You would wonder how something could be there all that time without being noticed because there's not many places on earth that humans haven't set their foot in so it is astonishing that there's so many undiscovered species
People still notice bugs they've never seen before living in their own backyard, there's absolutely no way to see every single thing living in an area even if we've gone to a place multiple times there will almost certainly be something that didn't get noticed because it's so small or someone thought it was just something else we've already seen and ignored it. If you notice most of the things in this video are either tiny, look like something we already know exists or is deep in the ocean. At this point in human history scientists and biologists have stopped saying things like "I imagine we've discovered everything there is to discover." Because every time one of them has said it we've gone on to find So Many more things that they now just assume there's always something new to discover. 😄👍
Actually 50% of all land on Earth has not been stepped foot on or seen. Sure we have seen it all from up above but most of it is hidden underneath the canopy of the jungle
@@deathsnitemaresinfullust2269 also some of the bigger creatures that have yet to be discovered are just Really shy and have been able to nail avoiding being spotted by us
Because the people who see them all the time, believe they are already well known and the zoologists who'd know, don't see them. (Or also believe they are known because no scientists knows every known species even in their specialty area, unless it's a genus of which only a handful of species are known)
@JustYourAverageSadGuy OnTheInternet Did I tell him he was wrong? I just stated a fact, and maybe the original commentor could tell me more of their story if they were so inclined. Memories aren't the most reliable thing, to be honest, and this could simply be a case of misidentification. So if this person has anything to say about my comment, it's for them to say, not you. You have nothing to add to the coversation.
Juney Shu, I absolutely agree with you! So many extraordinary creatures live there, yet we keep encroaching on their already small territory. If we don't act NOW, we can say goodbye to many more species! That would be terrible. We're supposed to be the caretakers of this incredible planet, why are we exploiting so much of it instead? Maybe all of us who really care, could get together and send petitions to the right people. Who would be the best to do something positive about it? The World Wildlife Federation, or does anyone have a good suggestion?
@@marcellepesek3038 Please... we are not caretakes, we are just another part of the ecosystem We are instinctual like all animals and thus we are not above everything else but just another part We cant even take care of our own species due to this fact
When you introduce new species to a closed environment, like an island it often results in either the collapse of the ecology or at least the death of many species. .
Success is not built on success. It's built on failure, It's built on fraustration. it's built on fear that you have to overcome. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life
This guy is one of my favorite narrators. When I first heard him the way he talked made me think sounded less than very intelligent, but it didn't take long to see that not only is he excellent at narration but he also has impeccable comic timing. I realize he most likely has great writers but his delivery is flawless. I hope he stays with this channel, between the excellent content, great writing and the unique comments this is one of the channels I most look forward to watching each upload.
Fun fact: The bird of paradise is found in the country of Papua New Guinea, which has over 1000 new species of plants and animals. It is also well known for having over a third of the worlds languages and cultures numbering up to over 850
Great video A piece of advice, as a biologist, i would recommend you to look for some species in the Indian subcontinent, India has a great biodiversity with different types of ecosystems, so you might find something very intersting here
I'm in the center plain part of Madagascar and I bet I have seen pelikan spiders more times than not when I was a kid. Those creepy insects exist in here and they're not that rare of a species. I was not aware of their venomous aspect though😨
I think the siphonophore is a good look into how the many species of animal and plant came to exist in the first place. This is evolution before our very eyes.
When l saw the thumbnail for the Greater Glider l thought it must be fake. But now l am convinced it must be an unbelievably cute animal that actually exists. *WHAT IS BEING DONE TO ENSURE THIS TREASURE DOES NOT FOLLOW the TASMANIAN TIGER into OBLIVION?*
You think that's the longest living thing, you should check out the tree fields where all the trees there are all connected by their root systems somehow so that beats anything found on land or in the sea!
This is gonna sound weird but I feel like I've seen one of those spiders when I was a kid. Oddly enough in Pennsylvania. I know it was probably something else but it looked exactly like the last picture of it. I actually popped it with a stick and a black fluid came out it.
