The Tiny Crustacean With the Oldest Penis

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 337

  • @journeytomicro
    @journeytomicro  2 года назад +38

    GiveWell is matching donations from first-time donors dollar for dollar up to $250. Click on bit.ly/3Igo0sZ to donate and be sure to use the fundraiser code MICROCOSMOS at checkout to make sure your donation gets matched.

    • @PhillipAmthor
      @PhillipAmthor 2 года назад

      Dear journey to the microcosmos team can you please tell us in the next video something about the mass of atoms in the organism? I was searching for the atom mass of single celled organisms and couldnt find anything good.

    • @rezziey4733
      @rezziey4733 2 года назад +1

      Sorry if I missed this but is the ostracod penis in comparison to all the other penises (one observes in the modern day and age) an example of convergent or divergent evolution? I guess them the earliest penises we found doesn't mean all penises come from them but still...
      Penises could be used to map the history of evolution and find the oldest common ancestor of modern animals... Pahllo-Evolutionary Science.

  • @Self-replicating_whatnot
    @Self-replicating_whatnot 2 года назад +430

    Me: "Time to go to sleep"
    Journey to the Microcosmos: "Crustacean dong"
    Me: "Ok, i'm listening"

  • @johnwalters1341
    @johnwalters1341 2 года назад +77

    Most ostracods are indeed tiny, but the one you illustrated at 3:43, Gigantocypris, is the size of a marble. It is a mesopelagic species with enormous eyes which show up well in your illustration. A nifty animal.

    • @jamesharrell4360
      @jamesharrell4360 2 года назад +3

      Tell me more papi

    • @sulien6835
      @sulien6835 2 года назад +5

      @@jamesharrell4360 It swims by rowing its antennae and have eyes more sensitive to light than any other animal despite living too deep for sunlight to penetrate because they hunt for bioluminescent prey.

  • @roneliadelgrange8315
    @roneliadelgrange8315 2 года назад +6

    It was nice to hear Deboki again.

  • @curvingfyre6810
    @curvingfyre6810 Год назад

    They make good pets. Almost unkillable. If they have water, some sort of dirt sand or gravel underneath them, and literally any water plant, they will never stop making new generations. Find the 2mm ones if you can, they're more visible than they seem. Pretty cute too honestly.

  • @pubgmobileesports4890
    @pubgmobileesports4890 2 года назад +7

    So size does matter... My whole dating life was a lie. She will be happier with a Ostracod. bye world

  • @misanthropichumanist4782
    @misanthropichumanist4782 2 года назад +8

    At first, I was surprised that Deboki was narrating this one. Makes sense though!
    Given that she studies biomechanics. Erectile tissue is one of the most interesting structures in nature, isn't it?

  • @vidhimaithani
    @vidhimaithani 2 года назад

    James thank u I love you

  • @TheBigMclargehuge
    @TheBigMclargehuge 2 года назад +3

    Oh I cannot abide this voice.

  • @xslowday6850
    @xslowday6850 2 года назад

    This is something right here

  • @zachadams3492
    @zachadams3492 Год назад

    The Prime Nut

  • @litepaw7
    @litepaw7 2 года назад

    Didn't need to see 5hat title...

  • @terminator499
    @terminator499 2 года назад +149

    My man dumped all of his stat points into the reproduction!

    • @qwertyferix
      @qwertyferix 2 года назад +2

      Hey, I get it.

    • @smileyp4535
      @smileyp4535 2 года назад +1

      Shoulda just gone with charisma and dexterity, doesn't matter how big it is if you know how to use it 😉

    • @LeoMajors
      @LeoMajors 2 года назад +8

      STR: 0 CON: 0 DEX: 0 INT: 0 WIS: 0 CHA: 0 DONG: 99 POOP: 99

  • @ltericdavis2237
    @ltericdavis2237 2 года назад +236

    We had an infestation of these guys in our aerobic digestor. We had a strange film of bubbles on surface and couldn't figure out what was going on. Turn on the microscope and we see that there were so many of these guys their shells formed a layer over the entire surface. James was right, eats everything, and swims in poop.

    • @Ealsante
      @Ealsante 2 года назад +18

      You might want to rejig that last sentence... unless it's true, in which case, poor James and I hope he's doing better now.

