Inside Insect Nests

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 апр 2017
  • Insects have the coolest houses! This is an ode to a few of the most amazing architects in the invertebrate world.
    We have a Newsletter! Check out our latest: bit.ly/2pYZA21
    Field Museum artist Peggy MacNamara has a beautiful book featuring many of these insect nests: press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/b...
    Thanks to Crystal Maier, Corrie Moreau, and Daniel Le for their help with this video!
    ---------------------------------------­----------------------------
    Help support our videos! bit.ly/1TjMRAo
    Under 'Designation,' put 'The Brain Scoop' - all proceeds go exclusively towards helping the show. We appreciate whatever you can give!
    Come hang out in our Subreddit: / thebrainscoop
    egraslie
    Twitters: @ehmee
    Facebook: / thebrainscoop
    Tumblr: thebrainscoop.tumblr.com
    Sign up for our newsletter! bit.ly/2oYTY6p
    ---------------------------------------­----------------------------
    Producer, Writer, Creator, Host:
    Emily Graslie
    Producer, Director, Editor, Graphics:
    Brandon Brungard
    Producer:
    Sheheryar Ahsan
    ---------------------------------------­----------------------------
    This episode is supported by and filmed on location at:
    The Field Museum in Chicago, IL
    (www.fieldmuseum.org)
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------

Комментарии • 296

  • @thebrainscoop
    @thebrainscoop  7 лет назад +145

    Hey folks! It's come to my attention that a few of the ants pictured in the video between 2:23 - 2:49 were misidentified - not all of them are carpenter ants - and the wasps labelled as Vespula maculifrons are actually paper wasps (subfamily Polistinae). We unfortunately didn't catch those mistakes in time. This reminded us that we need to be extra vigilant and triple-check with field experts when it comes to relying on identifications given by the photographers for the images we use. -Emily

    • @alaskan_adventurer6414
      @alaskan_adventurer6414 7 лет назад +5

      thebrainscoop
      ok
      =^_^=

    • @darkxerneasopenings9135
      @darkxerneasopenings9135 6 лет назад

      Yes, I was going to point this out :D

    • @clintwalls9429
      @clintwalls9429 4 года назад

      Hey Emily !! I have a red wasps in my house that hunt
      down big spiders . Look like a
      red paper wasp,only smaller.
      I love them!!

    • @jesusjoseph1899
      @jesusjoseph1899 2 года назад

      Some mistake i spotted
      0:41 termites aren't part of the hymenoptera order. 1:01 those are weaver ants and not fire ants.

  • @knah8
    @knah8 7 лет назад +153

    Love it ! This format is very good.
    Please note, however, the tubes that mud daubers are attracted to in aircraft are the pitot tubes, pronounced pee-toe. They measure an airplanes airspeed by comparing the ram-air pressure to the ambient pressure. Mud daubers love them. All pilots are taught to fly in an emergency if there is no airspeed indication as a result. Pitot tube covers are used to keep the wasps out.

    • @thebrainscoop
      @thebrainscoop  7 лет назад +108

      !! I totally misread 'pitot' as 'pilot'- thank you for this information.

    • @CrazyHatDave3000
      @CrazyHatDave3000 7 лет назад +10

      Hank Harrison Thanks for the science.

  • @vikio452
    @vikio452 7 лет назад +4

    I am living in Japan right now, and was invited to a party in a traditional style restaurant. One of the decorative pieces in the room was a HUMONGOUS beehive. I'm so sorry to y'all that I didn't take a photo! As I was staring at it, someone nearby commented on how beautiful it was. It makes me happy that the Japanese find these sort of things beautiful. :)

    • @lzeph
      @lzeph 5 лет назад

      That would be awesome. Appreciation for natural beauty is not limited to the Japanese, by the way. =-)

  • @JordanDeanFilms
    @JordanDeanFilms 7 лет назад +17

    A very interesting and underappreciated bunch of insects for sure!

  • @Draxis32
    @Draxis32 7 лет назад +110

    My god. What an astounding video. It's very rare to find such great quality work like this on youtube recently. Not to mention the information is quite precise, and the speed of how it's "poured" to us is in great pace with the images shown.
    This channel deserves 10 times more subscribers.