Hey, no fair you forgot the Liturgusa krattorum, a species of praying mantis recently discovered by Dr. Svenson in the Amazon region of South America named after the Kratt brothers themselves a.k.a. the WildKratts Unless you already mentioned that in another video… in that case, never mind
A mate and I found these glow in the dark millipedes about 15 years ago. Since I could never find any info on them, 6 months ago there was a news article on a new insect discovered in Australia, glow in the dark millipedes. I want a millipede named after me.
I should make a clarification for people to understand real quick so people won't get confused. Glass frogs were discovered long before 2022 (back in the 1920s), but the newer species in the videos (Mashpi and Nouns frogs), were discovered in 2022. But they ALL have a sort of transparent look to them, and there have been videos made on them by many nature-themed RUclips channels (such as BraveWilderness, you should check them out 👍)
2:55 I dont remember its name but I first learned about a similar frog from a book (same for 7:00). The book also had a pink centipede, a tarsier with a tail 3x longer than itself, and the T-rex leech. Does anyone know the name of the book (it was released around the 2010s)?
@@pAcoAppu Yeah, it also had a stick bug as long as a man's forearm. I used to have the book before I lost the book a while back. I probably still have it, I just don't remember where it is. You don't by any chance know the book's name, do you?
This is just sad, since scientists said that there's 10% of animals that they discovered, I wonder if there's still animals that we thought extinct still exist...
@@probablysomeguy4806 Interestingly enough, one could be in the bush and a whole herd of elephants could be nearby, but due to the soft pads of their feet, they could suddenly come upon us very unexpectedly. Who knows what else still exists out there? Other animals, like snakes, have amazing camouflage abilities. You could step on one and not realize it until it bites you!
@@marcellepesek3038 walking silently won’t hide large animals for thousands of years while we were recording history. Just look at how the elephant couldn’t hide from us despite their ninja footsteps.
Brookeesia minima has been the smallest chameleon for years and it's still the smallest chameleon from what I have found but they are all from Madagascar and I have a Buddy who does reptile tours in Madagascar and I have been looking into going with him on one of his trips and I think I should take my son lol. Also, the uroplatus leaf tailed geckos are also indigenous to Madagascar and they happen to be my favorite small tank animals!
And also the same thing is that the pet trade knew about the muntjac years before you said that they were discovered lol. I said also because I was saying the same thing about the glass frogs. We knew about them for many years and many of us kept them as pets
I love frogfish. Theyre so cute how they walk. An even cuter "walking" sea creatures is the flamboyant cuttlefish. Theyre tiny and don't use the jet propulsion that other octopodes do, they use their tiny arms and form little legs with them and walk along the ocean floor, hunting little critters for sustainance. Adorable and beautiful and so cute. I love them.
The long strand sea creature made of thousands of individual multicellular organisms is a prime example of the speed of information. Its instant. Whereas light has a limit, information is magically instantaneous.
the ending was so weird like 3 alligators, first on was eaten by huge crustaceans, second went missing, like the whole thing was missing and third was eaten by something till the bone and even after that there were zombie worms eating the bones creepy
You said something wrong. At 01:45 you say "cannibalistically", but cannibalism is eating one's own species. It's eating a different species, so it isn't a cannibal.
I think I saw a tv show talking about how in the next 30 years, millions of small different sea creatures could be found, as less than 30% of the ocean has been explored
I am now convinced... slugs are the most exciting species on earth! Hermaphrodite reproduction, the mating dance of the tiger slug, the inside out digestion-defense, now just when I thought I’ve heard it all about slugs they out do it again and literally regenerate POST beheading!!!! That species knows so much we don’t, we need a show on just slugs...
When he said only 10% of species had been discovered I got scared of what could be out there
The vast majority are just insect, fish in deep sea and very small organism
but how do we know there is another 90%?
Like how can scientists believe we have discovered 10% of species on Earth if we don't know about the other 90% that haven't been discovered?
