How Water Keeps Sea Snakes Out of the Atlantic

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 дек 2024

Комментарии • 644

  • @BizarreBeasts
    @BizarreBeasts  Месяц назад +6

    Did you miss this pin the first time around? Find it here until we run out! complexly.store/products/bizarre-beasts-pin-seasnake
    And get the sea snake patch here! complexly.store/products/sea-snake-patch

  • @ithrangroenen1787
    @ithrangroenen1787 Год назад +1146

    Yellow bellied sea snake sounds like a pirate insult

  • @Nikki0417
    @Nikki0417 Год назад +1549

    The first time I heard about sea snakes was watching Steve Irwin. He talked about how highly venomous they were while holding one. I think I was like 10 or 11 at the time, but I remember thinking "that seems insane." Miss that dude.

    • @elonweintraub9758
      @elonweintraub9758 Год назад +91

      They might be much more venomous than a cobra, but they are also completely docile. Researchers regularly handle them barehanded to tag them and take their measurements, as do fishers when the snakes get stuck in nets. I still wouldn't try it without training, but it's apparently far less insane than it seems.

    • @RealBradMiller
      @RealBradMiller Год назад +31

      I grew up on Steve Irwin, and know exactly where I was when I found out about his passing. Deeply missed!

    • @snipelite94
      @snipelite94 Год назад +16

      One poisonous critter eventually jabbed him though,
      I vaguely remember he took a lot of flak for carrying his baby around crocs or alligators.
      Dangerous creatures can behave randomly, and it was irresponsible to take a "civilian" into danger like that.
      I'll grant you, that his excitement was infectious, and he bubbled over with enthusiasm leading to a devoted following,
      but recklessness will run your luck out one day.

    • @safaiaryu12
      @safaiaryu12 Год назад +46

      @@snipelite94 It was a stingray that happened to get him in the heart. While venomous, the venom usually just causes pain; it was the stab wound that took him down.

    • @gilliesiut2332
      @gilliesiut2332 Год назад

      Yep it was the same thing here

  • @jp1431
    @jp1431 Год назад +742

    As someone from Puerto Rico, I am thankful that there are no sea snakes in the Atlantic Ocean. We have enough problems without encountering a venomous snake while chilling at the beach.

    • @janmoravec2584
      @janmoravec2584 Год назад +48

      They are the hippies of the ocean. I love diving with them, it is exactly opposite of aggressive. Super chill, unless you stick hand to their mouth. And yeah, that's why you dont want to stick your hand to crevices in the sea 😀

    • @stanziolad
      @stanziolad Год назад +31

      As someone from Panama, Your welcome.

    • @RevSquatchFultz
      @RevSquatchFultz Год назад +18

      What about the Puerto Rican Racer? It is a venomous snake you could see on your beaches already.

    • @jp1431
      @jp1431 Год назад +18

      @@RevSquatchFultz honestly I didn’t even know that snake existed. In the 23 years I have been in PR I have seen like 4 snakes and only 2 were alive. Still most of the snakes are in the forests and mountains and not in the coast.

    • @RevSquatchFultz
      @RevSquatchFultz Год назад

      I saw one my first day there lol guess it's the luck of the draw@@jp1431

  • @pauls5745
    @pauls5745 Год назад +488

    amazing! I thought if it were temperature tolerance, eventually some would traverse the current and setup in the south Atlantic, but I never thought about needing fresh floating rainwater to survive

    • @StonedtotheBones13
      @StonedtotheBones13 Год назад +44

      And it's the kind of thing that years ago we would be like "nah, that sounds impossible."

    • @liamnixon4428
      @liamnixon4428 Год назад +13

      Yeah. Near the southern tip of Africa is a desert, and you can see why there's no rainwater there. In fact, sea snakes can't even traverse up the Red Sea and pass through the Suez Canal, because of the Sahara-Arabian deserts, and passing through the Panama canal and its locks is hard for a snake that acts as an oversized Plankton.

