David Attenborough's Uncovers A Mysterious Natural Secret... | Nature Bites

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024

Комментарии • 403

  • @NatureBites
    @NatureBites  3 года назад +130

    We

    • @NP7_16
      @NP7_16 3 года назад +5

      EVERY. but best best one is humming humibird

    • @brockb6942
      @brockb6942 2 года назад +1

      The living planet actually changed the way I looked at and approached the world.

    • @oscarinacan
      @oscarinacan 2 года назад +2

      So are you guys just ripping of the BBC and David? Tried looking you up and can't find any info.

    • @ih8paper
      @ih8paper 2 года назад +3

      All of them.

    • @rusher80
      @rusher80 2 года назад

      All but specially Congo Rain forest in Africa series

  • @nicholaslewis8594
    @nicholaslewis8594 2 года назад +379

    I love that he had access to an actual giant tortoise for this😂 The little fella was adorable.

    • @te0pol159
      @te0pol159 2 года назад +32

      "little" fella

    • @chestersmith1384
      @chestersmith1384 2 года назад +6

      I don’t know about adorable. Did you hear him from when he didn’t get the banana on time?!?

    • @Ganttura1
      @Ganttura1 2 года назад +10

      @@chestersmith1384 fella can bite but they are not aggressive creatures

    • @fluuufffffy1514
      @fluuufffffy1514 2 года назад +2

      Goop mouthed big fella

    • @luvftywaplvr7853
      @luvftywaplvr7853 2 года назад +8

      yea and the tortoise was pretty adorable too

  • @kobejete2796
    @kobejete2796 2 года назад +560

    Tortoise be like, "I see the plant bro, let me just finish this banana first."

    • @mityaboy4639
      @mityaboy4639 2 года назад +22

      [ Sir David puts the plant away]
      Tortoise: you had to hide it to have your point… of course I CAN’T see it if you put it away
      [Tortoise walks away murmuring]
      - ‘He HaS a BaD eYe SiGhT … CaN’t SeE tHe PlAnT…’ :)))

    • @alex-loxa
      @alex-loxa 2 года назад +3

      Hahaha

    • @sumith1870
      @sumith1870 2 года назад +1

      @@mityaboy4639 lol

    • @rommelp8720
      @rommelp8720 2 года назад +1

      🤣😂🤣😂😭😭😭🇨🇦🇨🇦💯💯💖

    • @internalizedhappyness9774
      @internalizedhappyness9774 2 года назад +4

      The tortoise probably sees the vibrant yellow banana and then sees a dark brown whatever green plants and is like I’ll take the banana bro, also if other fruits and vegetables may be more appetizing than the plants earlier stages of development therefore saving some of them by chance due to the unappetizing look to a tortoise or at least I should say potential unappetizing look.
      P.s I was looking for a farm emoji to say that your thing is like a strawman argument but not even Apple has a farmhouse emoji and I think this is a much more pressing matter than the other thing I mentioned,
      I like bread.
      Have a good day!

  • @vilyar122
    @vilyar122 Год назад +11

    I had no idea plants could even do this, it's amazing!

  • @khsuki1
    @khsuki1 2 года назад +122

    Too bad the actual Rodrigues Giant Tortoises (there were two species) are extinct, Aldabra tortoises have been introduced to replace them. For those who don't know Rodrigues is part of the Mascarene Islands east of Madagascar that includes Mauritius (they are The Republic of Mauritius) where the Dodo lived. Rodrigues had it's own Dodo called the Rodrigues solitaire, both were giant flightless pigeons whose closest living relatives are the Nicobar (from SE Asia) and tooth-billed pigeon (from Samoa).

  • @carolynallisee2463
    @carolynallisee2463 2 года назад +52

    Which begs the question- if the seedlings and young plants look so different to the adult ones, could they have been hiding in plain sight all the time people thought they were extinct?

    • @pixazelz
      @pixazelz 2 года назад +10

      but those plants eventually mature into adults and they only found 1 remaining plants for now. there might be more , but not enough...

    • @LostSoulNexus
      @LostSoulNexus 2 года назад +14

      How many were stepped on or pulled out by mistake because they thought it was a different plant?