  • @rizashahril
    @rizashahril 7 лет назад +40

    oh god, ,i remember having a few weaver ants nest fall and break on top of my head while cutting a path in the jungle is not fun at all.
    Another interesting behavior i noticed happened when my mom told me to cut a branch of mango tree blocking our driveway. I saw a weaver ant nest there and vocally object (Because of the previous experience i had with them obviously) but of course my mom wont listen.
    Reluctantly sawing the branch while trying not to get any ants on my body i manage to cut it down. Then i dropped down from the ladder and saw the weaver ant nest broke open on the driveway and a bunch of them swarm out.
    i took a few steps back and to my surprise, they are moving towards me in a swarm. Thinking it might be just a fluke, i sidesteps a few feet away and saw all of them changing direction and still continue heading towards me. I bolt after seeing that, endured my mom nagging me to clear the branch i just cut for a while before actually clearing it is better than facing the wrath of those ants.
    Anyway nice video emily, sure brings back a few memory i havent told anyone before XD

    • @Cuix
      @Cuix 7 лет назад +11

      Your comment gave me a physical reaction.

    • @Rainkit
      @Rainkit 5 лет назад

      Its surprising how observant ants really are. I'm betting a guard saw you and somehow signaled to the rest of the group that you were a threat.

  • @cricketrox4ever
    @cricketrox4ever 7 лет назад +10

    I don't have a lot of fears, but I've definitely always been uncomfortable with insects (especially ants!). Videos like these help me to see them in a different light and maybe gain a little bit of respect for them. Although images of insects make me cringe, I appreciate these videos helping me to know know more about the creatures I despise :)

    • @Hyptosis
      @Hyptosis 4 года назад

      I totally agree! We have a lot of ants here in Springfield too!

  • @ryanang8125
    @ryanang8125 7 лет назад +168

    FINALLY A NEW VIDEO
    I've been waiting for so long

    • @bobbymccabe2825
      @bobbymccabe2825 7 лет назад +7

      img.memesuper.com/49dea7de37c74b57198ef049e77b2ee3_1000-images-about-laughter-is-meme-its-been-84-years_399-172.gif

  • @JoaoPessoa86
    @JoaoPessoa86 7 лет назад +36

    so fencing has created a cut-throat acacia real estate market for ants?

  • @celtgunn9775
    @celtgunn9775 7 лет назад +4

    Wonderful to see an upload from this channel. I absolutely love & enjoy the channel and your sense of humor! "Sugar Poop" 😆 Always great fun watching. Thank you for such a great video.

  • @kyledemaree6142
    @kyledemaree6142 7 лет назад +2

    I think it was in Built by Animals by Mike Hansell in which he discussed the trade-offs between wasps building very low population nests which were resistent to parasitism and wasps who built high population paper nests which relied on the population to fight off parasites. However, the REAL gem of this book was difflugia coronata, a house-like capsule building amoeba. I recommend this book to all, and it's topics to Brain Scoop!

  • @kingyuckfou4748
    @kingyuckfou4748 7 лет назад

    I would love to say THANK YOU. it is very nice to find smart like minded people who take the time to create videos like this.

  • @SanokoMiakE
    @SanokoMiakE 7 лет назад +7

    No matter what I ALWAYS learn SO MUCH from this channel. I'm slightly tipsy on cheep wine & .... wow. Ants. and bees. Also I most likely have paper wasps. ALMOST.... ALMOST want to give them colored paper.... almost.😥

    • @riz1812
      @riz1812 7 лет назад +2

      SanokoMiakE kill them!!!!!

  • @CrankyPantss
    @CrankyPantss 7 лет назад +6

    Very interesting. We used to have a problem with mud daubers at my house. One summer they just disappeared and paper wasps took over. I'd rather have the mud daubers. They aren't nearly as aggressive or painful as these paper wasps. I wonder if the paper wasps drove away the mud daubers. With the fire ants on the ground and paper wasps on the roof, it's a scary world out there.

