is an epic heavenly battle for your soul! You're never alone, reach out from wherever you are, Jesus is there, trust Him.

  • @mariyaandriyanova5299
    @mariyaandriyanova5299 Год назад +1

    Small note on 5:08 - the front leg pair by lions and elephants is not homologous to human legs (it would be human arms). But I´m very excited by the chanel!

  • @glennbabic5954
    @glennbabic5954 Год назад +3

    Air is just another medium like dirt, another fluid like water, it's not surprising life would evolve to move through it easily. It just seems miraculous to us because we are earthdwellers

    • @andytheindividual3862
      @andytheindividual3862 Год назад +1

      So aliens are evolved humans that adapted into space ?

    • @markzuckergecko621
      @markzuckergecko621 Год назад +1

      I remember in one of the old Ratchet and Clank games, one of the planets has flying whales. At first I kinda laughed at how ridiculous it was, but after I thought about it for a minute I was like hold on..... I guess that could actually be possible, on a planet that has an atmosphere with the same viscosity as water on earth.

    • @gpaull2
      @gpaull2 Год назад +2

      Even earthdwelling evolutions are miraculous to me

    • @glennbabic5954
      @glennbabic5954 Год назад +1

      @@markzuckergecko621 Yep, water and air aren't just different density fluids, we and whales are buoyant in water because we are less dense. Flying whales would need very dense atmosphere and low gravity.

    • @adamplentl5588
      @adamplentl5588 Год назад

      @@andytheindividual3862 what a retarded question.

  • @jessemcfadden9706
    @jessemcfadden9706 Год назад +1

    Apparently in a paper published only 18 months again, it states that mice use echolocation. So that's very interesting in terms of the bat flight vs echolocation debate.

  • @dice3000
    @dice3000 Год назад +14

    As an average person who's not that interesting in biology I always end up fascinated

    • @greenguitarfish
      @greenguitarfish Год назад

      Examine the counter perspective so your not just hearing from one side. Here are 15 PH.D scientists with a very different opinion. ruclips.net/video/sCK1qFnB_zU/видео.html

  • @stoneyjonez
    @stoneyjonez Год назад

    this is seriously my new favorite youtube channel

  • @varunprakash6207
    @varunprakash6207 Год назад +7

    0:52 Bird flying visuals ♥️ mind blowing Evolution of Flight ✈️ Insects 🦋 wings Charles Darwin - The survival of fitness The transformation from ground to sky 13:06 Bat climbing tree 🌳 15:21 Eagle 🦅 largest wings

  • @IncoGnito-ji5du
    @IncoGnito-ji5du Год назад +2

    You should also evovle, and use the metric.

  • @Raylor
    @Raylor Год назад +3

    Honestly, you are educating so many people. I sometimes wonder, Isnt RUclips enough to live and enjoy life? arent the ads on youtube enough for this channel to just release content instead of locking it behind a paywall.
    the content is amazing. just let everyone who wants to learn through your creation, this video, its only way is to consume it now.
    why lock it, if youtube doesnt pay enough, then, perhaps we need to just Subscribe to help out with the content.
    I wont pay just to see the video, i want to pay so that everyone else can see it. education is important for all of us.

    • @luedog8385
      @luedog8385 Год назад

      It didn't happen no such thing as evolution

  • @maltedmilk6888
    @maltedmilk6888 Год назад +2

    There's something else that is unique to humans, the ability to consciously evolve

    • @jondunmore4268
      @jondunmore4268 Год назад +1

      You're talking about "artificial selection," not "conscious evolution" as there is no such thing.

  • @afhdfh
    @afhdfh Год назад +3

    I'm a little confused. Why do you differentiate between insects, crustaceans and arthropods? Arthropods encompass the two other groups. This doesn't make any sense at all!

  • @differous01
    @differous01 Год назад +1

    Mantis shrimps use modified gills to aid swimming, as do larval dragonflies, mayflies, gnats... "It's exceedingly unlikely for organisms to suddenly evolve a whole NEW body structure." [3:53]