    • @jamesharrell4360
      @jamesharrell4360 2 года назад +6

      @@Ealsante as an old man named James, I'm sure he's doing his best and we should love him... Or the work he does... And accept that his housing and fetishes are his, and he doesn't have to come over for holidays. 😏

    • @OwenPrescott
      @OwenPrescott 2 года назад

      The correct scientific term for an infestion of these is a gangbang

    • @ltericdavis2237
      @ltericdavis2237 2 года назад +3

      Well, I think I'm gonna leave the typo in for humor at this point

    • @MARKET_GARDNERI
      @MARKET_GARDNERI Месяц назад

      They have bred like crazy in my fish tanks

  • @deawinter
    @deawinter 2 года назад +138

    The amount of footage you got of that one ostracod circling a grain of sand over, and over, and over, and over again is just hilarious. Look at him go

    • @marsar1775
      @marsar1775 2 года назад +5

      Living his best life

    • @chadcuckproducer1037
      @chadcuckproducer1037 2 года назад +3

      Stewing and poop bigotry and ignorance since it doesn't know sex is a social construct.

    • @corbeaudejugement
      @corbeaudejugement Год назад

      ​@@chadcuckproducer1037 what

  • @n1cknamed
    @n1cknamed 2 года назад +138

    How am I supposed to ignore a title as intriguing as this one?

  • @FusionDeveloper
    @FusionDeveloper 2 года назад +168

    They are good if you are growing plants in water and need something to consume stuff to create fertilizer for the plant roots. (aqua-culture).

    • @glidershower
      @glidershower 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the tip! 👍

    • @ericcolella6484
      @ericcolella6484 2 года назад +2

      wonder if it work with growing cannabis, i know they have used fish in aquaponics

    • @FusionDeveloper
      @FusionDeveloper 2 года назад +2

      @@ericcolella6484 I'm sure it would be great. Deep Water Culture (DWC) is a sterile alternative. All you need is a 5 gallon bucket, a very strong basket filled with very heavy material for the roots to anchor into (so it doesn't get top heavy and fall over) and most importantly, water a simple airstone on an aquarium pump.
      I had done some aqua-ponics with some random invasive vine I found outside and the roots it grew and the speed of the root growth was INSANE.
      Unfortunately, the water started to stink, so i dumped it out.

  • @procrastinator99
    @procrastinator99 2 года назад +369

    I'm 34 years old. Nearly 35, and I'm reasonably sure I will never be mature enough NOT to giggle like a child at the word hemipene. That's just..... hilarious.

    • @philtkaswahl2124
      @philtkaswahl2124 2 года назад +42

      Reaching your 30s is when you realize and accept you never matured beyond adolesence.

    • @johnwalters1341
      @johnwalters1341 2 года назад +20

      Snakes have hemipenes, too. And the singular is "hemipenis."

    • @qzbnyv
      @qzbnyv 2 года назад +3

      37 and right there with you

    • @procrastinator99
      @procrastinator99 2 года назад

      @@johnwalters1341 That doesn't make any sense at all. The plural for penis is penises. Why would the plural for hemipenis be hemipenes?

    • @johnwalters1341
      @johnwalters1341 2 года назад +12

      @@procrastinator99 The plural for penis is penises--in English. In Latin it's penes.

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage 2 года назад +59

    "Um... Dad? Am I allowed to watch this one?"
    -My youngest daughter, after reading the thumbnail

    • @qwertyferix
      @qwertyferix 2 года назад +6

      Was she?

    • @EvilBandeez
      @EvilBandeez 2 года назад +4

      If she did, she is probably scarred for life.

    • @nagydoesstuff
      @nagydoesstuff 2 года назад

      @@EvilBandeez ayo a cell lab player

    • @EvilBandeez
      @EvilBandeez 2 года назад

      @@nagydoesstuff I am indeed

    • @nagydoesstuff
      @nagydoesstuff 2 года назад

      @@EvilBandeez same 💀

  • @oshikiri999
    @oshikiri999 2 года назад +166

    I've been searching 30 years to the answer of this, one of life's most meaningful questions: "what's the oldest peepee?"