  • @jessf2660
    @jessf2660 7 лет назад

    It still has brains on it!!! I'm so happy you've still kept it at the end of the videos!😆

  • @prashanthariharan6310
    @prashanthariharan6310 7 лет назад

    I do microscopy for a living,...so just seeing the green shine of your glasses and how clean they are somehow made me feel comfortable. Yay optics! (PS: I judge people based on how clean they keep their glasses)

  • @loveludowe
    @loveludowe 7 лет назад

    Acasia trees and ants are my favorite symbiotic relation. Nature is amazing. Great video!!

  • @adamjameskranz
    @adamjameskranz 7 лет назад +4

    The wasps labelled as Vespula maculifrons are actually paper wasps (subfamily Polistinae) not yellow jackets (subfamily Vespinae). You can tell because they have two parallel yellow stripes on the thorax where it meets the abdomen. Yellow jackets also enclose their nests so the cells aren't visible from the outside except when they're first started (and they get much larger and more abundant).

    • @jayholmes46
      @jayholmes46 7 лет назад

      Yup. And I think the ones depicted here are a European species.

    • @adamjameskranz
      @adamjameskranz 7 лет назад

      I was going to guess P dominula, yeah, but it's hard to be sure; not an expert.

    • @jayholmes46
      @jayholmes46 7 лет назад

      That is what I would have guessed too.

  • @BCCanuck1945
    @BCCanuck1945 7 лет назад +13

    Hey Emily, good to see you back :-)
    BTW, it's PITOT tubes on airplanes, not PILOT tibes.

    • @wendys2654
      @wendys2654 7 лет назад +2

      and pronounced "PEE-toe" in case anyone is wondering.

  • @taguato2000
    @taguato2000 7 лет назад +4

    "Eventually they will end up killing her"
    Well, that scalated quickly

  • @mattf2219
    @mattf2219 7 лет назад

    I would be so very happy if you did an individual video on each of the insects talked about where you went more in depth about their habits and behaviors.

  • @c.i.demann3069
    @c.i.demann3069 7 лет назад

    Good to have you back, Emily. It's been awhile.

  • @ViolettaSachra
    @ViolettaSachra 7 лет назад +2

    I love your 'screaming internally'-faces, like at the end of the video :D bugs can be pretty creepy and gruesome D:

  • @NemoTheDinosaur
    @NemoTheDinosaur 7 лет назад +2

    Nature, where a single insect can take down an entire airplane...both fascinating and absolutely terrifying

    • @tiny_M
      @tiny_M 7 лет назад +2

      Part of me wants to see if there are similar incidents with other species but part of me is afraid to Google it

  • @littlebelleblue
    @littlebelleblue 7 лет назад

    I took an Animal Behavior class at Florida State University with Dr. Tschinkel before he retired a few years ago! Got an A and everything.

  • @mike0rr
    @mike0rr 7 лет назад +2

    This has been my favorite video yet

  • @ShubhamBhushanCC
    @ShubhamBhushanCC 7 лет назад +1

    FINALLY OH MY GOD I HAVE WAITED FOR THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @morkmon
    @morkmon 7 лет назад

    Great production quality brainscoop team! Best in the biz.

  • @carlosapiang8256
    @carlosapiang8256 7 лет назад

    WOOP WOOP, I live for this channel!!! (and my family and school work) But mainly this channel..!

  • @rukahazuki6650
    @rukahazuki6650 5 лет назад

    The potter wasp nest are all around my house. Few months ago,a new house was in construction just beside my house. They also making their nest inside my shoes, on my window curtains and pretty much everywhere around my house.

  • @thomasr.jackson2940
    @thomasr.jackson2940 7 лет назад

    Love the necklace. You find the coolest jewellery.

  • @tom5256
    @tom5256 7 лет назад

    Yaaa...Brain Scoop...good to see you Emily ☺

  • @duckpondwithoutducks
    @duckpondwithoutducks 7 лет назад +1

    Wow, what a conclusion!

  • @thalesfm
    @thalesfm 7 лет назад +1

    Those termite queens seem to be the inspiration for the queen in Alien Resurrection. They are both are certainly very unsettling

  • @jayworkman5792
    @jayworkman5792 7 лет назад +2

    I missed these. My day is slightly better now.