    • @carolynallisee2463
      @carolynallisee2463 2 года назад +4

      @@pixazelz certainly, the fact that the majority of living specimens are clones does not increase genetic diversity.. But there may be more immature wild plants growing in out of the way places, unseen and unrecognised...

    • @adity4587
      @adity4587 2 года назад +3

      But they will grow eventually in their bigger size some years later.. Also when the clones were made, David didn't mention they showed different colours when they were saplings or even years after..

  • @leonav218
    @leonav218 4 месяца назад +1

    I've been watching his videos since I was 5..... I'm 30 now and still in awe with nature and his presentation!

  • @vondahe
    @vondahe 2 года назад +41

    Perhaps I’m getting carried away here, but I genuinely feel that Sir David Attenborough is the most influential man of the 20th century. And he hasn’t even stopped two decades into the 21st century. Without him, my love and appreciation for nature would not have been the same.

    • @Orroset
      @Orroset 2 года назад +1

      I have learned more from him than from any other single person.
      Unless you count walking and talking..

    • @simonkoeman3310
      @simonkoeman3310 2 года назад

      I don't think he gets that title. A lot happened in the 20th century...

    • @SoldierX32
      @SoldierX32 2 года назад +1

      ngl the most influential man in the 20th century would probably be hitler, though I also bet there is a strong argument to be made for lenin or franz ferdinand (but for the latter it really was that his death was influential, and not as much himself as a person)

    • @sharonsmith1783
      @sharonsmith1783 2 года назад

      Yes him and Jaque Cousteau.

  • @feeberizer
    @feeberizer Год назад +2

    Sir Attenborough isn't just a National Treasure to Great Britain. He's a World Treasure to us all.

  • @PiXie232
    @PiXie232 2 года назад +137

    That is amazing.. so interesting that they finally worked that out! And were able to get it to reproduce seeds.. what a cool job!

    • @Alternatives_Universum
      @Alternatives_Universum 2 года назад +1

      But aren´t the seeds also just creating new clones?

    • @TMtheScratcher
      @TMtheScratcher 2 года назад +12

      @@Alternatives_Universum true. But mutations will accumulate over time and seeds are the only way of mixing genes from two populations. That's basically the next task: Get genetic variability among the now existing individuals

    • @boges11
      @boges11 2 года назад +8

      @@Alternatives_Universum Clones are reproductions from 1 plant. Seeds are the combination of 2 plants, pollen from 1 deposited in the ovule of the other. That way you get genetic diversity.

    • @tauruscommunist9532
      @tauruscommunist9532 2 года назад +1

      @@boges11 not always, seeds can produce clones too

  • @johnnyc613
    @johnnyc613 2 года назад +54

    Another example of how nature never ceases to amaze us !!

    • @driverlexus4025
      @driverlexus4025 2 года назад +1

      who told the planet to do this? who give them this idea? do they have brain?

    • @GoldSrc_
      @GoldSrc_ 2 года назад +4

      @@driverlexus4025 Evolution and natural selection.

    • @adriaandoelman2577
      @adriaandoelman2577 2 года назад +2

      @@GoldSrc_ and billions of years.

  • @patriciakunz1198
    @patriciakunz1198 2 года назад +12

    How can one choice a favorite David Attenborough show? He has been my most favorite person in the world since I was 7 years old (nearly 70 years ago) A brilliant and amazing human being.

  • @MantraHerbInchSin
    @MantraHerbInchSin 2 года назад +20

    There are two kinds of nature documentaries. The ones with Sir Attenborough, and the rest

  • @NaturesSecrets1.618
    @NaturesSecrets1.618 Год назад +3

    The intelligence and problem-solving skills displayed by certain animals leave us in awe, reminding us that we are not the sole possessors of wisdom.

    • @peterrollinson-lorimer
      @peterrollinson-lorimer 11 месяцев назад

      In fact I'm starting to think that even plants are smarter than I am. Perhaps a function of my brain is getting in the way.