  • @chaser107
    @chaser107 Год назад +5

    At least put on a graphic for metric if you insist on using feet

  • @intezam9735
    @intezam9735 Год назад +1

    I makes sense why birds never yawn: they don't need to. Yet some rooks, crows, and jackdaws were yawning into my face, trying to tell me something. Peanut? Sunflower seeds? Nope! Only after a clever beautiful eyed jackdaw took the extra time to explain it to me, did I understand: by acting as if he was holding something in his claw, perched, and tearing away from it with his beak. Then he changed posture and became very erect and made some woodpecker like hacking motions, followed by vigorously shaking of head, in denial (not peanut?).Okay...I think I started to get what they are asking! The yawn was their way of saying: hole....or, that which has a hole in the middle. Donut? Nope, I would never give them that. What they wanted was my dogs semi soft pedigree frolic dog mellows (donut shaped dog biscuit), with beef and carrot. It was not the first time this same jackdaw explained something I didn't get. He looks me deep into the eyes, and from somewhere he can understand, wether I understood it, or didn't. Which is amazing. Even unsettling. Because it involves a degree of human like empathy that we do not usually asign to wild animals. I started to treat some of the older birds with more respect now, and bowing my head to them, and they reply likewise. Only young birds are animals...I think

  • @doglabdogtraining-gus.8873
    @doglabdogtraining-gus.8873 Год назад

    This channel has some of the best content, thank you.

  • @SudaNIm103
    @SudaNIm103 Год назад +1

    😆 As a child, I somehow learned that the (evolutionary) origin of insects was in-question; I naïvely speculated that insects must be extraterrestrials that colonized Earth before humans even existed. . .
    . . .Wait! What if. . .
    😂 Ahh I miss that kid.

  • @bobtibet3954
    @bobtibet3954 Год назад +5

    i love your content. i have a little critik point. could you use also the metric system. its totaly okay to say feet etc beause amaricans cant imagen better. but only 3 countrys use that system and the rest of the world dont know what 6 feets are.

    • @gpaull2
      @gpaull2 Год назад +2

      Most of the world is fluent in both, or at least able to figure it out. It’s the imperial countries that need all the help they can get. 😂

    • @beyond-journeys-end
      @beyond-journeys-end Год назад +1

      Thought the same except i belived there to be more then 3

    • @DustyHoney
      @DustyHoney Год назад +2

      Idk if you’re actually American, but most Americans do know the metric system. It’s taught to us in school from the time we’re in first grade lol.

    • @gpaull2
      @gpaull2 Год назад

      @Hannah Winterhalder Is it the imperial that you can use without your head 😮😂

  • @AdonDiklon
    @AdonDiklon Год назад +1

    Didn't see the video yet but it seems like it's gonna be amazing!

  • @AGO1896
    @AGO1896 Год назад +6

    As a scientific channel, start using the Metric System, please

  • @TomTurbo-wh6op
    @TomTurbo-wh6op 5 месяцев назад

    Being a geologist and hobby palaeontologist for >30 years now,, my interest always was the evolution of the feather and then flight.
    I have never been able to see any sense in the running-flapping-takeoff-theory. Evolution usually doesn't go the hard way.
    So, it was always the tree down theory, that made far more sense to me.
    Feathers surely did not start as aerodynamic flight feathers, but first there were filament feathers, that then split up and became downs", that made a very good thermal insulation, esp. for younger and smaller animals.
    Problem obviou"sly was, that dinosaurs did not only live in desert like environments, but also in much higher humidities.
    And, although downs also give some thermal insulation when wet, dry down works way better.
    So, over time, the reptiles developed cover feathers, even learned to make them more waterproof by covering them with fat.
    And, as best method to cover a body and still have some reserves for movement, the shindle-like layer worked best.
    This meant, that the cover feathers had to become asymmetric and which then lead to the development of flight feathers.
    That is, how I still see it...

  • @FlushGorgon
    @FlushGorgon Год назад +4

    A lot of mistakes make this video unreliable.

    • @senghkawn315
      @senghkawn315 7 месяцев назад +3

      can you make a list of mistakes from this video please?

    • @will-pk8hq
      @will-pk8hq Месяц назад

      ​@@senghkawn315they're probably nitpicking simplifications

  • @kozmaz87
    @kozmaz87 Год назад +1

    Insects live on every continent? Antarctica? OMG there is 1 insect there: Belgica antarctica

  • @bjarnes.4423
    @bjarnes.4423 Год назад +4

    Please use metric. Especially since you have "science" in your channel name

    • @DustyHoney
      @DustyHoney Год назад

      It really bothered me when they didn’t talk about how birds have pneumatized bones.

  • @Overthought1
    @Overthought1 Год назад

    Wow, I nominate this as the best Real Science vid ever made! Well done!

  • @BrockLezzy
    @BrockLezzy Год назад +3

    The video made me believe in creation more than before, to be honest

    • @FreedomAnderson
      @FreedomAnderson Год назад +2

      How?

    • @BrockLezzy
      @BrockLezzy Год назад

      @@FreedomAnderson I don't remember the specific parts of the video, but defects, which the early forms of adaptation would be, would usually be eliminated from a population, rather than proliferated. The assumption that the theory of evolution makes is that every single micro mutation had to be beneficial, which I don't believe to be possible. Also, evolution is also studied as fact rather than what it is, a theory - so a lot of inductive reasoning is used. It's like a detective who assumes someone committed a crime and only looking for facts that confirm their assumption. I know microevolution happens, but macroevolution leaves me skeptical.