  • @AlleyBetwixt
    @AlleyBetwixt 7 лет назад

    WOO! Fantastic video. Beautiful editing and Emily being the perpetually excellent host she is. Yay, Brainscoop!

  • @rjviereckl1321
    @rjviereckl1321 7 лет назад

    Absolutely love this video and it's format, Keep up the good work!

  • @IsaBetaBug
    @IsaBetaBug 7 лет назад

    Excellent video! Bravo

  • @cameronsipka3352
    @cameronsipka3352 7 лет назад

    what a good episode. little creepy crawlies overthrowing their queen is macabre

  • @josuelservin2409
    @josuelservin2409 7 лет назад +1

    Yaaaaay new video!
    And it was amazing as always.

  • @alicemattsson8681
    @alicemattsson8681 7 лет назад

    Yay, you are finally back! I've missed your videos so much.

  • @rodolfoprobst6584
    @rodolfoprobst6584 6 лет назад

    Amazing video, Emily - as always! Just one thing - and I apologize if someone has already commented on that. The ant shown at 0:58 is not a fire ant (subfamily Myrmicinae, genus Solenopsis) but what looks like a weaver ant instead (subfamily Formicinae, genus Oecophylla, probably O. longinoda), beautifully displayed by you from 3:44-4:11. :)

  • @hotdrippyglass
    @hotdrippyglass 7 лет назад

    Wow Girl ! You really know how to party !!!!! Nice work Emily.

  • @DuckettMMC
    @DuckettMMC 7 лет назад

    Such great info! Can't wait to share this with my students!

  • @elisewalters7822
    @elisewalters7822 7 лет назад

    Even though looking at them grosses me out, it's still very interesting to learn about these insects and how they live! Insects are amazing, they're so tiny, but they can do so much! Power of organization haha!

  • @chibaBOOM
    @chibaBOOM 7 лет назад

    Very informative! Loved this video, Emily!😊

  • @ArthurFreitag
    @ArthurFreitag 7 лет назад

    how much knowledge in such a small video. great work!

  • @fernandonavarro1691
    @fernandonavarro1691 4 года назад

    Amazing video, thank you

  • @moterinsun
    @moterinsun 7 лет назад

    Love the new episode! It really makes you wonder about the actual intelligence of insects, that they have social situations like this. Maybe there's something we aren't seeing?

  • @MikeOkami94
    @MikeOkami94 7 лет назад

    This was absolutely fascinating, thanks for putting this together! This kind of quick fire, comparative look, at one aspect of an animal group is a really good format, I'd love to see more like this :-)

  • @ThisIsReMarkable
    @ThisIsReMarkable 7 лет назад

    I missed the usual intro, but nevertheless THIS IS GREAT! There's so much to learn about every single one of those species. :)

  • @LateNightHacks
    @LateNightHacks 7 лет назад

    Yay! Emily is back!
    keep us updated here as well,
    I'm only getting your stuff here in the tubes, not really all that keen about newsletter subs, already gotten rid of most that I had, don't want any new ones. (I know the reasoning(s) behind why you want people to sub, but alas many of us are de-cluttering by reducing email/notifications/interruptions.)

  • @YasminMouse
    @YasminMouse 7 лет назад

    So stoked for the new video!!! Emily if you're reading the comments when will we be getting more videos ? Are they going to be more frequent?? Thank you so much Emily for making science fun! 😁😁❤❤❤

  • @sidewinder15599
    @sidewinder15599 6 лет назад +1

    Hi! Actually, if the queen in a honeybee nest dies or is killed, the workers will start to lay eggs in an attempt to create a new queen. I would suggest the beekeeping videos over on Cody's Lab for more information. And a bunch if interesting videos.

  • @sueanoimm
    @sueanoimm 7 лет назад

    My favorite part is when you do the awkward stare after you said an awkward line. XD In this episode, it's the last sentence when you said the termite queen got licked to death *stare*

  • @anelguerrero801
    @anelguerrero801 7 лет назад

    Great episode 👏👏👏👏

  • @gautampassi3863
    @gautampassi3863 7 лет назад +6

    Yay! A new Brainscoop episode! :)
    What's up with the schedule? Will they be more frequent now? or Big things coming? what about the podcast? well, that's too many questions, I should stop. SIGH! Don't blame me, I'm excited for a new video.