  • @shahad_alsayed
    @shahad_alsayed Год назад +13

    You've brought knowledge and enlightment Sir David Attenborough and team. Thank you for establishing Nature Bites Channel may God Bless you all 🙂.

  • @ayapamungkas2267
    @ayapamungkas2267 2 года назад +24

    Plants ability to learn something then adapt for their self defense mechanism is just amazing

    • @trojanhorse7897
      @trojanhorse7897 2 года назад +4

      Plants have no brain, only the strongest survives by genetic faults. But even then it looks like nature has some sort of Intelligence during evolution. God is the brain of this evolution.

    • @ross-carlson
      @ross-carlson 2 года назад +16

      @@trojanhorse7897 Oh you were doing so good until you had to add a fairy tale to your explanation which adds zero additional explanation and only complicates things for no reason. Yes, plants have no agency and nor does evolution, it is simply a response to the environment and those with a specific trait continue to survive and over eons those traits are selected for. Zero "god" fairy tales needed.
      And since we can test the first part how would you test your "god" claim?
      1. Which "god" are you claiming?
      2. How did you rule out the 2000+ other "god(s)" that haven been proposed over the centuries?
      3. What traits does your "god" have that we can test for?
      4. How do we falsify your "god"? If it's unfalsifiable it's absurd to believe in it.
      5. Can you give me any examples of a brain without a physical mind?
      6. What about universe farting pixies guiding evolution? How did you rule that out?
      Hopefully, but very doubtfully, you see how absurd your final statement was. I'm sorry that your religion is in direct contradiction to science but that's just fact. I doubt you'll address any of my specific points, you'll likely make some more absurd baseless assertions or attack me personally, as that's what I get the vast majority of the time. I guess we'll see.

    • @Jshh7s
      @Jshh7s 2 года назад +4

      @@ross-carlson Religion & science go hand in hand. You're just too righteous about your atheism to see it - a lot of the most famous scientists to ever live were religious. (I know its because 99% of people were religious at that time but it still shows one doesn't contradict the other)

    • @Jshh7s
      @Jshh7s 2 года назад +5

      @@ross-carlson I used to be as atheist as they come but then I began to look at things differently, nobody can ever disprove Gods existence, therefore making fun of it as an impossible or laughable idea is a betrayal of the scientific method.

    • @_Stormfather
      @_Stormfather 2 года назад +6

      @@Jshh7s maybe you should study actual logical reasoning then. If you did, you'd realize pretty quickly that it's impossible to prove a negative. As the other guy said, how do you rule out the idea that evolution is guided by magical pixies? After all, there's no proof that they DON'T exist, just like god. That's because it's impossible to prove that something DOESN'T exist. You have to assume it doesn't, until someone can prove that it does.
      Does that mean the idea of god should be made fun of? Maybe not. But it does give some pretty strong reasons to make fun of people who try to claim that god exists without any proof.
      The fact that many scientists were also religious doesn't mean anything. People live with contradictions all the time. We're just very good at convincing ourselves that they're not contradictions.

  • @GracefullyMetal
    @GracefullyMetal 5 месяцев назад +1

    I love anything D. A. talks about! Anything!!! ❤❤❤

  • @zoraiamoreira2973
    @zoraiamoreira2973 2 года назад +3

    A perfect planet... But I just watched him on PBS today about three times when it came on and I just put him every night talking about the reefs talking about the ocean talking about the beginning of the world talking about dinosaurs being found around the planet I just listened to him because I love him... His voice makes me feel safe like I can't believe and I know what he's saying is real and it's just so soothing... Like right now the only reason I'm here is because I couldn't sleep and I wanted to hear his voice so I could finally go to sleep... Some people a blessed that way anything they say sounds like a prayer...

  • @martemacdougall1985
    @martemacdougall1985 4 месяца назад

    Can you believe the spectacular adaptation of this coffee plant? Wonderful. And thank you for such dedication to endangered plants. 🌲🌳✨️

  • @slydreadley
    @slydreadley Год назад +7

    Carlos Magdalena is such an amazing person. If you love plants check out the "The Plant Messiah" by Carlos Magdalena. Absolute legend. As a horticulturist Carlos is one of my hero's, after Sir David..

