Fun fact: One of these fabulous frogs was at a zoo in Arizona, and my mother, while wearing a BRIGHT yellow shirt with small black triangles, walked up to it's tank. An he was SMITTEN. He marched right up to her and attempted to woo her. I have a picture of it and it's one of the timeless things we own.
8:00 Minor feedback: ☢ is warning of ionizing radioactivity, there is another for biohazard that seems more fitting: ☣ (U+2623). It also looks way cooler. Thank you for the video!
@@eSKAone-What's a lot? How many does she make in this video? It's easy to be critical, I find myself being overly so lots of times. Remember that this is one of the good channels. It is actively trying to provide as accurate, interesting and informative content as possible. One also has to consider that we are all human, we all make mistakes and that finding all research or knowledge on a subject can be difficult. Then that information has to be presented in a comprehensible way. Compared to channels that are actively, knowingly putting out false and misleading information I would say this channel meets the level of academic acceptability.
@@rickyspanish492Labratory hazard signs should be part of basic biological knowledge. I personally feel like that this is claiming that a Salamander is reptile instead of an amfibian.
@@martijn9568 I "personally feel" (oh the irony) that you just want to hate on something if you're grasping that hard. Seems like you ignored my previous comment. If you don't appreciate channels like this and the work they do, then why are you here? Get lost, and take your negative downer personality with you.
@@rickyspanish492 You can appreciate something while also giving constructive criticism. What I don't understand, however, is how you can tell someone to take their negative downer personality away while being the person with that personality yourself and not seeing the irony of your statement.
Due to their flamboyant coloring and toxins, these guys are bold! They won't be spooked nearly as easily as other frogs, and their wonderful personalities make them extremely charismatic. My phyllobates vittatus duo are wonderful to watch. Bert and Ernie will live like the little kings they are.
Hey, RealScience team. I really enjoy watching your videos and learn new and enriching facts about different species or lineages. I have a humble request for you. I'd really love if you could make a video about urochordates. These organisms, brothers of vertebrates, are in my opinion one of the most amazing branches of evolution known to mankind. They are like the Mr. Potato of the animal kingdom, presenting characteristics (celulose tissues, placentary viviparism, larvae presenting a self-made bubble for feeding) unimaginable to most of us. Love u all
I discovered this channel recently and i have already watched 80% of the videos on it, you present the information in a very very interesting and entertaining way and i have learned so many new things from these videos, thanks so much Real Sciense!
This was an amazing episode. I am very glad to have found your channel on Nebula. Keep up the great work guys, this extremely valuable and interesting content.
Many birds are smart enough to learn through observation and even verbally teach their offspring. They could be taught, during chickhood, to not die from eating a colorful frog like Aunt (name squawk) did.
@@CAMSLAYER13This is evidenced in cats, humans, and other primates' responses to snakes. There is (could be wrong, but this is how I learned it) a genetic code responsible for that fear response to snakes. I imagine because snakes are incredibly dangerous to mammals, particularly tree dwelling cats and primates. So it is innate, it is ingrained in our dna.
Or just Hardwired like mentioned in the Video. My Cats are indoor Cats. They never where outside, they attack evey Insect they can find but they totally avoid a Wasp. They just look at them. They know not to deal with them. And like i said. Indoor Cats! They never experienced a Wasp sting or something like that.
@@HansGruberX1 Possibly. Avian language is also a well-documented phenomenon. It'd take some experimentation to determine which cause is more important.
They are super common in (legal, usually captive bred or legally obtained) captivity, or at least some species, which is good given how many are threatened in the wild (among other frogs in general) The coolest other fact is the tiny non-tadpole size of the babies! They leave tadpole phase at a small size, given the nature of their reproductive/life cycle. They are just teeny tiny frogs lol. Super adorable.
I was wondering about that, when they mentioned that a non-toxic diet yields a non-toxic frog. Now, THAT would be cool! Is the barrier to entry very expensive?
@@cpfs936 no, not very expensive, we suggest you start with Dendrobates species, and even you can buy from tadpoles which cheaper, but before that, you must have nice terrarium/vivarium for them, which humid, relatively cool and of course have many plants, inside
@@cpfs936none in legal pet trade are toxic. They are in CITES Appendix II B i believe, so cites makes sure of a captive lineage, no wild specimen, and if you do want them you’ll have to report the fact you own them to local authorities. Also only buy from reputable sellers that give you the proper documentation of lineage. Dendrobates, Phyllobates, Oophaga and co, so poison darf frogs, are not a beginner kind of frog. They have complex social dynamics, dietary and climatic needs that a beginner won’t be able to consistently and appropriately provide without a lot of research and money. But if you wanna get into frogs, ones that are small, perhaps look into reed frogs
Really enjoy your videos. I’m not a chemist or biologist. My Mom was a PhD in virology, not me. I grew up in the shallow end of that gene pool, I’m afraid. So some of your script I have to pause the video and google certain things and resume. Still, I love it! Thank you and keep your Real Science videos coming. BTW, congrats Stephanie on your recent wedding!