    • @vishwakumar2864
      @vishwakumar2864 2 года назад +5

      Oldest "fossilized" peepee 😁

    • @oshikiri999
      @oshikiri999 2 года назад +2

      @@vishwakumar2864 😂😂😂

    • @vishwakumar2864
      @vishwakumar2864 2 года назад +3

      @@oshikiri999 I forgot to add "known" 😅😂

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 2 года назад +21

    This is one notification title that I thought I would never see in youtube!

  • @FusionDeveloper
    @FusionDeveloper 2 года назад +64

    I was hoping this would be more about ostracods and less about their reproductive organs.
    Maybe we can get a part 2, about their lifecycle, favorable and unfavorable habitat conditions, preferred foods, things they won't eat and so on.
    I know other people have established this information, but I would like to see what SciShow/microcosmos would contribute.

    • @AGDinCA
      @AGDinCA 2 года назад +12

      To be fair, the title card says "Giant Genitals," soooo...

    • @adfaklsdjf
      @adfaklsdjf 2 года назад +1

      I had nearly replied to register my disagreement--that I'm not that interested in more detail on that other stuff than was already presented--but had decided "nah, I'll leave it alone". Then I came across another post by you which seems to indicate you already know all that stuff. These guys strike me as pretty uninteresting besides the weird genitals/reproductive stuff... but hey that's me.. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @FusionDeveloper
      @FusionDeveloper 2 года назад +4

      ​@@adfaklsdjf
      Ostracods by themselves, are not incredibly awesome, but when combined with copepods, rams-horn snails, pond snails, aquatic detritus worms, tubifex worms, limpets, algae, some under-water aquatic plants and other small organisms, along with a sponge filter, it becomes quite an entertaining thing to watch and is very stable and low maintenance.
      Therefore, knowing as much as possible about each organism, can help create a more optimum "bucket pond" type of aquarium, where there is always a lot of things moving around 24/7 and very responsive to feeding.

  • @JusNoBS420
    @JusNoBS420 2 года назад +29

    The title got me 😂
    Figures Hank was not the narrator on this one 😝

  • @DavidKutzler
    @DavidKutzler 2 года назад +20

    Sooooo... Are the two halves of the ostracod shell called "cod pieces?"

    • @mikagami69
      @mikagami69 2 года назад

      Super-underrated comment

  • @Aziracelsus
    @Aziracelsus 2 года назад +19

    the philosophical question of whether evolution is "worth it" is very interesting--but I think it's misleading to frame the genetic shifts of a species as "choices". an ostracod doesn't "decide" to be mostly reproductive organ, it's that way due to genetic and environmental factors. and the proliferation of a genetic trait within a species does point to reproductive success, at least in a short-term sense. if those mutations also lead to lower lifespans and survival rates, then the fascinating see-saw of evolution begins; some species and mutations will reach a survivable balance, and some will disappear.

    • @marsbron767
      @marsbron767 2 года назад +3

      Another factor not considered or mentioned at least is that some of those species may have been outcompeted by other ostracod species but may have still been similar enough to breed successfully with each other, which may be more like assimilation than outright extinction for some of the species. If their evolutionary strategies overall were in a wrong or unhelpful direction they would not have as a whole existed for 450+ million years

    • @Aziracelsus
      @Aziracelsus 2 года назад +3

      @@marsbron767 yes! evolutionary biology is so complex and fun tbh

  • @Prophet016
    @Prophet016 2 года назад +36

    Ostracods are one of my favorite invertebrates! Ever since I got a call from a friend about some bugs that turned out to be ostracods inside an aquarium I've been so interested in how they can seemingly turn up everywhere and survive just about anything!

    • @riverAmazonNZ
      @riverAmazonNZ 2 года назад +5

      You can keep them in a jar with some pond mud and live plants! They’re adorable. You can watch them with a lens.

  • @1TakoyakiStore
    @1TakoyakiStore 2 года назад +12

    Hank: Look what I found!
    James: Oh a floating sperm.
    Hank: Wait what???

  • @mattparker7932
    @mattparker7932 2 года назад +19

    James’ quote among other things had me laughing at this one a lot. Well done.

  • @viewsandrates
    @viewsandrates 2 года назад +3

    "Is it worth it? Let me work it
    I put my thang down, flip it and reverse it
    Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i
    Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i
    If you got a big, let me search ya
    To find out how hard I gotta work ya
    Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i
    Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i
    Come on!" -Some Ostracod, circa early mesozoic era

  • @Ateesh6782
    @Ateesh6782 2 года назад +32

    “with a long… history” - I caught that playful intonation there… ;) 🤣🤣🤣 - Fantastic job again. Thanks!