  • @TauroChuck
    @TauroChuck 2 года назад +11

    Davids videos are so soothing. I could go to sleep watching these videos. I want my small kid to see such videos

    • @midgetman4206
      @midgetman4206 2 года назад

      Sleep? You can't sleep when there's Sir Attenborough to be watching

  • @markyboi79
    @markyboi79 2 года назад +15

    The tortoise doesn’t have very good eyesight cos Davo just poked him in the eye with that banana!

  • @darriousdagustino6345
    @darriousdagustino6345 2 года назад +4

    This channel is amazing! RUclips suggested this, Ive watched 10 vids in a row and their all amazing! David Attenborough is the best!

  • @davefoc
    @davefoc 2 года назад +58

    Great video but there was a surprising aspect to this story that the video didn't touch on. According to Wikipedia the plants are dioecious (separate male and female plants). Apparently the plants they were trying to get seed from were males, which can be a problem if you are trying to get seeds. From Wikipedia: ".. horticulturist Carlos Magdalena discovered how to make the male plant bear female flowers. " I would like to have known more about that.

    • @resuwanrazack7253
      @resuwanrazack7253 2 года назад +1

      Wikipedia. Seriously.

    • @juppheinekken3465
      @juppheinekken3465 2 года назад +14

      @@resuwanrazack7253 What's your problem? Seriously?

    • @LokiOdinssnn
      @LokiOdinssnn 2 года назад +16

      @@juppheinekken3465 he has been convinced by his high school that he is very intelligent for only parroting "mainstream" sources lol.

    • @Steveshappylittletrees
      @Steveshappylittletrees 2 года назад +4

      Probably the tech pioneered by Cannabis breeders to produce "Feminized" seeds. A solution of either Silver Nitrate or colloidal Silver is sprayed onto the plant and the sex of the plant is reversed.

    • @davefoc
      @davefoc 2 года назад +13

      @@LokiOdinssnn Possibly, I thought about a response where I listed the sources for the article so he could get some idea why his comment about Wikipedia was not as smart as he thought. The idea that Wikipedia is not a valid source for any kind of formal article or student paper is exactly right. But to take from that fact that all use of a Wikipedia article is inappropriate is misinformed. If he doubted the article he could have added something to this discussion by refuting it with his sources or reading the sources attached to the article and providing some additional information based on those. As it is, his response was irrelevant to this discussion.

  • @TheWildShotsPodcast
    @TheWildShotsPodcast 2 года назад +2

    How Sir David looks in his 70s at 96 years old never ceases to amaze me

  • @BOGNORregisSUCKS
    @BOGNORregisSUCKS 2 года назад +5

    Can we please preserve sir David Attenborough, a national treasure

  • @kellyharrison5184
    @kellyharrison5184 2 года назад +2

    Fascinating! Another gem from Sir David.

  • @Patrick_The_Pure
    @Patrick_The_Pure 2 года назад +2

    "Ah, it's the young caretaker giving me food again" - Tortoise probably.

  • @lambert1875
    @lambert1875 2 года назад +1

    David Attenborough is just amazing

  • @davidarundel6187
    @davidarundel6187 2 года назад +14

    Juvenile plants sometimes do appear very different to the adult form - New Zealand , has several like that .

    • @LostSoulNexus
      @LostSoulNexus 2 года назад +2

      We also used to have large flightless herbivores such as Moa, an example that comes to mind is Lancewood that would be close to, or above the average moa height before the transition to juvenile foliage then mature foliage/canopy, I always assumed this was the reason for the various forms but that opinion was probably influenced by The Private Life of Plants series I obsessed over for years

    • @emiliofernandez7117
      @emiliofernandez7117 2 года назад

      @@LostSoulNexus I will check that series out thank you ❤️

  • @mistahanansi2264
    @mistahanansi2264 2 года назад +1

    Dunno why, but I think that is one of the coolest things ever.