It has been over 50 years since I unexpectedly encountered a poison dart frog in a southern california creek, scaring the living daylights out of my child self. Better late than never to discover that, so far from its native diet, it probably wasn't poisonous after all. Also, thanks to the entire Real Science team for such great topics, video footage, and understandable science that is never dumbed down--you are a UA-cam gem as beautiful as the frogs in this episode!
Few years ago I was at the Minnesota Zoo in their jungle area. They had a bunch of these frogs in cases on one side of the walk way, but on the left there were a few just chilling outside of their cases, hanging out on leaves... like 5 feet from where people were walking... no protection.
Thank you so much for this video, very interesting to learn! As someone who also has a science UA-cam channel and is science obsessed I love your educational videos. Keep posting!
I can't pay Nebula in my country but i can deduce from this video that if this is the free content the paid content is WAAAAY better Keep up the hard work
Wow, great video and very well-researched. I would also be very interested in a video about the Draco lizards.They are small, arboreal reptiles found in Southeast Asia that can glide between trees using specialized wing-like structures built of elongated ribs and a membrane of skin to achieve controlled gliding. It is a unique adaptation for aerial movement
Another interesting fact about the golden and predominantly red ones and the orange ones is their main staple (food and poison source) are the nasty south american fire ants. The interesting bit is they lay a single egg in a pitcher plant (bromeliad etc.) which then catches flies and such for itself and the tadpole. When the tadpole starts to develope legs and grows more frog like but not a full fledged frog, the parent returns and deposits a unfertilized egg in the plant to ensure food for the final stage of developement. Truly amazing little creatures.
I have one! Maybe I should do the video. I'm pretty sure they also practice sequestration and use the toxins in the food they eat to poison their enemies, in this case by expelling the poison into the air.
at 0:33 you said that "just 2/10 of a μg could kill a human". but your own slide shows otherwise. it says 0.2μg PER KG for LD50. meaning for an average 75kg human, a dose of 75*0.2=15μg has only 50% chance of killing him.
1 Poison dart frog can kill 20 people or 20,000 mice. The math might not add up cause she made a mistake in the video but shes not wrong. Why dont you eat one and see how that works out for you bro.
Most science channels offer species bios that simply hint at the surface of fascinating processes of these animals whereas this channel gives all the details and imagery and the writing is terrific. Awesome channel new subscriber!! The toxic bank account and chemical conversion of Dart frogs along with their other worldly colors and patterns makes them one of the most exotic and coolest species on the planet.
Truly amazing video as always, but I had a suggestion, a rather ambitious one tbh, can you make a video summarising all of evolution? like explaining and visualising the evolutionary tree or something along that sorts, would be the cherry on top of your already phenomenal content! Have a great day and never stop Real Science!
These frogs are VERY noisy! I saw them at a reptile zoo and they never shut up, and they only had a handful of them. They were very beautiful though, and small.
As a proud Australian I am profoundly disappointed that the Worlds Most Deadly Animal is not found here. We Aussies need to lift our game in this regard,
Neat finding out about it being through sequestration. I've heard about it being a method of acquiring poisonous status for geckos and garter snakes, it's interesting to know it's also the method for those lethal cuties.
Hi ^^ Great video, as always! If you ever want to make a video on velvet worms I might be able to get you into contact with one of the leading experts on the topic since he's my zoology professor. I don't know if that ever becomes relevant, but if you do and you remember this, let me know. Hope you have a great day!
a few years ago during a trip, my friend's kid briefly held one of those (it had multiple colours, idk if thats important) with their hands... out of innocence/curiosity. The only thing between them and death was the ""protective"" clothing and accessories the mother had put in them, which I guess worked as a thick-layered barrier between the venom and the kid's skin. Nevertheless, they were rushed to a hospital just to be sure... idk the details, but the kid is fine today. It was af to the parents, to the point my friend (dad) continues in therapy due to PTSD today, 6~7 years later. Bizarre...
@aero-space541 I think op meant that the kid's dad got ptsd from the kid being so close to dying. He probably feels he should have watched his kid better and that he should have better prepared the kid before getting into a potentially dangerous environment.
I love poison dart frogs. The local zoo has a few colors blue, red, and orange might be more hiding because they have an all natural live plant enclosure.
Years ago in Costa Rica, we went on a Zoo tour. The a lady had a Golden Dart Frog jump on her. We all thought that she was going to die. She didn’t, but everyone was certain (including the staff) that she was a goner.
Luckily it was just a golden dart frog and not the golden poison dart frog so false alarm 😸 Seriously, they had a zoo where poisonous _anything_ can just jump around and get out? 😆
Honestly, the way that other animals learnt to not touch the bright frogs is kind of like this: Steve: "YO LOOK EASY FOOD" Andrew: "Steve... Are you... Why are you not moving?" ... Andrew to other birbs: _"Yo if you touch those frog things you f*cking _*_die."_*
❤ I'd like to understand the physical sensations, and perhaps the thought process of a predator after it has bitten down on a dart frog. For example: when you showed the clip of the snake eating the frog. Did the neuro toxins cause the snake to feel sensations similar to a brain-freeze, an acidic burn, scalding heat, extreme bitterness similiar to Buckley's cough syrup? In other words, how can I best imagine the sensation of a fatal snack through common experiences that we all HAVE experienced or likely will in the future?