@@weedb5533 trueee
@Weedb straight fax
The best part about this channel is that he never, EVER clickbaits, and it's educational
Indeed
Indeed
Indeed
Indeed
Indeed
You would wonder how something could be there all that time without being noticed because there's not many places on earth that humans haven't set their foot in so it is astonishing that there's so many undiscovered species
People still notice bugs they've never seen before living in their own backyard, there's absolutely no way to see every single thing living in an area even if we've gone to a place multiple times there will almost certainly be something that didn't get noticed because it's so small or someone thought it was just something else we've already seen and ignored it.
If you notice most of the things in this video are either tiny, look like something we already know exists or is deep in the ocean.
At this point in human history scientists and biologists have stopped saying things like "I imagine we've discovered everything there is to discover." Because every time one of them has said it we've gone on to find So Many more things that they now just assume there's always something new to discover.
😄👍
Actually 50% of all land on Earth has not been stepped foot on or seen. Sure we have seen it all from up above but most of it is hidden underneath the canopy of the jungle
There's hundreds discovered each year
There’s billions of undiscovered organisms in your bellybutton
@@deathsnitemaresinfullust2269 also some of the bigger creatures that have yet to be discovered are just Really shy and have been able to nail avoiding being spotted by us
Growing up in the 90s in Louisiana I remember seeing green glass frogs in the area all the time I thought everyone knew about them.
Because the people who see them all the time, believe they are already well known and the zoologists who'd know, don't see them. (Or also believe they are known because no scientists knows every known species even in their specialty area, unless it's a genus of which only a handful of species are known)
Same🧐
Glass frogs live exclusively in Central and South America. Looking through the lists of frog and toad species in Louisiana, not one is a glass frog.
@@majorasothermask1258sorry but did you grow up with his eyes.
@JustYourAverageSadGuy OnTheInternet Did I tell him he was wrong? I just stated a fact, and maybe the original commentor could tell me more of their story if they were so inclined. Memories aren't the most reliable thing, to be honest, and this could simply be a case of misidentification. So if this person has anything to say about my comment, it's for them to say, not you. You have nothing to add to the coversation.
Madagascar should be some kind of world wildlfe preserve.
Juney Shu, I absolutely agree with you! So many extraordinary creatures live there, yet we keep encroaching on their already small territory. If we don't
act NOW, we can say goodbye to many more species! That would be terrible.
We're supposed to be the caretakers of this incredible planet, why are we
exploiting so much of it instead? Maybe all of us who really care, could get
together and send petitions to the right people. Who would be the best to
do something positive about it? The World Wildlife Federation, or does
anyone have a good suggestion?
@@marcellepesek3038
Please... we are not caretakes, we are just another part of the ecosystem
We are instinctual like all animals and thus we are not above everything else but just another part
We cant even take care of our own species due to this fact
Ž
L
@@marcellepesek3038when were we ever destroying Madagascar?
When you introduce new species to a closed environment, like an island it often results in either the collapse of the ecology or at least the death of many species. .
Success is not built on success. It's built on failure, It's built on fraustration. it's built on fear that you have to overcome. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life
@Carl Garza O' Yes I'm a living testimony of Mrs Victoria Alejandro.!
Victoria has changed my financial status for the best.!
All thanks to my aunty who introduced her to me.!
@lindagomez8344 A friend that I referred to her just received €61,050 profit after 6days of investing..... I became jealous.. Lol.
My first experience with her gave me the assurance that has made me to invest without fear of loosing.
Omg why does BE AMAZED get the point across so well! I love his channel it’s soooo good and I learn so much from it! He is hilarious 😂
Bruh
@@ruqsarfathima5404 bruh
ሠዕሃጠ ጌሁረዪሁዘ
@@bot1bot1official54 ነፕዐየ ነልሃጎክኗ ሀዪሁዘ
@@kaitlincruthers8060 bro is speaking noodles
The thumbnail alone is something so attractive
I watch your videos all the time ( ;
I see monkey
Anxious to see the next compilation of newly/recently discovered species.