    • @emotionalfriendone43
      @emotionalfriendone43 Год назад

      @@StonedtotheBones13so science got it wrong?!? 😮

    • @Fledhyris
      @Fledhyris 7 месяцев назад +11

      @@emotionalfriendone43 Science just hadn't investigated at that point. We simply didn't know. Science is not omniscient, it takes years (sometimes decades) of rigorous, difficult, expensive research by dedicated individuals who are often working for little or no funding (because who is interested in sea snakes?) so there's just really not a lot of science going on in many areas that don't seem economically attractive to universities, Big Pharma, NASA, the military and so on. And the whole area of behavioural biology - trying to understand plants and animals within a holistic context of their evolution, genetics, environment, and natural (not laboratory) behaviour - is very recent, it only really started taking off midway through the 20th century. tldr; science is a lot more difficult and complicated than the internet generation give it credit for. Cut those scientists some slack! :)

    • @andrewfreiji4647
      @andrewfreiji4647 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@StonedtotheBones13Exactly. You can thank modern science and innovation for creating such beautiful snakes

  • @Basement_crusader
    @Basement_crusader Год назад +398

    The only reason I tolerate snakes is because I can quickly walk away from them. I cannot swim as fast as I walk. I do not tolerate sea snakes.

    • @dreammaker9642
      @dreammaker9642 6 месяцев назад +37

      They don’t tolerate you either so keep your distance and they keep theirs 😂

    • @Maccaboy1984
      @Maccaboy1984 6 месяцев назад +27

      Keep away from black mambas, they can reach 23km/hr!

    • @Back-alley-technician
      @Back-alley-technician 5 месяцев назад +8

      As there is not much you can do about them, but more they can do about you. Just be thankful they tolerate you. Because if they were more aggressive towards humans, there would be no defense.

    • @philippal8666
      @philippal8666 5 месяцев назад +1

      I’m with you.

    • @sushantmanandhar1387
      @sushantmanandhar1387 5 месяцев назад

      All sea snakes are venomous but if they bite you underwater, they drown. They want to avoid you as much as you want to avoid them

  • @safaiaryu12
    @safaiaryu12 Год назад +488

    Okay, awesome episode in general, but I had never heard about fresh water floating on top of ocean water?! Like, it totally makes sense, especially with underwater lakes being a thing... sometimes water can kind of stratify based on salinity/density... but dang! Rain water floating on top of the ocean to provide fresh water to sea animals! I never thought of that! How neat!

    • @EECyrpys
      @EECyrpys Год назад +15

      mindblown

    • @FidelCattto
      @FidelCattto Год назад +36

      Yea made me think about how whales and dolphins get water and it's almost entirely from their diets. Weird stuff.

    • @juliaanfloress
      @juliaanfloress 8 месяцев назад +2

      Bots are progressing in language, damn

    • @safaiaryu12
      @safaiaryu12 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@juliaanfloress Huh?

    • @Fledhyris
      @Fledhyris 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@FidelCattto So do cats... not as much, granted, but still. It's why cats fed on dry food tend to develop kidney problems, they just don't gulp down water like other animals when they get thirsty.

  • @davidarredondo2106
    @davidarredondo2106 Год назад +74

    That plot twist at the end that all sea snakes need to drink freshwater to survive had me reeling. Freshwater pools floating on top of the ocean? There’s clearly a lot for me to learn.

  • @RickySTT
    @RickySTT Год назад +78

    6:09 The Panama Canal is powered by an uphill reservoir, so that water flows outward at both ends. I image this would discourage species from crossing the isthmus.

    • @pamelah6431
      @pamelah6431 Год назад +2

      PHEW.

    • @joedellinger9437
      @joedellinger9437 5 месяцев назад

      Also fresh water kills marine species.

    • @boxsterman77
      @boxsterman77 3 месяца назад +3

      It’s not the flow, it’s the locks and the sequence an animal would have to go through to traverse the isthmus. 1. Make it to one lock and avoid being squished by ships that barely fit. Wait until lock fills up to next level. When gates open, move out with the ship into the next lock. Keep repeating until you are at the level of Lake Gatun traverse the lake. Get on lock on other side. Take the series of locks down but I could see a small number making it to the lake and there breeding sufficiently. It’s a tropical paradise.
      Keep in mind lampreys had to negotiable locks in the St Lawrence seaway-and they did.
      The old Panama Canal is “powered” by damning a river,causing a reservoir and directing the captured water out both sets of locks (Caribbean and Pacific).