  • @fdavidmiller2
    @fdavidmiller2 2 года назад +32

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @RareVBlue
    @RareVBlue 2 года назад +4

    Could it possibly be that tortoise ate the seeds somehow and helped to spread the plant thru its feces and not having a population of the animals in sufficient numbers could have caused it to start going extinct. And if not the tortoise, then prehaps another animal, particularly avian, who may have one been responsible for spreading the seeds and aiding in pollination.

  • @vandliszt
    @vandliszt 2 года назад +15

    Why’s David shoving the banana at the turtle. He literally says, “go on”. Like a father with a stubborn child.

  • @dineshapunchihewa1228
    @dineshapunchihewa1228 Год назад +1

    With all the camouflage the plant still disappeared. Huge thanks to those scientists to bring it back to life

  • @281crane
    @281crane 2 года назад +16

    Sir David Attenborough is the Gandalf/Dumbledore/Obi-wan of our time.

  • @1BergerVongSchlauigkeitHer
    @1BergerVongSchlauigkeitHer 2 года назад

    Fascinating piece of evolutionary history.

  • @asimally9468
    @asimally9468 2 года назад

    Mr ATTENBOROUGH IS THE BEST OF THE BEST....WISH WE HAVE A FEW MORE LIKE HIM...

  • @Weirdkauz
    @Weirdkauz 2 года назад +1

    There's some excellent reasons here to love humanity.

  • @ToneTraveler
    @ToneTraveler 2 года назад

    Earth is a better place because of David Attenborough.

  • @janellesmalls1171
    @janellesmalls1171 Год назад

    Fascinating adaptation!

  • @MrStringybark
    @MrStringybark 2 года назад +9

    Maybe I missed something but this didn't explain why no trace of the plant was found later on.

    • @baulderos1950
      @baulderos1950 2 года назад +1

      Invasive species cause them to go extinct

  • @thepodum.7203
    @thepodum.7203 2 года назад

    If I get to watch such intresting every day....I would not feel RUclips is a waste of my time.

  • @172louis
    @172louis 2 года назад +9

    eucalyptus trees start off different from the adult tree too

    • @paragwarana
      @paragwarana 2 года назад

      No. Eucalyptus lives r same when it is plant or when it grows huge tree

    • @Jugurtha33
      @Jugurtha33 2 года назад

      @@paragwarana disagree, eucalyptus seedlings look nothing at all like the saplings they grow into, as I learnt to my cost after disposing of several planter boxes I falsely thought had become weed infested.

  • @kaleoariola
    @kaleoariola 2 года назад

    Very fascinating! Mahalo for sharing

  • @armelinrameta5359
    @armelinrameta5359 2 года назад

    Love you Extraordinary Attenborough🤘🤘🤘🤘❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @pzan49
    @pzan49 Год назад

    The plant DNA knew what it had to do in order for the presumably "dead" species to continuing to be living and propagating. Wonderful!!

  • @ravindrabhagwat6257
    @ravindrabhagwat6257 3 года назад +5

    Fascinating info and as interesting as mystry tell.

  • @thomasbjurstrom6480
    @thomasbjurstrom6480 2 года назад

    Fascinating!

  • @aemiliadelroba4022
    @aemiliadelroba4022 2 года назад +2

    Life on this planet is always amazing 🤩

  • @willieneilson9185
    @willieneilson9185 2 года назад

    Awesome observation!

  • @namkhanh1505
    @namkhanh1505 2 года назад +2

    Would anyone mind give me the name of that plant cause I could not catch sir David Attenborough's phrasing it.

    • @pal98111
      @pal98111 2 года назад +1

      Ramosmania rodriguesii,

    • @namkhanh1505
      @namkhanh1505 2 года назад

      @@pal98111 Very appreciate that!

  • @AlexDuWaldt
    @AlexDuWaldt 2 года назад

    Life's majesty unravelled.

  • @BiBo24-
    @BiBo24- 2 года назад

    amazing. great video.

  • @yetti4817
    @yetti4817 2 года назад +12

    Nature sure is extraordinary.

  • @lightfoot.2000
    @lightfoot.2000 2 года назад +6

    We also have simalar native trees in New Newland that morf through their life cycle .. .
    As an arborist, I find that quite fascinating 🤔
    100 0f Millions of years of Coding .. .
    😎👌

    • @nokia5359
      @nokia5359 2 года назад

      I actually went searching for "new newland". Hahaha silly me.