  • @Babirusacurl
    @Babirusacurl 2 года назад +9

    THEY ARE SO CUTE IM CRYING.
    THEIR LITTLE LEGS PLEASE😭

  • @lahayestudiofrqc8708
    @lahayestudiofrqc8708 2 года назад +9

    Wow Hank! Your voice on this new microphone is so suave! 🤣🤣

  • @ahmedelshafey7602
    @ahmedelshafey7602 2 года назад +4

    Ostracod enters ...
    Other microbiology: oh, we are fu**ed, LITERALLY.

  • @kimoloyola4574
    @kimoloyola4574 2 года назад +35

    “The large, muscular sperm pump”. Huh, reminds me of someone

    • @JusNoBS420
      @JusNoBS420 2 года назад +6

      Ostracod scientists say eh…lol

    • @froggystyle642
      @froggystyle642 2 года назад +3

      Have we met?

    • @robinchesterfield42
      @robinchesterfield42 2 года назад +2

      I was gonna say, that sounds like it could be someone's..."adult fun-times films" name. Except it's a little long.
      (...and that's what she said ("she" being a female ostracod), of course.)

    • @sahb8091
      @sahb8091 2 года назад

      I swam and dove competitively as a young man, and during a gala in Latin America, when I was up on that diving board, feeling stiff and exposed in my Speedos, people began chanting 'Colymbosathon Ecplecticos!'. I didn't know what it meant then, but I felt empowered and encouraged. I truly miss those days.

  • @DUCKDUDE4100
    @DUCKDUDE4100 2 года назад +12

    "Hemipeenies" I'm dying of laughter! Best mispronounciation(?) ever, 10/10.

  • @MoisesCaster
    @MoisesCaster 2 года назад +8

    It's bigger than mine.

  • @JusNoBS420
    @JusNoBS420 2 года назад +8

    Ostracod was my nickname in College 🤥

    • @technopoptart
      @technopoptart 2 года назад

      ah, so you were small, hairy and tended to go about your day covered in your own poop?

  • @christopherbrand5360
    @christopherbrand5360 2 года назад +5

    Something about an ostracodpiece…

  • @crylune
    @crylune 2 года назад +10

    This is quickly becoming my favorite channel. I've discovered James' original "Single-celled Organism Dies" video a week ago, at about 1 AM, and it made me think for a good half hour about what death is. I then looked that phrase up and stumbled upon your "This ciliate is about to die video". Only binged videos from there, stood up all night. Great work guys.

    • @ivytarablair
      @ivytarablair 2 года назад

      i think i've watched 'This ciliate is about to die' more than any other single video on this channel...it's beautiful, beautifully narrated, beautifully written...just an amazing episode

    • @zosoart
      @zosoart 2 года назад

      I am on exactly the same journey progression as you! And here we both are, learning and curious 😊

  • @jasepoag8930
    @jasepoag8930 2 года назад +18

    Great, now even a 2mm clam shrimp hybrid is making me feel inadequate.

  • @leggomygopro8219
    @leggomygopro8219 2 года назад +7

    Those poor lonely, hairy, poopy Lima Beans !!

  • @JustOneAsbesto
    @JustOneAsbesto 2 года назад +7

    It must be worth it if they've been around for 450 million years.

  • @huraqan3761
    @huraqan3761 2 года назад +3

    You guys must have had this request before, but is there any way to show us Sars coV2 through your incredible imagery?

    • @huraqan3761
      @huraqan3761 2 года назад

      @@captainskeptical2326 damn :/

  • @CONGTHEGUERILLA
    @CONGTHEGUERILLA 2 года назад +3

    2:49 what a coincidence that’s also what your mother calls me

    • @sofvalauren
      @sofvalauren 2 года назад +1

      Yes, and that it's microscopic. 🤣

  • @mizomint4197
    @mizomint4197 2 года назад +2

    You guys should leave a cup with coke in it or any soda out on the counter for a week and then look at the bacterial blobs that form in the soda. Do different sodas form different bacterial colonies?