    • @Wolf-hh4rv
      @Wolf-hh4rv 2 месяца назад

      They’ll get through eventually

  • @LeoStaley
    @LeoStaley Год назад +210

    As someone who lives in a desert, it's really easy for me to forget just how often it rains in other places, especially on the ocean and in the tropics.

    • @helixxia9320
      @helixxia9320 11 месяцев назад +10

      I would be so sad in my life without rain. i love it when it pours

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 5 месяцев назад

      I like when it rains but rain where I live isn’t common, usually just enough to grow a somewhat decent crop of wheat.

    • @cameroonkendrick6312
      @cameroonkendrick6312 5 месяцев назад +1

      I can’t imagine 3 weeks without rain

  • @gradesam6306
    @gradesam6306 Год назад +601

    they're tiny limbless elasmosaurus

    • @sampagano205
      @sampagano205 Год назад +10

      Id actually compare them more to tetrapod moray eels.

    • @sillybeanthing
      @sillybeanthing Год назад +19

      ​@@sampagano205I mean it's obvious to compare them to eels. Elasmosaurus is more creative imo

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Год назад +7

      beheaded elasmosaurids who refused to die

    • @maxasaurus3008
      @maxasaurus3008 Год назад +2

      That’s my cousin 🦕🦖

    • @thiagoalencar3937
      @thiagoalencar3937 Год назад +13

      Maybe Elamosauros are huge limbed sea snakes. Have you ever thought of that? No, you only think of yourself.

  • @v_wegs
    @v_wegs Год назад +170

    So interesting, as usual! You answered all the questions I had about sea snakes, very well written

  • @rianfelis3156
    @rianfelis3156 Год назад +147

    You mentioned Panama and the trouble with South Africa, but what keeps them from expanding into the Red Sea, and from there through the Suez Canal?

    • @BizarreBeasts
      @BizarreBeasts  Год назад +206

      Hello! This is Sarah! We did end up looking into this a little bit, and it seems like the salinity might be why they don't get into the Red Sea (too salty!).

    • @JoSan3
      @JoSan3 Год назад +69

      ​@@BizarreBeastsLesson learned. Being salty keeps sea snakes away

    • @RobertP.Trebor
      @RobertP.Trebor Год назад +14

      @@BizarreBeasts makes sense it wouldnt rain enoigh up there

    • @Mastermachine100
      @Mastermachine100 Год назад +13

      I would have thought the lack of rain would prevent those surface films from occurring so they can't get any water to drink.

    • @arislopes1924
      @arislopes1924 Год назад +7

      I don’t think Panama would be a issue with all the locks and safety measures, the Rivas isthmus in Nicaragua is where u gotta watch out this thin isthmus separates lake Nicaragua which empties into the Caribbean despite being close to the pacific

  • @brandondavidson4085
    @brandondavidson4085 Год назад +117

    It's interesting how much ocean currents act like mountains on land, as physical barriers

  • @Coral_skies
    @Coral_skies Год назад +76

    Sea SNAAAAKES! I LOVE SEA SNAKES! Bizzare Beasts never misses with the animals they pick! Y'all finally got me to sign up for the pins with this one!

  • @Clawed9
    @Clawed9 Год назад +33

    This channel has to be one of the greatest things RUclips has ever suggested to anyone, I feel. great content!

    • @somefishhere
      @somefishhere Год назад +1

      Deep Look by PBS is also pretty great! They even have behind the scenes on how they capture the video

  • @ThatJaymsWisdom
    @ThatJaymsWisdom Год назад +45

    I always say that this channel is the best thing on the internet, and that remains true, but this video is amazing! Probably one of the best!

  • @TsubasayaYami
    @TsubasayaYami Год назад +18

    Damn what an awesome pin this month!
    Unfortunately, just like sea snakes, pins have a hard time crossing the atlantic

  • @Fede_99
    @Fede_99 Год назад +9

    The fact that in the Eocene there used to be giant marine snakes called Palaeophids (unrelated to living ones as they were not venomous) which in some species could reach around 10 meters and maybe even more amazes me so much.