This guy is one of my favorite narrators. When I first heard him the way he talked made me think sounded less than very intelligent, but it didn't take long to see that not only is he excellent at narration but he also has impeccable comic timing. I realize he most likely has great writers but his delivery is flawless. I hope he stays with this channel, between the excellent content, great writing and the unique comments this is one of the channels I most look forward to watching each upload.
Same.
i hate when he's not narrating an episode. there's just so much character and humor in his delivery.
which one of these are ??
I feel like that 'helicopter bug' has been around, listed
where is my pasport
Love the videos. How do you manage to get so many out per week
I wonder... he posted 2 in less than half hour today
Be Amazed is a group of people, not just one person and they probably have paid editors. Also, scheduled uploads are a thing.
I wonder too
I saw one of these on a tv show around 3 years ago
They make 12 minute reserche and say half a minute of sensed thing then all bullshit
I'm so glad that the rainforest is being protected!
Fun fact: The bird of paradise is found in the country of Papua New Guinea, which has over 1000 new species of plants and animals. It is also well known for having over a third of the worlds languages and cultures numbering up to over 850
Really
@@pAcoAppu Really
@@Dante_Fr yes
Show off
@@braxtonsizemore6527 It's not show off, people can actually learn from this.
Great video
A piece of advice, as a biologist, i would recommend you to look for some species in the Indian subcontinent, India has a great biodiversity with different types of ecosystems, so you might find something very intersting here
U should, there's some unkown bird here too, many things that's unkown, even some plants
@@General_Halfling unknown*
I'm in the center plain part of Madagascar and I bet I have seen pelikan spiders more times than not when I was a kid. Those creepy insects exist in here and they're not that rare of a species. I was not aware of their venomous aspect though😨
All spiders are venomous, some more than others.
This is my favorite BE AMAZED narrator 👍
That’s so cool. I love nature, though I was cursed with allergies, I still love the flora and fauna of our amazing planet
I think the siphonophore is a good look into how the many species of animal and plant came to exist in the first place. This is evolution before our very eyes.
Best channel on RUclips so far🏆
Respect for all you guys 🙏🏾
Humor: Check
Facts: Check
Edit: Check
Entertainment: Check
Mad respect!!
Cringe comment: Check
@@Norge_1 Pointless hater: Check
U always entertain us ur soo funny keep up the good work❤👍
Thank you, I will!
@@BeAmazed Would love the job of naming new species being discovered . ♑️✍️🇦🇺🇸🇯
Frrrrrr
@@BeAmazed do you have a channel on Rumble?
@@anbernicguy rumble? Is that the name of the little mascot guy?
Helicopter bug: HeLiCoPtEr HeLiCoPtEr
Seeing all these different creatures is super cool. Like the animated character that keeps popping up as well. Did you create it?
When l saw the thumbnail for the Greater Glider l thought it must be fake. But now l am convinced it must be an unbelievably cute animal that actually exists. *WHAT IS BEING DONE TO ENSURE THIS TREASURE DOES NOT FOLLOW the TASMANIAN TIGER into OBLIVION?*
Lol yet not lol
There is a possibility the Tasmanian Tiger is still alive.
How can scientists believe we have discovered 10% of species on Earth if we don't know about the other 90% that haven't been discovered?
They made it up
You think that's the longest living thing, you should check out the tree fields where all the trees there are all connected by their root systems somehow so that beats anything found on land or in the sea!
I still don’t understand how we haven’t yet made any strides in regeneration for humans, based on all these amazing animals.
Amazing video by the way very educational for animal lovers like me
The commentary voice is warm and clear ... Good job
The problem about discovering small animal/insect is.. I'm holding one and I'm not sure if it's venomous or dangerous or not.
I'm AMAZED by this AMAZING BE AMAZED vid🤩
20:49 Am I the only person wondering how well this thing would work for bass fishing?
This is gonna sound weird but I feel like I've seen one of those spiders when I was a kid. Oddly enough in Pennsylvania. I know it was probably something else but it looked exactly like the last picture of it. I actually popped it with a stick and a black fluid came out it.
Irritating sound
@@pAcoAppu irritating face
Duuude, that's awesome
Always a pleasure to watch your videos.