  • @mundomicroscopico-microsco4830
    @mundomicroscopico-microsco4830 2 года назад +4

    Spore game in real

  • @bluebeeboo
    @bluebeeboo 2 года назад +3

    7:24 Lowkey thought the narrator would say "a remarkably well-preserved animal with a long 'penis' ", again.

  • @bcdm999
    @bcdm999 2 года назад +3

    Wait, I'm confused. The ostracod can get up to 2mm in length...but its sperm can get up to 10mm? 3:30

    • @Aereto
      @Aereto 2 года назад +1

      There's length, but don't forget the width and height.

    • @Candesce
      @Candesce 2 года назад

      Well, you're probably between 1.6m and 2m in height, but have something like 8m of intestines.

    • @mikagami69
      @mikagami69 2 года назад

      3 dimensions are harder than an Ostracod's dick.

  • @froggystyle642
    @froggystyle642 2 года назад +17

    B I G N U T
    yes, I'm a child, and I'm 29. It's never not going to be funny.

  • @CMZneu
    @CMZneu 2 года назад +2

    What am i looking at? where is the penis or sperm? are those legs? is that the shell? which one is the male and female? how do they swim? do they have eyes? so many questions, usually you guys explains things pretty well, what happened?

  • @FusionDeveloper
    @FusionDeveloper 2 года назад +32

    I guess this is more of a channel for viewing and identifying and less about raising at pets.
    A while back, I collected some pond water and saw them and got help identifying them.
    I thought I wanted regular small shrimp, but I found out that ostracods are a better option for little "bucket ponds", because they are lower on the food chain and can thrive in conditions that actual shrimp can't survive in.
    One thing I should mention is that if you go somewhere and find them, don't expect to be able to go to that location year-round and find them.
    Make some sort of note about the date and time of day you find them. Weather conditions can also be helpful if you want to document that.
    I went to a pond and they were everywhere. It was impossible to collect water without collecting them. I went maybe 2 months later (i don't know the time frame) to get more and there were none at all.
    Ostracods seem to prefer to stay near the surface of the water, where they can hide within duckweed, azzola, algae and other dense plant material, but they aren't in any way restricted to that area.
    A problem I had with them, is that they would end up getting stuck above the waterline, to the side of my aquarium. There is probably something simple that could be done to prevent that from happening. Maybe aerate the water in a way that doesn't create bubbles in the area of the ostracods.

  • @paleodan
    @paleodan 2 года назад +2

    Love the idea that selection for sexual dimorphism doesn’t give a damn about species survival. Short term gain over long term sustainability is so typical.

    • @patchoulidaze7193
      @patchoulidaze7193 2 года назад +1

      Cause evolution/selection is horribly inefficient.

  • @funnygrunt_o7
    @funnygrunt_o7 2 года назад +4

    Yep. I did read that correctly 😂

  • @kayskreed
    @kayskreed 2 года назад +1

    "Is it worth it?" is quite the philosophical question is it not? I guess it depends what the goal is, the person you ask, etc.
    Perhaps it benefits the individual more than species itself, or perhaps the opposite. But then again nearly species eventually go extinct. To reproduce in order to survive? And to survive for a time only to inevitably vanish? Someday life will no longer exist on this planet in any form. So was it worth it? Was any of it _truly_ worth it? Was is the purpose of it all? Or maybe there was none?
    Anyway, it's best not to fret too much. Wield those pp proudly you lil' chad crustaceans! xD

  • @lancejobs
    @lancejobs 2 года назад +2

    No microbe kink shaming ok you'll?!

  • @Ole_Rasmussen
    @Ole_Rasmussen 2 года назад +4

    Giant and old? It could be any one of us!

  • @ashleysmith9516
    @ashleysmith9516 2 года назад +1

    Just an FYI: direct mutual aid works better than charities. There's no pimp. Just money right to those who need it. Ask your neighbors if they're ok too.

  • @Pants4096
    @Pants4096 2 года назад +1

    I can't help but feel slightly judged as the female narrator discusses whether penises are worth it. ◡̈

  • @brianlee4811
    @brianlee4811 2 года назад +3

    Guess I need to delete my History after I watch this one! 😂 Fascinating!

  • @thefirstofthelast1181
    @thefirstofthelast1181 2 года назад +2

    You guys were my inspiration to order a nice swift microscope, your work is absolutely incredible and, in my opinion, undeniably important for public education into a criminally unknown science!