  • @ami-scuba-diver
    @ami-scuba-diver 10 месяцев назад +3

    I dove with hundreds of sea snakes in Manuk island, Banda sea, Indonesia. They are beautiful and majestic - love them. I saw them coming up to the surface to breath. Didn’t know they drink fresh water. Great post.

  • @baldurdashing501
    @baldurdashing501 Год назад +38

    I want to know more about how they breathe and dive! The volume of air those long skinny lungs (or that long skinny lung-I seem to remember most snakes have one functioning lung) can hold has gotta be pretty limited. Long and thin is also not a shape optimized to stand up to pressure. What are the mechanics of being a pelagic snake even like?

    • @lukasg4807
      @lukasg4807 Год назад +11

      Snakes can dive for a long time, their metabolism is so slow even a land dweller can last without oxygen for a while

    • @Bzhydack
      @Bzhydack Год назад +1

      They also can breath throu their skin.

    • @aiko9393
      @aiko9393 Год назад

      ​@@Bzhydack like frogs??? Wow

  • @aaroncoff611
    @aaroncoff611 Год назад +34

    I once found a dead yellow bellied sea snake washed up on the gulf coast of the Florida panhandle. Must have gotten through the Panama Canal.

    • @lightningboltt5437
      @lightningboltt5437 6 месяцев назад +2

      Really? Can u give more detail.

    • @johnnash1119
      @johnnash1119 6 месяцев назад +10

      Yellow bellied sea snake or yellow bellied water snake? Cause the latter is a native species

    • @StoneGone
      @StoneGone 5 месяцев назад +1

      *Lies* 😂

  • @marcwhittle9810
    @marcwhittle9810 Год назад +20

    Micrurus surinamensis, an aquatic Coral Snake, and Naja (Boulengerina) annulata, an aquatic cobra, are two other aquatic Elapids though found in fresh water. Both have evolutionary traits similar to the marine Sea Snakes such as eyes towards the top of the head and laterally compressed bodies.

  • @1234j
    @1234j Год назад +13

    This is just excellent! Great information, super presentation. Cheers and thanks from England.

  • @BurchellAtTheWharf
    @BurchellAtTheWharf Год назад +4

    0:59 we got loads of eels though

  • @surrealfarm
    @surrealfarm Год назад +7

    Many years ago, my brother and I were walking on a beach on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica and we saw a snake. I picked it up and tossed it to my brother. He caught it and tossed it back. We did that a few times, then put it back in the water. It wasn't for another 5 years that I learned that we were playing with one of the most venomous snakes on the planet!

  • @djs3957
    @djs3957 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve been watching nature flicks for 45 years. Its rare I don’t know any of the content. Great video!

  • @ricardo68
    @ricardo68 Год назад +9

    I have wondered why I’ve never seen sea snakes kept in public sea aquariums. 😮

  • @fran13r
    @fran13r Год назад +4

    This video was just fantastic, was hooked the whole time.

  • @carlorielmendez6505
    @carlorielmendez6505 Год назад +2

    H. semperi is quite special of the freshwater "sea snakes" that it lives in a lake that is formed by a collapsed volcano (Taal Volcano) approximately 50 kilometers from where I live.
    It's a pretty active volcano, it erupts pretty frequently within the past few years.

  • @knightshade6232
    @knightshade6232 Год назад +17

    Im in the Philippines its that thing that prevents me from enjoying my beach ⛱️ vacation besides sharks,boxjellys,salties & stonefish..😢

    • @angelalewis3645
      @angelalewis3645 Год назад

      😜

    • @helixxia9320
      @helixxia9320 11 месяцев назад +1

      i had a friend who came from the philipines and i said that since it is kind of an island it must been so nice to have almost a beach around your whole country and you could swim in the nice warm water every day after school, but he said he never really swam and doesnt know how to swim good, and neither does his friends. i never knew why not so many swim from their beaches in philipines but this makes sense now if they have all that creatures around

    • @knightshade6232
      @knightshade6232 11 месяцев назад +5

      Yeah 👍 one thing to note at is an average household here rarely go to the beach because it cost too much, worst if your from the mainland who rarely saw the sea, luckily my city is in the bay area so i got to splash at the coast for a while.