    • @jacksontreece3497
      @jacksontreece3497 2 года назад

      Gotta protect themselves from those dasterdly moa!

  • @ibeatyoutubecircumventingy6344
    @ibeatyoutubecircumventingy6344 2 года назад +1

    I am kinda confused as too why the plant expert was surprised at a juvenile plant not looking like its Matured version.

  • @ummrahmak
    @ummrahmak 2 года назад +2

    "Is it We that grow or are you the grower"
    All these amazing species scream a Creator was behind it,
    Surah Waqiah 56

  • @Forever_Rayne
    @Forever_Rayne 2 года назад +4

    Wow! That's awesome! 🥰

  • @troophq
    @troophq 2 года назад +1

    We have a similar transforming tree In New Zealand the Horoeka / Lancewood, starts off with long brown spindly leaves then at it matures it turns into a large broad green leafed tree, it is thought that this growth pattern was to deter Moa from eating the young leaves.

  • @adityanarayan3213
    @adityanarayan3213 2 года назад +2

    Sir you are a Legend, I am your fan from India ❤️

  • @marshasteeds
    @marshasteeds 2 года назад +1

    So amazing! Thank you.

  • @theweirdbugnerd3224
    @theweirdbugnerd3224 2 года назад +1

    "It earned the nickname 'The Living Dead '" That's so sad, I know plants don't have brains or anything but I still feel bad for them

  • @intruthwetrust9928
    @intruthwetrust9928 2 года назад

    His voice is soothing

  • @skylahenry8552
    @skylahenry8552 2 года назад

    Wow that's so amazing

  • @learner2452
    @learner2452 3 года назад +3

    Amazing

  • @orawal
    @orawal 2 года назад

    those flowers must smell real good!

  • @rap5374
    @rap5374 2 года назад

    Nature is so smart

  • @guodzillakaiju5683
    @guodzillakaiju5683 Год назад

    I sculpted a Rodriguez Island Solitaire "smoked head," using the famous preserved dodo head as a reference.

  • @AnyoneCanSee
    @AnyoneCanSee 2 года назад

    They flew the giant tortoise in just to get this footage as it was cheaper than flying Sir David Attenborough to the islands. It was too expensive to fly it back and so they just threw it into a trash compactor after they shot this segment.
    I feel it was worth it as its presence added so much to the feature.

  • @piotrrajmundkoprowski4732
    @piotrrajmundkoprowski4732 2 года назад

    As always amazing!

  • @williamcheung8189
    @williamcheung8189 2 года назад

    That turtle is epic!

  • @spookayitsme
    @spookayitsme 2 года назад

    3:01 Sir David mashing a banana into the tortoise's head is hilarious to me 🤣🤣🤣😅🤣🤦‍♂️

  • @johnnydarwin3939
    @johnnydarwin3939 2 года назад

    Wow! amazing discovery by Sir David

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 2 года назад

    Now THAT is fascinating.

  • @phumlanibuthelezi1600
    @phumlanibuthelezi1600 Год назад

    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 granny is awesome

  • @pkre707
    @pkre707 2 года назад +1

    If the coffee is good, I see a bright future for this plant.

  • @spiralpython1989
    @spiralpython1989 2 года назад

    Such a cool story! Botany is brilliant 🌿

  • @aishaalwaseela2722
    @aishaalwaseela2722 2 года назад +4

    سبحان الله احسن الخالقين

    • @avb1301
      @avb1301 2 года назад +1

      How you could even think of creationism even under a video where evolution is constantly being proved.

    • @aishaalwaseela2722
      @aishaalwaseela2722 2 года назад

      @@avb1301 am I not allowed to ?

    • @GoldSrc_
      @GoldSrc_ 2 года назад

      @@aishaalwaseela2722 BS is not allowed near science or education.