  • @fartzinwind
    @fartzinwind 2 года назад +1

    So BDE can be great for an individual, but maybe not so much for a species... tee hee

  • @clairejeansonne9800
    @clairejeansonne9800 2 года назад +1

    Comments for the algorithm, also known as "the large, muscular sperm pump".

  • @davidfromamerica1871
    @davidfromamerica1871 2 года назад +1

    My ancient ancestors were microbes 🦠
    Yes, that is my family tree. 😀👍🤗😎

  • @bro6568
    @bro6568 2 года назад +1

    Colymbosathon ecplecticos is my nickname too funnily enough.. 😂

  • @tariqhamid6864
    @tariqhamid6864 2 года назад +3

    Congrats on 600k🥳🥳

  • @sahb8091
    @sahb8091 2 года назад +5

    This really stirred up some memories. I swam and dove competitively as a young man, and during a gala in Latin America, when I was up on that diving board, feeling stiff and exposed in my Speedos, people began chanting 'Colymbosathon Ecplecticos!'. I didn't know what it meant then, but I felt empowered and encouraged. I truly miss those days; thank you for the memories.

  • @DKmintz81
    @DKmintz81 2 года назад +2

    Your videos popped up in my feed and loved them! My understanding of a single cell organism at that point was a blob of gunk with a dot in the middle surrounded by a wall or film. I could not understand for the life of me what the wriggly bits were (Flagella) and that has sent me on a 3 day binge of learning! Proteins have now captured my imagination and I will be looking into these a lot more. I am absolutely fascinated, and it's all thanks to you fine folks at Journey to the Microcosmis.

  • @inquaanate2393
    @inquaanate2393 2 года назад +2

    Tasteful thickness.

  • @Andre-qo5ek
    @Andre-qo5ek 2 года назад +3

    Ostracod ... aka, water humans ( regarding eating and pooping till nothing is left in their environment)

  • @Orion_280
    @Orion_280 2 года назад +4

    Hungstacean

    • @mikagami69
      @mikagami69 2 года назад

      I love that Google is asking if I want this translated to English rofl

  • @paulmetdebbie447
    @paulmetdebbie447 2 года назад +1

    Is it worth it? Is the wrong question. The only question is: does it work, did it improve survival? Apparently it did.

  • @etcetera1129
    @etcetera1129 2 года назад +1

    I’m wondering when the first STD developed and if there are any known examples fore Ostracods

  • @1.4142
    @1.4142 2 года назад +1

    Fun fact: ostracods can survive being eaten alive and even bring down worms and fish, attacking the weakest parts of the animals. During a night dive in Panama, a diver's ears, hair and beard were covered with ostracods, forcing him out of the water.

  • @peterlewerin4213
    @peterlewerin4213 2 года назад +2

    An interesting reminder that the (considerable) enjoyment value of watching these things is still only one part of it. The microscopic fauna puts some biological issues right at the table for studying and are also often easily comparable to fossilised specimens. While a bunch of bones from the Permian might tell us something about questions we have today, provided we interpret them right, animals like these speak clearly.

  • @discosteffn
    @discosteffn 2 года назад +1

    I am right now exactly 3 minutes into the video and am already laughing out loud while thinking about the comment section.

    • @discosteffn
      @discosteffn 2 года назад

      Like... What will I learn more about? Ostracods or human behaviour? :D

  • @enigmagrieshaber5555
    @enigmagrieshaber5555 2 года назад +1

    Don't let anime illustrators to have this knowledge

  • @petrairene
    @petrairene 2 года назад +2

    Wow, this thing is CUTE!

  • @chrisprescott2273
    @chrisprescott2273 2 года назад +1

    Anybody else think this looks a little like a baby metroid?

  • @Zappygunshot
    @Zappygunshot 21 день назад

    A 10mm sperm cell means that it's 5x as long as the longest ostracods. Imagine pulling out a 9m long worm and- actually nevermind, don't. It's not worth it.

  • @Dr.GeoDave
    @Dr.GeoDave 2 года назад

    Brought a smile to me; I did my Master’s on Ostracode morphology and shape analysis of a species. Thanks for the video.

  • @AceTheBlue
    @AceTheBlue 2 года назад +2

    Shocking title aside, am I the only person who thinks these guys look like Metroids?