    • @NoOne-kx7zs
      @NoOne-kx7zs 6 месяцев назад

      same in india..

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 5 месяцев назад +3

      It’s funny, I’m from the landlocked and semi-arid prairies of Saskatchewan and can swim like a fish. Most Asians I met? Can’t swim to save themselves.

  • @ItsJayCross319
    @ItsJayCross319 Год назад +2

    Ahhhh what a good video on one of my favorite groups of reptiles. I am such a sea snake nerd. I think they are some of the coolest animals on the planet. This is such an easily digestible, thorough deep dive into their biology that includes oodles of fun facts about what makes them special. Incredible work!

    • @andrewfreiji4647
      @andrewfreiji4647 5 месяцев назад +1

      I too am fascinated by sea snakes and all kinds of water snakes. Have you seen one in person

  • @silentglacierfang
    @silentglacierfang 6 месяцев назад +1

    1:58, correction here of a species name. It is Laticauda *_crockeri,_* not cockeri, also known as Crocker's sea snake.

  • @AphidKirby
    @AphidKirby Год назад +8

    Absolutely MINDBLOWN that there is freshwater on top of seas! What!!! There's gotta be other organisms that take advantage of that!

  • @zemlidrakona2915
    @zemlidrakona2915 Год назад +2

    I am on vacation in Zanzibar at the moment. I've been snorkeling a lot in front of our hotel. At least 50% of the time I encounter a sea snake. But these don't seem very aggressive. I've come within a meter or so several times and they just ignore me.

  • @metamorphiczeolite
    @metamorphiczeolite 5 месяцев назад +1

    I just learned a bunch of things I didn't know that I didn't know. Thanks, BB Crew!

  • @takenname8053
    @takenname8053 Год назад +2

    Truly a bizarre beast!
    The head to body ratio and freshwater drinking in the ocean were new and surprising to me!

  • @mandibriar9837
    @mandibriar9837 11 месяцев назад +1

    I love this channel- please keep up the good work!

  • @Lohengrin1850
    @Lohengrin1850 Год назад +6

    Thanks for the education on awesome animals, as always! (Also love the Auryn necklace!!)

  • @robrice7246
    @robrice7246 Год назад +11

    Salt-marsh snakes are the closest you may get to marine snakes in the Atlantic (especially since they're live bearers).
    If they were to occur, it's mostly from human introductions (directly or indirectly via cargo ships).

  • @akjarni
    @akjarni Год назад +5

    I love your Auryn! I have a big one on my shelf that the pins will go great with!

  • @BBBrasil
    @BBBrasil Год назад +1

    Oceanic fresh water oasis, like it.
    One of those things that sound obvious once you think about, but on our own we would never think about.
    Thinking about Polynesian sailors, they might have used this, too, for pathfinding.

  • @bazra19
    @bazra19 6 месяцев назад +1

    You have just received my award for the best dressed presenter on RUclips. Thank you for starting my day off on a high note.

  • @BizarreBeasts
    @BizarreBeasts  Год назад +7

    Join the Bizarre Beasts pin club to get your sea snake pin and keep getting pins every month! complexly.store/products/bizarre-beasts-pin-subscription
    And get the sea snake patch here! complexly.store/products/sea-snake-patch

  • @Romanticoutlaw
    @Romanticoutlaw Год назад +4

    wow, the giant ship worm was a thing I didn't know existed, and was happier not knowing

  • @KxNOxUTA
    @KxNOxUTA 11 месяцев назад

    This is indeed absolutely bizarr and fascinating. I know a lot about animals but all of this was new to me! How cool!

  • @Hushpuppysox
    @Hushpuppysox Год назад +2

    This was a cool video i just figured it was too cold but didn't realize the cold water was being brought up by a current. Also Sarah where did you get your top at for this video? It's so cool!

  • @jaiward4869
    @jaiward4869 Год назад +1

    Okay so I live in Barbados, an island in the Atlantic Ocean, East of the Caribbean. I've seen yellow bellied sea snakes twice while snorkeling here, and i know other people who have seen them. How exactly do you explain that?