    • @aishaalwaseela2722
      @aishaalwaseela2722 2 года назад

      @@GoldSrc_ well that’s your opinion, not mine

    • @GoldSrc_
      @GoldSrc_ 2 года назад

      @@aishaalwaseela2722 That's not an opinion, it's a fact.
      BS ideas are not allowed near science or education, otherwise you would see flat earthers teaching that BS in school.

  • @JTM670
    @JTM670 2 года назад

    i love carlos' book!

  • @kobaltocr6927
    @kobaltocr6927 2 года назад +1

    Que importante propagar proteger e incluir la flora nativa a nuestras vidas💚💚💚 Asi pasa en Costa Rica con muchas plantas y arboles las plantulas son totalmente distintas al adulto

  • @Degenerecy
    @Degenerecy 2 года назад

    1 clip of this show has more nature documentary then a years worth then the discovery channel.

  • @halilhalilovic6118
    @halilhalilovic6118 7 месяцев назад +1

    Prahistoric planet ❤

  • @helenrichmond6373
    @helenrichmond6373 Год назад

    I live in the Caribbean and love my tortoises in my garden.
    They eat grass and other leavecplus they love lettuce, banana and papaya ans some occasional cooked chicken.

  • @axi6ne8us
    @axi6ne8us 2 года назад

    The desire for continued survival exist in all species.

  • @huldu
    @huldu 2 года назад

    Truly spectacular!

  • @shubhamsawant293
    @shubhamsawant293 Год назад

    This kind of behavior in plant is know as heterophylly in which a juvenile plant switches its form into an adult this happens in sygonium ,passion fruit, papaya,and it mostly happens in aroids such as philodendron, anthurium, sygonium ,monstera etc.

  • @hamihamro
    @hamihamro 2 года назад

    we are not allowed to sit on the working desk😍 like him

  • @ВалентинаЛеонидовна-и5ф

    Симпатичная, черепашка - долгожитель.🤗❤️👍

  • @danielroyse6640
    @danielroyse6640 2 года назад +4

    Well that is actually a very cool story. Nature is awesome!

  • @shaneyaw4542
    @shaneyaw4542 2 года назад

    I surmise that this has something to do with the red queen hypothesis. Fascinating.

  • @OverlordShamala
    @OverlordShamala 2 года назад

    People that collect carnivorous plants may be familiar when germinating the North American Pitcher Plant _Sarracenia_ from seed, either pure plants or hybrids... The plantlets all look the same, like tiny _Sarracenia minor_ plants. Between 3 to 5 years, they will eventually take the characteristics of their respective species.
    Another American pitcher plant which the plantlets look the same is the Sun Pitcher Plant _Heliamphora_ from South America.

  • @dengslacson1
    @dengslacson1 2 года назад

    The wonder of nature👏👏👏❤️❤️❤️

  • @carmelitajones7779
    @carmelitajones7779 2 года назад

    Extraordinary.

  • @starcrystal5551
    @starcrystal5551 2 года назад

    Tortoise @ 3:09 'Nan-bos'
    @ 3:18 'I Like Nan-bos'
    @ 3:34 '¡Gimme da green Leafs!'

  • @anniehyams587
    @anniehyams587 2 года назад

    Thank you to Sir David Attenborough for wonderful very interesting audio and video and Oh hi beautiful giant tortoise lively meeting you and thank you so much for stopping and saying hi and thank you for sharing a beautiful pictures yes I saw you also enjoying your delicious 😋 🍌 Banana and thank you so much for sharing the beautiful video

  • @rpurdy4821
    @rpurdy4821 2 года назад +1

    Plants are more clever than one might think.

  • @tippyandfriend
    @tippyandfriend 2 года назад +1

    But why change it's leaves at all if the early ones are obviously sufficient to grow? What is the benefit that the final stage leaves have over the early stage ones?

    • @blblalalbla
      @blblalalbla 2 года назад +1

      Maybe attracting those animals that can help to reproduce when they see green leaves. The one tortoise should not see, so not green, the others should see and so it is green.

  • @johnkrimmel1533
    @johnkrimmel1533 2 года назад

    I can listen all day iconic

  • @jonhohensee3258
    @jonhohensee3258 2 года назад +1

    That tortoise didn't look like an actual living creature. It looked more animatronic.