Phylum Annelida Part 2: Polychaeta (Segmented Marine Worms)

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  • Опубликовано: 24 янв 2025

Комментарии •

  • @Scentillia389
    @Scentillia389 Год назад +27

    The thumbnail is terrifyingly

  • @yourweirdplant
    @yourweirdplant Год назад +4

    Babe wake up, new professor dave video dropped

  • @BlakeSynder-di8hi
    @BlakeSynder-di8hi 6 месяцев назад

    7:49 this is truly facinating.

  • @ournextarc
    @ournextarc Год назад +4

    Okay, who else saw the thumbnail and thought Meshuggah just dropped a new single?

  • @ikarinze
    @ikarinze 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks alot please don't stop the good work 🫂

  • @jomaugar
    @jomaugar 11 месяцев назад

    Great material! Thanks a a lot!

  • @Gman6365
    @Gman6365 Год назад

    At 2:40, did you mean 'crevices' not 'cervices'?

  • @jamieweir645
    @jamieweir645 Год назад +2

    I used to dig these babies up for sea fishing, one of the best fresh baits around. We call them Ragworm over here, or "Raggies" 😁

  • @noswim
    @noswim Год назад +2

    Thanks Dave, another successful explanation!

  • @SkinkUA
    @SkinkUA Год назад +1

    Dave on his way to make a video on every animal ever

  • @FailingFalsely
    @FailingFalsely Год назад

    yo just saw an ad and you were in it. congrats on that.

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Год назад

      Someone else said that. What ad? I’m so confused.

    • @FailingFalsely
      @FailingFalsely Год назад

      I don't remember what it was for but i was watching a scimandan playlist when it popped up.@@ProfessorDaveExplains

    • @FailingFalsely
      @FailingFalsely Год назад

      @@ProfessorDaveExplains found it again it’s 100% your voice and I think your content. Called Chegg I assume you have like partnership with them or something.

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Год назад

      OHHH yeah I did some content for Chegg, I guess they made an ad for it.

    • @FailingFalsely
      @FailingFalsely Год назад

      Well still congrats on that. Also if you google your name you get nothing but James Tour videos and that's hilarious. @@ProfessorDaveExplains

  • @ShadowMeister42
    @ShadowMeister42 Год назад +1

    Hey Dave I know this probably wouldn't be your kind of video but I recently watched a video titled The History of The Entire World... I Guess and I would love to see your reaction to it
    I really do think you'd get a kick out of it
    Anyway just thought I'd throw that out there

    • @Huzaifa3620
      @Huzaifa3620 9 месяцев назад

      Have you forget to add "sir " 😒
      Respect b koi cheez hoti he 🙄

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Год назад

    Wow, another brilliant video! Thanks!

  • @bag2363
    @bag2363 Год назад

    You should make some videos about music theory

  • @billyr2904
    @billyr2904 Год назад

    5:56 this one has a striking resemblance to centipedes, with this being an example of convergent evolution.

    • @justsomenightowl7220
      @justsomenightowl7220 Год назад

      I thought the same thing!

    • @fasbazawllfflen5427
      @fasbazawllfflen5427 8 месяцев назад

      Actually it's not an example of convergent evolution, because this term refers to the convergence of function or structures related to their similarities. Polychaeta have parapodia, while centipedes have legs, and those structures don't have similar function or even structure. But it's very clear that the specimen that you refers is similar to centipedes in shape, but this isn't a case of convergent evolution.

  • @gentlechimera
    @gentlechimera Год назад +1

    Me n the boys learning of the Werms

  • @deadboyzX8
    @deadboyzX8 Год назад

    thank proff dave

  • @xzgames7210
    @xzgames7210 Год назад

    Dave, pls
    Make the playlist about Physical Chemistry
    We need to watch!
    Thanks for this fabulous zoology's video

  • @JS-qk6th
    @JS-qk6th Год назад

    Thank you for your truth speech

  • @lmoral222
    @lmoral222 Год назад

    I love you bro.

  • @Evolved_Skeptic
    @Evolved_Skeptic Год назад

    The more I learn about the evolution & sheer diversity of Life on Earth, the more fascinated I become...
    Many of these wormy critters have body plans going way, way, back to the end of the Ediacaran period, (over 540MYA - predating even the Cambrian Explosion), where their deep burrowing modification of the ocean beds may have helped increase the oxygen content of the water column, thus stimulating the development of greater diversity of complex Life.
    [ en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambrian_substrate_revolution ]
    ~ ~ ~
    I've known about the giant Pompeii Worms (which proliferate near deep sea hydrothermal vents) for decades, yet I never knew that they were closely related to the free swimming, many-setae-ed kind of Polychaete Worms. Pompeii Worms are just so radically different, with the bizarre internal structure (Coelom) replacing pretty much their entire insides with a habitat for symbiotic bacteria (which convert Hydrogen Sulphides, extracted from the hydrothermal vent water, into nutrients).

  • @samanthagrave1964
    @samanthagrave1964 Год назад

    You are incredibly smart

  • @CryptoRoast_0
    @CryptoRoast_0 Год назад

    Come for the flat earth debunks, stay for the natural history.

  • @Naomi.Robertson
    @Naomi.Robertson Год назад

    Hate when the blood worms bite me while using them as bait

  • @uncleanunicorn4571
    @uncleanunicorn4571 Год назад

    My only regret is no discussion of the ancient penis worm, Which was apparently responsible for a mass extinction back in the ediacaran period.

    • @fasbazawllfflen5427
      @fasbazawllfflen5427 8 месяцев назад

      Penis worms are Priapulids from the Priapulida Phylum, quite unrelated to Polychaeta actually.

  • @donchristie420
    @donchristie420 Год назад +2

    I like turtles

  • @barnabasrsnags4828
    @barnabasrsnags4828 Год назад

    Ew worms

    • @Mothobius
      @Mothobius Год назад

      Bro thinks he's something

  • @a.j.infowars7582
    @a.j.infowars7582 Месяц назад

    Eat the mud worm from an oyster 🦪 for good luck 🍀