    • @Arri7979
      @Arri7979 Год назад

      Yeah, I'm from South Florida and we have water moccasins in the Atlantic Ocean, eastern coast, part of the state. There are definitely snakes in the water in the Caribbean, but they're probably discussing a specific type of snake in this video. She mentioned a "true sea snake", so maybe what is currently in the Caribbean is something else.

  • @raynac224
    @raynac224 Год назад +1

    so how thick are these lenses of fresh water? If I was stuck at sea and out of water but I had a straw would I be able to suck it off the surface after a heavy down pour?

  • @Tjalve70
    @Tjalve70 Год назад +1

    "The yellow bellied sea snakes don't seem to make it through the Panama Canal either".
    Well, DUH!
    The Panama Canal is a fresh water canal, that has locks. In order to make it through there, the snakes basically have to swim up a river.
    It would have made a lot more sense for them to get through the Suez Canal. Or around South Africa.

  • @AllCanadianReptileGirl
    @AllCanadianReptileGirl Год назад +3

    Sea snakes and sea kraits are so cool. So many cool adaptations!

  • @janzei
    @janzei Год назад +3

    I live near the sea in the Philippines and I sometimes see sea snakes, atleast they’re not aggressive

  • @pauljordan7465
    @pauljordan7465 9 месяцев назад

    Many seasnakes are in Broome WA. Ihave seen them. They are very inquisitive but not aggressive. Very common. Fangs are short. Extremely rare to be bitten

  • @Vanguardkl
    @Vanguardkl Год назад

    This is an absolutely fascinating video I've learned 5 new things watching this, I'm 36 and watch hours of different things everyday so yea this is really great work

  • @thedude7319
    @thedude7319 Год назад +4

    Is sea really a misnomer when you have 60 species but only 4 that also can be found in fresh ? Seems like a stretch

  • @LiveActionKimPossibleRufus
    @LiveActionKimPossibleRufus 2 месяца назад +1

    4:34 I can not stree how much I do NOT want to do that

  • @ryangonzalez3225
    @ryangonzalez3225 6 месяцев назад +1

    Now I know one thing I can do that forever change the world. To think less than a day's drive across Panama you could change history...

  • @kyliegangwish17
    @kyliegangwish17 Год назад +3

    That opening line was 🤌🏻🤌🏻😂

  • @carto4028
    @carto4028 6 месяцев назад +1

    Our ocean was once dominated by reptiles, i find the ones still around to be fascinating. Last holdouts of a long standing tradition.

  • @toastnjam7384
    @toastnjam7384 Год назад +5

    When I was in the Gulf of Tonkin with the Navy the water was churning with sea snakes as far as the eye could see. It was like a horror movie.

  • @BryanBradley-vm1jp
    @BryanBradley-vm1jp 6 месяцев назад +1

    Well that was a nice run...
    Flordida man: Hold my beer...

  • @TonyCasamassima
    @TonyCasamassima Год назад +2

    Very informative. I had no idea there was even such a thing as sea snakes. Also very easy to watch 👀!

  • @Mars-ev7qg
    @Mars-ev7qg Год назад

    What stops sea snakes from moving into the Red Sea and then through the Suez canal into the Mediterranean sea and eventually through the straight of Gibraltar into the Atlantic Ocean?

  • @drizzlingrose
    @drizzlingrose Год назад

    at 6:32 i was like "Whoaa! thats the same music GoldShawFarm uses in their videos! Neat :D "

  • @bryanbradley6871
    @bryanbradley6871 Год назад +3

    random flordia man: hold my beer

  • @believein1
    @believein1 Год назад +1

    Glad to have found your channel 👏

  • @BruceVial
    @BruceVial 6 месяцев назад

    When we were in st Lucia there was what looked like a few banded sea snakes there, I was pretty confused, we always saw the spotted eel-snake which is an eel. These was 95 or 95

    • @BruceVial
      @BruceVial 6 месяцев назад

      So yeah I’m always confused when people say no sea snakes in the Atlantic but in the Caribbean many have been spotted.