    • @thebrainscoop
      @thebrainscoop  7 лет назад +23

      We spent a few months working on a video that took much longer than we anticipated/intended :p so it'll go up in two parts in a few weeks. Then we're heading to the World Taxidermy Championship, and THEN going.... somewhere... I can't announce yet! Also if you want more updates, check out our new newsletter and sign up: bit.ly/2pYZA21

    • @23Scadu
      @23Scadu 7 лет назад +1

      thebrainscoop Awesome, looking forward to it! :D

    • @thomasr.jackson2940
      @thomasr.jackson2940 7 лет назад +1

      thebrainscoop The World Taxidermy Championship? Awesome! Please say you're making (a) video(s)!

  • @greenbeevideo765
    @greenbeevideo765 7 лет назад +1

    I got so excited when I saw this!! Awesome video! So much cool stuff to learn about wasps!
    One thing though... the wasps you labeled as Eastern Yellow Jackets in the video were not Eastern Yellow Jackets :( the wasps in the clip had bright yellow antenna while yellow jackets have black antenna.

  • @asherhebert
    @asherhebert 7 лет назад

    Love this! This is the type of content that first made me love the Brain Scoop

  • @Joyhova
    @Joyhova 7 лет назад

    This was such an interesting video, if more videos similar to this comes out I will definitely be watching them.

  • @frods1234
    @frods1234 7 лет назад

    Great content!

  • @PedroMarco94
    @PedroMarco94 7 лет назад +2

    I'll point out that the plant does not react to the gull wasps egg, but rather they mutate the plants ADN to make that

  • @whatthefizzsticks
    @whatthefizzsticks 7 лет назад

    Carpenter ants may be my new favorite insect. Love the vid!

  • @grace5991
    @grace5991 7 лет назад

    Yay new brainscoop! My day is made!

  • @theclague
    @theclague 7 лет назад

    Really enjoyed this video, I like the new style.

  • @jarodbeukelman6893
    @jarodbeukelman6893 7 лет назад

    So wonderful to have another Entomological video. Keep it up! :D

  • @ellie4943
    @ellie4943 7 лет назад

    A new video! AND it's about insects!? Too good to be true

  • @darkfire090
    @darkfire090 7 лет назад

    We had those paper wasps set up shop under our deck, and after we shooed them off, I managed to nab the tiny beginnings of the hive they were making. Still have it somewhere in an ol' gum container with a tiny crab that found it's way into one of our cooked oysters.

  • @tayet6875
    @tayet6875 7 лет назад

    What a neat episode

  • @Fralmunk
    @Fralmunk 7 лет назад +1

    I'm not even into insects, but found this fascinating! great video :D

  • @brianeckerle120
    @brianeckerle120 7 лет назад

    Brilliant; had no idea about all the different types of insect social structures. Thanks

  • @thomasr.jackson2940
    @thomasr.jackson2940 7 лет назад

    Yay, you're back!

  • @flszen
    @flszen 7 лет назад

    Yay new video!

  • @jaimeoliveiramoro5253
    @jaimeoliveiramoro5253 7 лет назад +1

    you are back!!!

  • @gymnasticsrat94
    @gymnasticsrat94 7 лет назад

    That was weird and gross and fascinating, and I love the Brain Scoop.

  • @weenieolis
    @weenieolis 7 лет назад

    If the brain scoop ever did a podcast I would listen to the shit out of it

  • @jordangreen9201
    @jordangreen9201 7 лет назад

    Wooop Whoop!! new episode!

  • @aliciapagequicios8070
    @aliciapagequicios8070 7 лет назад +1

    OMG OMG OMG You are back! Love it! I saw this kind of cribs in zoology classes, they are so beautifful, so freaking incredible... :3
    PD: What about a tematic onycophora video?
    PPD: Perdon por mis faltas de ortografia x)

  • @VOmaker
    @VOmaker 7 лет назад +2

    Emily. Just to help you out a bit for the next time you encounter it. I'm sitting here listening over and over trying to confirm that you said PIE-Tot tube when you encountered it in your script. To please the aviation nuts in your audience, pronounce it PEE-toh tube next time you happen across it. It's used to measure the aircraft's airspeed and is named for the French inventor Henri Pitot, who invented it to measure other pressure-based data long before we had aircraft.