I love Ur videos it's educational and fun so I'm very thankful to u for making these videos ❤️
Hey, no fair you forgot the Liturgusa krattorum, a species of praying mantis recently discovered by Dr. Svenson in the Amazon region of South America named after the Kratt brothers themselves a.k.a. the WildKratts
Unless you already mentioned that in another video… in that case, never mind
Please make this a series
yes
A mate and I found these glow in the dark millipedes about 15 years ago. Since I could never find any info on them, 6 months ago there was a news article on a new insect discovered in Australia, glow in the dark millipedes. I want a millipede named after me.
In 1973 I bought a mini deer from a trapper in Xuân Lộc, Long Khanh, Vietnam. It was 10 to 15 in tall. It lived only three days in captivity.
That Hammer-Headed bat kind of looks like a miniature flying moose TBH.😎
Man I am very addicted to this channel.. great work buddy 😊
The channel WATOP is even better!
i was just waiting for it to come out
Congrats being first!
I should make a clarification for people to understand real quick so people won't get confused.
Glass frogs were discovered long before 2022 (back in the 1920s), but the newer species in the videos (Mashpi and Nouns frogs), were discovered in 2022.
But they ALL have a sort of transparent look to them, and there have been videos made on them by many nature-themed RUclips channels (such as BraveWilderness, you should check them out 👍)
amazing creatures bro
9TH WTF
2:03 "I'd like it move it move it"😂
The pelican spider has to be one of my most favorite spiders
I want one to appear in my house
I find it a little creepy to be honest! Certainly interesting though
@@BeAmazed well they are the only spiders that has a neck so very interesting indeed
my favorite is still one of the danish jumping spiders, they're such little skrunkly gumbles
Good job be amazed today am totally👀😆 entertained by two videos.😄.......from kenya ✌
The pelican spider has unlocked a new fear within me.
"Do you know what geckos are really good at disguising at?" "That's right it's Boeing 737's"
Anyone else want to know what happened to the other alligator?
maybe that's a question best left unanswered...
@@BeAmazed you could be right.
Our planet is just so wonderful, how beautiful and diverse all life is 🌍🌎🌏
2:55 I dont remember its name but I first learned about a similar frog from a book (same for 7:00). The book also had a pink centipede, a tarsier with a tail 3x longer than itself, and the T-rex leech. Does anyone know the name of the book (it was released around the 2010s)?
Really
@@pAcoAppu Yeah, it also had a stick bug as long as a man's forearm. I used to have the book before I lost the book a while back. I probably still have it, I just don't remember where it is. You don't by any chance know the book's name, do you?
@@garrettfairley3401 true fact
@@pAcoAppu I finally found it at my grandma's. It's called Wild Discoveries Wacky New Animals.
You blew me away today, nice job.
Our Lord God's creation is always amazing 😁🙏❤️ stay in faith,we need to save animals from extinction❤🙏
Yep
The description of how zombie worms eat actually reminds me of how fungi consume dead organic matter in a weird way.
This is just sad, since scientists said that there's 10% of animals that they discovered, I wonder if there's still animals that we thought extinct still exist...
Dinosaurs still exist but in the form of chickens
I sure hope so
Only if they’re small. Any huge animals would’ve been found already.
@@probablysomeguy4806 Interestingly enough, one could be in the bush and a whole herd of elephants could be nearby, but due to the soft pads of their feet, they
could suddenly come upon us very unexpectedly. Who knows what else still
exists out there? Other animals, like snakes,
have amazing camouflage abilities. You
could step on one and not realize it until
it bites you!
@@marcellepesek3038 walking silently won’t hide large animals for thousands of years while we were recording history. Just look at how the elephant couldn’t hide from us despite their ninja footsteps.
Brookeesia minima has been the smallest chameleon for years and it's still the smallest chameleon from what I have found but they are all from Madagascar and I have a Buddy who does reptile tours in Madagascar and I have been looking into going with him on one of his trips and I think I should take my son lol. Also, the uroplatus leaf tailed geckos are also indigenous to Madagascar and they happen to be my favorite small tank animals!