  • @brratata6767
    @brratata6767 Год назад +1

    So living in south caribbean (Curacao) i was seeing eels as a kid thinking they where sea snakes?

  • @1TakoyakiStore
    @1TakoyakiStore Год назад +2

    There's more to it than that. Black Marlin are stopped by the Atlantic side of the Cape of Good Hope, and they do not need to drink fresh water. From what little I've been able to find on the subject it seems that this particular area of the Southern Atlantic is an aquatic dead zone preventing a lot of Indo-Pacific species from establishing populations in the Atlantic.
    While we are on the subject of snake mysteries, I would love to know why there are no boas native to Florida?

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Год назад +1

      As said in the video the water temperature will be the bigger problem, the missing rainwater puddles is just the cooler one.

  • @SeanRundell
    @SeanRundell Год назад +3

    Props for the Auryn medallion!

  • @Jham3D
    @Jham3D 6 месяцев назад

    Finally, the algorithm is feeding me the type of content I actually enjoy and learn from. Only took 2+ years 🐍

  • @stuartAF888
    @stuartAF888 Год назад +1

    I love the Ms. Frizzle vibe you’re giving! ❤❤❤

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Год назад +4

    Sea snakes are one of my favorite bizarre beasts

  • @dubbwire3198
    @dubbwire3198 Год назад

    At first I thought that was a stupid question. Then I looked at the range and okaayeee. There are Sea Snakes are in the Carribean as in off Florida right?

  • @CAMacKenzie
    @CAMacKenzie Месяц назад

    Yellow bellied sea snakes are found off the west coast of Mexico, but don't usually get up to California. Don't usually, but, a few times recently, they've been seen here. In 2015 one was found at Oxnard (Ventura County), in 2018 one turned up on the sand at Newport Beach (Orange County, south of Los Angeles County) and in 2019 one was caught in San Diego. I would suspect that this growing presence is due to warming sea temperatures, as the current along the California coast flows down from the north.

  • @mysterium364
    @mysterium364 7 месяцев назад

    Such a peculiar adaptation caused that snake to be one of the most successful snakes ever. Fascinating.

  • @blairesantos5491
    @blairesantos5491 Месяц назад +2

    There are no sea snakes in the Atlantic, until somebody accidentally releases them in our waters like Lion Fish. ._.

  • @ihcfn
    @ihcfn Год назад +2

    Great video, never knew about the thin headed snakes or the lens of fresh water on the surface of the ocean. 👍

  • @rajr1032
    @rajr1032 Год назад

    Great commentary.TIL - no sea snakes in Atlantic Ocean & lens of fresh water over sea water ! Thanks.

  • @erichtomanek4739
    @erichtomanek4739 Год назад +1

    I wonder if a lineage of Sea Snake may evolve into a filter feeder for plankton or krill?
    Maybe grow a layer of blubber to insulate that long and slim body?
    Maybe establish itself over in the rich waters of Antarctica?
    And then become a plaything for the awesome Leopard Seals!

  • @vincentperratore4395
    @vincentperratore4395 Год назад

    I suppose that all of the more dangerous sea snakes, (the ones accoutered with longer fangs), and due to some inherent sort of tidal influence that they instinctively obey, gravitate toward the polar regions when things get a little too hot for them?

  • @reyjur1493
    @reyjur1493 6 месяцев назад

    6:18 Why don't they traverse the Suez Canal?

  • @brianjones3191
    @brianjones3191 Год назад

    Amazing!
    How thick are fresh water lenses?
    Could we use it if we were lost at sea?

  • @dareka9425
    @dareka9425 5 месяцев назад

    We a particular type of snakes that love to swim in the rivers and hunt fish. They have orange and black stripes. They can be confusing considering we also have a couple of other terrestrial snake species that have a similar color scheme.
    A friend who loves fishing bought a boat, painted it like the snake's stripes and named it with the water snake's name. The funny thing is he and his fellow fishing friends are terrified of these snakes. These snakes are attracted to disturbances in the water which is not ideal when my friends were spearfishing. In one occasion, they encountered by a couple of these snakes at their favourite spot. They cut them down only to discover that they were surrounded by countless numbers of these snakes. The unusual number of snakes in one spot definitely puzzled my my friends but when they saw there are specimens that were far larger than they usually encountered...they decided to call it a night.