    • @VOmaker
      @VOmaker 7 лет назад

      Interesting. I guess I'm getting old and deaf. I was having a hard time hearing it. Yet I knew what she was referring to, regardless of the pronunciation. When I was learning to fly, one of the most important pre-flight checks was the pitot tube to ensure that there were no wasp or spider nests in it.Difficult to check because opening is rather small.

  • @irisanddaisy
    @irisanddaisy 7 лет назад

    Could weaver ants possibly be able to be thought of as tool users in the way they manipulate larvae? Their use of the silk larvae to construct their homes was an amazing fact.

  • @hindosgottenberg237
    @hindosgottenberg237 7 лет назад +2

    How do the acacia trees know they no longer need the string ants as badly? If the role of the stinging ants is to discourage herbivores from making a nice meal out of the acacia then surely the tree wouldn't be able to tell the difference between ant-prevented meals and fence-prevented meals.

  • @XDonlyone
    @XDonlyone 7 лет назад

    Those carpenter ants can tell their loved ones "It still had brains on it!" when they bring them back heads to eat.

  • @ndemers
    @ndemers 7 лет назад

    Awesome video! Some of this I had already picked up, but the bit about gall wasp galls being used in industry? News to me!

  • @abdulabdul1838
    @abdulabdul1838 7 лет назад +1

    Absolutely Love your Videos Emily !!
    Love From Pakistan

  • @geniusmp2001
    @geniusmp2001 7 лет назад

    Fascinating subject, and awesome presentation. I had mentioned vulture bees to you on Twitter a while back, and I was kinda hoping they'd get a spot here, but that's just me.

  • @MisterTingles
    @MisterTingles 7 лет назад

    those ant colony castings are one of my favorite things in the world.

  • @SexyBakanishi
    @SexyBakanishi 7 лет назад

    wowwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww that was the coolest thing on bugs I've seen since I was a kid!

  • @kikithesixthgun
    @kikithesixthgun 7 лет назад

    Hymenoptera and Beyonce... two of my favorite things :')
    I love the Brain Scoop

  • @willmendoza8498
    @willmendoza8498 7 лет назад

    Welcome back!

  • @duncanmcpherson2555
    @duncanmcpherson2555 7 лет назад

    Great stuff! Just like TheBrainScoop of old (and no Natural News persiflage either)!

  • @DaibaDesu
    @DaibaDesu 7 лет назад

    I need a Bill Nye/Brain Scoop collab in my life.

  • @indravargas1388
    @indravargas1388 7 лет назад

    This was intense Emily!

  • @Stevonicus
    @Stevonicus 7 лет назад +1

    good to see a new video. will they be a regular thing again?

    • @thebrainscoop
      @thebrainscoop  7 лет назад +4

      Yes. :) well, as regularly as we've ever been- but closer to the every-other-week schedule. For updates and reminders, check out and sign up for our Newsletter! bit.ly/2pYZA21

  • @rosetownstumpcity
    @rosetownstumpcity 7 лет назад

    YES! new brain scoop!!!

  • @TerraPupaAbyssus
    @TerraPupaAbyssus 7 лет назад

    Your channel is so rad! I'm a fantasy writer and I was inspired by the Egyptians and native americans to build a world centered around animals, but I am also into science and I want everything to be biologically correct and like use symbolism that relates to their biologies or the societies they form, I absolutely love learning about this, thank you.

  • @Styreta
    @Styreta 7 лет назад

    I never thought treating someone like a queen would mean licking them to death

  • @alecwinner
    @alecwinner 7 лет назад +6

    Trying to watch this with trypophobia is weird, I love the brain scoop, but god my skin is crawling!

  • @WarisAmirMohammad
    @WarisAmirMohammad 7 лет назад

    Hooray!

  • @OfficialGotbrick
    @OfficialGotbrick 7 лет назад

    welcome back!

  • @theblindspot985
    @theblindspot985 7 лет назад

    More videos! More Dissections!!