    • @ericpeterson9110
      @ericpeterson9110 Год назад +3

      @@BrockLezzy "evolution is also studied as fact rather than what it is, a theory" Evolution is both a fact and a theory, they arent exclusive terms. Evolution is the phenomenon that we factually know has occured, and the theory of evolution is the mechanism and esplanation for that phenomenon.
      The theory of gravitation doesnt mean that gravity's existence is some unproven assumption.

    • @BrockLezzy
      @BrockLezzy Год назад

      @@ericpeterson9110 I said micro evolution is a fact. Macro evolution is still theory. Gravity is a fact, the mechanism by which it operates is a theory

    • @ericpeterson9110
      @ericpeterson9110 Год назад +3

      @@BrockLezzy Exactly. You understand what the therm theory means but refuse to use it correctly. When you say Macro evolution is "still a theory" you might as well say gravity is "still a theory".

  • @JeffreyShao
    @JeffreyShao Год назад +1

    This video is very well made ngl

  • @matthewexline6589
    @matthewexline6589 Год назад +2

    Can you please explain better what you were talking about at @10:51 in the video about how the robot test showed better running while gliding than flapping?

  • @Kehlen578
    @Kehlen578 Год назад

    11:56 contrary to a common misconception, bird's hollow bones are not lighter (they are thiner but denser). They mainly help for air intake.

  • @OpEditorial
    @OpEditorial Год назад

    The best explanation so far to explain how and why flight evolved in certain species is: it just did.

  • @rkozakand
    @rkozakand 5 месяцев назад +2

    I was very surprised to see you comparing leg segments of insects and crustaceans to arthropods. Both insects and crustaceans ARE arthropods. WTF?

  • @ArisaemaDracontium
    @ArisaemaDracontium Год назад +1

    Microraptor was not a direct ancestor of modern birds. So how it developed flight (or possibly just gliding) is irrelevant. I think modern bird behavior gives us a strong indication that the 'ground up' hypothesis is correct for birds. If you look at ground-feeding birds, when they run away from a threat, they often use their winds for a 'turbo boost' to move faster along the ground, only taking flight if the threat persists. You can also see this in flightless breeds of chickens, proving that wings have a use for high-speed movement along the ground as a precursor to flight.

  • @MxIzmir
    @MxIzmir Год назад

    That was fascinating

  • @GOOD_FARMER
    @GOOD_FARMER Год назад +2

    Congratulations for 1million subscriber's. ☺️

  • @KooriPlays
    @KooriPlays Год назад

    HUGE congrats for reaching the 1 MILLION subs!!!

  • @GeoffryGifari
    @GeoffryGifari Год назад +2

    We know wingless insect exist. did they lose the ability to fly along the way? or do they come from a distinct insect ancestor

  • @iracingrookie3301
    @iracingrookie3301 Год назад

    Hands down my favourite channel

  • @k3630
    @k3630 Год назад +1

    What I find truly remarkable is how anyone believes such stunning engineering, not to mention navigational algorithms, could occur via random mutations??? Randomness is the opposite of coherence

  • @TwoFourFourFour
    @TwoFourFourFour Год назад

    Best female narrator on RUclips. I love to fall asleep to videos like this and sometimes the smooth deep voice of a man is good to listen to and relax. But this woman does an amazing job. Great channel.

  • @tolotolo2380
    @tolotolo2380 Год назад +1

    Very interesting study of human imagination

  • @benjaminlessard8710
    @benjaminlessard8710 Год назад

    I love this channel. I am always waiting for the next video, I am hooked.

  • @crackedemerald4930
    @crackedemerald4930 Год назад

    I thank you for using the least unnerving clip of the fish that walks with spider leggies.

  • @meine.wenigkeit
    @meine.wenigkeit Год назад

    I woke up at 4:00 AM for no reason with two completely random thoughts - when did animals start flying and why do elephants have trunks...I'm glad I have one of the questions answered 🤣😂

  • @Jdjdbxdj
    @Jdjdbxdj Год назад

    I used to hate bugs. Now, because I rarely see them, I treat every single one like it’s the last.

  • @kayrius
    @kayrius Год назад +1

    What is the sky if not an ocean of light fluid? Animals don't simply "fly". they majestically "swim" the skies.

  • @joeshmoe8345
    @joeshmoe8345 Год назад

    Your content is really really good. Thanks for sharing it with us G.