  • @Jwinius
    @Jwinius Год назад +1

    You forgot to explain why sea snakes have failed to make it to the Atlantic via the Red Sea, the Suez Canal and the Mediterranean. The old theory is that the Red Sea is just too salty for them. However, if they can't get enough fresh water from their food, like desert snakes, and therefore drinking it from the surface is essential for their survival, then they won't find enough of it in the Red Sea because it hardly ever rains there (>9 mm annually).

  • @augustlizabethmoore
    @augustlizabethmoore Год назад +1

    I love your hair! Such a pretty color!!

  • @gracie_cat
    @gracie_cat Год назад +2

    Fantastic episode and shout out to the Neverending Story ouroboros medallion!

  • @daltongalloway
    @daltongalloway 6 месяцев назад

    So if I took a ton of them to the Caribbean would they be able to survive theoretically?

  • @arislopes1924
    @arislopes1924 Год назад

    The Panama Canal has many locks and other safety features I think the thin rivas isthmus that separates the pacific from lake Nicaragua who’s watershed empties into the Caribbean despite being closer to the pacific. The original canal was supposed to be across the Rivas isthmus because of the natural route that already existed, The Canal was never meant to be built in panama originally

  • @bulleyes.btp1601
    @bulleyes.btp1601 8 месяцев назад

    I had a personal experience with a sea snake at Timor Leste as I started to dive. I tried to keep in distance from the sea snake and it did the same thing. Finally, we separated and I decently to 30 meters underwater. It was an odd and scary experience to me.

  • @bcddd214
    @bcddd214 Год назад +2

    I have see a few sea snakes in Miami on a couple of occasions.

  • @samwill7259
    @samwill7259 Год назад

    Imagine being an animal that gets yeeted into the Atlantic by the Panama Canal of all things, literal alien abduction

  • @Marlodrama
    @Marlodrama Год назад

    “I like snakes, i just dont expect them in the water” im sure they dont be expecting us either 🤭

  • @remknightly5222
    @remknightly5222 Год назад

    Really lovely Neverending Story necklace! I adore the video, but I got distracted every time the necklace appeared, it's such an obscure interest.

  • @margaretfulton9676
    @margaretfulton9676 7 месяцев назад

    Sea snakes hurrah! But also that is a damn fine auryn necklace. Someday I'd love to see a Bizarre Beasts about the purple buffalo. Or luck dragons.

  • @reptilez13
    @reptilez13 Год назад +2

    I love sea snakes!!! Well, all snakes lol. Even tho highly venemous, no recorded deaths are on record from any sea snake species (genus hydrophiinae - i think of sea kraits that may differ but i could be wrong, as mainland Kraits have bitten and killed at least a handful of times iirc) Theres some amazing videos of people on one person boats coming across sea snakes, the snake investigating, saying hello, and slither-swimming by lol. Theres so many cool species and variants!! Sizes, colors, etc. Beautiful, amazing animals! Oh and turtle-headed sea snakes are the only non-venemous true elapids. Tho African House Snakes are closely related to Elapids too, tho not considered Elapids.

  • @lucaspagote3042
    @lucaspagote3042 24 дня назад

    I live in brazil and I could swear i once saw what looked a lot like a sea snake, thin slender body with white and black alternating stripes, and swam like a snake, I was diving and saw it go under a rock, I got curious, went there and lifted the rock, and it swam away and I followed for a little bit but it was too fast, looked like a baby snake. Would it be possible for one to live in the atlantic ocean if it was introduced by man?

  • @aozaire2445
    @aozaire2445 Год назад

    Been swimming with these guys every time I go snorkeling. I always seem to catch them pop their heads out of the water to breathe.

  • @CG-xb1kh
    @CG-xb1kh Год назад +1

    This was a really interesting ep!

  • @m.k_dk7622
    @m.k_dk7622 Год назад +1

    I live in the Atlantic Ocean I've seen plenty of sea snakes over here