Already seems cool and I’m 10 seconds in
Best Videos, extremely educative
Wonder what the hell ripped that second alligator away
All cheers for the diversity of my land, Madagascar
Antonio Adriandafatra, I second that! Three cheers for Madagascar!
We can never be sure that we discovered everything about earth
And also the same thing is that the pet trade knew about the muntjac years before you said that they were discovered lol. I said also because I was saying the same thing about the glass frogs. We knew about them for many years and many of us kept them as pets
Free Andrew Tate
Who's that?
Don’t
@@wastedmindss your a shame for the memes
What is that New species ?
Keep his ass in there😂
2:02 "I'd like to move it move it"
The spider that's been poison:I can't move it move it anymore 😭😭😭
I love frogfish. Theyre so cute how they walk. An even cuter "walking" sea creatures is the flamboyant cuttlefish. Theyre tiny and don't use the jet propulsion that other octopodes do, they use their tiny arms and form little legs with them and walk along the ocean floor, hunting little critters for sustainance. Adorable and beautiful and so cute. I love them.
Dude. That Gump section was totally Worth it. Wonderful video and suddenly, I have a smile on my face. 😂
"A cannibalistic spider that sadistically kills it's prey..." In other words, any species of spider.
I think I like the very last one the zombie bone eaters… Love the humor good editing. I really enjoyed this. Thank you.
Dude the glass frogs were well known among us in the reptile and amphibian pet hobby
This guy has the best voice!
FINALLY a video about new species,!!!! I already new we only new about 10%, I just wanted to see like what kind of new species they are
ze first one scared me but you do make interesting facts everytime keep this up
Him casually simping on animals
The long strand sea creature made of thousands of individual multicellular organisms is a prime example of the speed of information. Its instant. Whereas light has a limit, information is magically instantaneous.
Great content love the channel…That was a interesting video…wow great job guys
You got to MOVE IT! MOVE IT! Thanks for getting that song stuck in my head....
The instant I hear this guy's voice I'm amazed anyone still watches this stuff.
Bro took “HELICOPTER HELICOPTER”
To a whole new level 💀
[the thumb nail]
Great video!
19:41
It's like the Eevee evolution but with bugs.
I’m 12 seconds in and I’m staying like always
Starting 2023 with seeing one of my biggest fears first In the video and screaming and dropping my phone and punching the air: spiders
1:00 is that spooderman?
Your vids make my day
the ending was so weird
like 3 alligators, first on was eaten by huge crustaceans, second went missing, like the whole thing was missing and third was eaten by something till the bone and even after that there were zombie worms eating the bones
creepy
00:01 my friend woke up hung over and found 1 of those things in his underwear, and has been sober now 4 years !
That micro chameleon was absolutely adorable I want one
He's wrong about these creatures we've known about these for a while
@shanechauncey7341 not true. Yes same "class" but not species
The most charming narrator
You said something wrong. At 01:45 you say "cannibalistically", but cannibalism is eating one's own species. It's eating a different species, so it isn't a cannibal.
Nice
Pelican spider?😂 just the looks of it make me laugh
I think I saw a tv show talking about how in the next 30 years, millions of small different sea creatures could be found, as less than 30% of the ocean has been explored
If 10% of the species are discovered? How do they discovered that there are still 90% that were yet to be discovered?
Amazing stuff 😎
FINALLY! The Earth Update! Earth 2.0!
I am now convinced... slugs are the most exciting species on earth! Hermaphrodite reproduction, the mating dance of the tiger slug, the inside out digestion-defense, now just when I thought I’ve heard it all about slugs they out do it again and literally regenerate POST beheading!!!! That species knows so much we don’t, we need a show on just slugs...
I took the shell off of my racing snail, thinking it would make it faster. If anything, it made it more sluggish.
The helicopter, aah, yeah no we actually had them at my backyard in Australia i might think that they may be extinct
Very nice information. Some animals i never seen in my life
Okay, I haven't heard a pun that isn't a groaner, yet, but I still chuckle. Fun stuff!