  • @Nyadlabaoth
    @Nyadlabaoth 2 года назад +1

    heavy is the pelvis that wears the (huge) meat

  • @glidershower
    @glidershower 2 года назад

    Even Nature is trying to comfort mankind by saying: _"See, dude, it's not the size what matters but what you do with it; at least you're not swimming in your own excrement...well, unless you live in Baltimore, but I digress."_

  • @OwenPrescott
    @OwenPrescott 2 года назад

    AstoundingSwimmerWithALargePenis is going to be my next username

  • @fltchr4449
    @fltchr4449 2 года назад +1

    My question is what about the DNA? A species is really just a carrier for DNA. Good fitness here I think can be determined by a continuous line of DNA even if the species it creates changes. Or perhaps there is a strong family of DNA here that has a tendency to develop sexual dimorphism. While the more dimorphically pronounced examples (species wise) are more fragile, the DNA with this tendency is, for whatever reason, more robust.

  • @dandavatsdasa8345
    @dandavatsdasa8345 2 года назад

    Interesting!
    What might the perfect balance be between more Sexuality and less Sexuality for the sake of perpetuating the species?
    Is there anything more that can be learned from this species?
    Thank you for sharing informative videos!

  • @gfyourself
    @gfyourself 2 года назад +3

    new narrator has a very nice voice! i wasn't sure about her in the first few seconds but she's got a super calming voice. i like it

  • @brokebloke5834
    @brokebloke5834 2 года назад +3

    Love these videos

  • @abdulmuminiali7897
    @abdulmuminiali7897 2 года назад

    I will never forget the day I came across dr igho on RUclips channel I will always keep it memorable, thank you doctor for giving me my deserved inches naturally, in you, I hope to leave again because am more Enhanced!

  • @snizkouk8177
    @snizkouk8177 2 года назад

    Kinda annoying the same yellow glob is the ONLY thing that u can see in this video 98% of the time!!! BORING 😴

  • @SudaNIm103
    @SudaNIm103 2 года назад +1

    I've not read the 2018 study but I find it a bit bunk as described. The evolution of a species isn't a coordinated affair; it is the organism's genes vying for survival. The gene’s in favor of significant investments in sexual reproduction are pressing for their own survival not the long-term stability of a particular species or phenotype. Gene lines can and often will have many terminal paths, but as long as some lineages live on they continue to be successful.

  • @qzbnyv
    @qzbnyv 2 года назад

    I haven’t watched this season so far as life has been very hectic, but I felt like I had to click on this video to offset RUclips’s likely penile-ising of this video due to the naughty words associated with it.

  • @kiraPh1234k
    @kiraPh1234k 2 года назад

    The question is dumb, no offense.
    Obviously its worth it, or ir wouldn't be so successful. Success literally defines what is "worth"

  • @gretagreebling
    @gretagreebling 2 года назад

    You could say that they were at the forefront of the animal kingdom's
    "Sexual Evolution" (ehehehehe).

  • @Jezus667
    @Jezus667 2 года назад +1

    An absolute mastery of the clickbait title/thumbnail combo

  • @blehmeh2566
    @blehmeh2566 2 года назад +3

    i love deboki’s narration. hoping it becomes a regular thing!

  • @acerockman3520
    @acerockman3520 2 года назад +2

    5:12 this is nightmare fuel, it looks like a head with claws 🦞

  • @asnaghall
    @asnaghall 2 года назад

    it seems like to me the study on extinct ostracod sexual dimorphism came to the wrong conclusion. the species with less dimorphism have stagnated, whereas the only conclusion you can come to with the highly dimorphic species, is that different lineages crop up and die off constantly. that says to me that they have a higher rate of evolution, which would make sense if they were more invested in sexual reproduction.
    a higher rate of speciation would also mean that older forms would stop showing up in the fossil record, as they are replaced by newer ones. that seems far more advantageous to me

  • @Heinskitz
    @Heinskitz 2 года назад

    It probably goes without saying that the age-old dispute of the existence of *"Hemipenes Envy"* has not been put to rest.

  • @stephaniemilitaryprotozoa6131
    @stephaniemilitaryprotozoa6131 2 года назад

    Good and fascinating video i love ostracods🦠🦠🐚 They look like hairy potatoes