4:01 the ability to eat something poisonous and use it for your own body may be uncommon in nature but lepidopterans (butterflies/moths) do it all the time the monarch butterfly being a common example, though unlike the frogs those caterpillars HAVE to eat those toxic leaves in order to survive (even in captivity) as they’d rather die than eat anything else.
Question: at the start of the video she says 0.2 ug could kill a human, but the stat on screen shows 0.2ug/kg, so for a 70kg person like myself wouldn't it be 14ug?
They are sooo cute ❤❤ I own two kind, Dendrobates Azureus (blue one, with back spots), and D. Auratus (green and black) 😊 Obv capt breed. The auratus pair just started to breed, now I need to learn to deal with tadpoles 😅
@@Aliandrin Srry, I dont get it.... It is sure not hard et all to breed them. A proper housing and care, and baby frogs will start to jumping around :DDD Even I managed it.... And the wast majority of the hobby has capt-breed frogs (in a developed county at least). Maybe some breeder gest some wild cut for genetical upgrade.
They are definitely some of the coolest looking creatures on Earth, the colouration is amazing. Plus they're cute, tiny little frogs. That can kill you 💀
One small correction: around 7:20 you describe the neuron's charge in units of mV (millivolts). But charge has units of C (Coulombs), not V (volts). Did you mean to say neuron voltage, rather than charge? If so, I assume you mean neuron voltage with respect to the muscle beneath it (since voltage is always a measure of potential between two points).
As a Dart Frog owner. I'd like tonjust add that most ofnusninnthe hobby are interested in conserving the species and most frogs sold in the hobby are captive bred. We don't condone wild caught frogs. Side benefit captive bred versions without access to their native food are actually non toxic.
an Arachnophobia warning when showing close ups of really big spiders would be appreciated, i knew a close up was coming, but didn't scroll down the screen quickly enough."shivers"
I got in a customers car. She was a collage student and the headliner of the car had fallen down. She covered the whole inside roof of her car with plastic poison dart frogs.
I don't think there is a problem with the way the graph is layout. it means the same amount that reaches LD50 doesn't reach so high when it comes from the snake. However she does say that 0.2μg is enough to kill a human, while the slide says 0.2μg/kg, a human usually weigh more than 1 kg, and LD50 is not 100% so it's not enough.
@@elraviv Uh.... I get the idea that the video wants to convey is that frog toxin is more poisonous than snake venom. However, the picture put LD50 on the y-axis, and LD50 is, by definition, the amount of poison needed to kill 50% of subjects. The frog has a lower LD50, but it has a higher bar on the graph, making the graph technically incorrect. It'd be completely fine the y-axis was 'toxicity' or 'mortality rate' or 'LD50^-1 on the graph.
Fun fact: One of these fabulous frogs was at a zoo in Arizona, and my mother, while wearing a BRIGHT yellow shirt with small black triangles, walked up to it's tank. An he was SMITTEN. He marched right up to her and attempted to woo her. I have a picture of it and it's one of the timeless things we own.
I admire the confidence of that frog. "She's 1000x bigger than me, but I think I have a shot".
@@recoil53 I had the picture labeled, "what a woman!"
The 'Science-Anime' Dr Stone is pretty good. Watch it if you havent. Watch it and then help me figure-out some of science cause science is cool
"Whoa big lady!😈" The frog probably
Remind me of the british guy being shagged by a parrot
It's impressive what these little frogs can do even without a degree in chemistry.
*"duh-gree"*
Biology will always be better at practicing chemistry than trained human chemists :D
@@martingonzalez3629Eventually that won’t be true
Designed by a superior Intelligence (i.e. God). No way you perfect working with such dangerous toxins through trial and error.
@@martingonzalez3629mother nature is the best chemist in the universe
8:00 Minor feedback: ☢ is warning of ionizing radioactivity, there is another for biohazard that seems more fitting: ☣ (U+2623). It also looks way cooler. Thank you for the video!
Yea she makes lot's of errors (for "real" science). It's a little annoying.
@@eSKAone-What's a lot? How many does she make in this video? It's easy to be critical, I find myself being overly so lots of times. Remember that this is one of the good channels. It is actively trying to provide as accurate, interesting and informative content as possible. One also has to consider that we are all human, we all make mistakes and that finding all research or knowledge on a subject can be difficult. Then that information has to be presented in a comprehensible way. Compared to channels that are actively, knowingly putting out false and misleading information I would say this channel meets the level of academic acceptability.
@@rickyspanish492Labratory hazard signs should be part of basic biological knowledge. I personally feel like that this is claiming that a Salamander is reptile instead of an amfibian.
@@martijn9568 I "personally feel" (oh the irony) that you just want to hate on something if you're grasping that hard. Seems like you ignored my previous comment. If you don't appreciate channels like this and the work they do, then why are you here? Get lost, and take your negative downer personality with you.
@@rickyspanish492 You can appreciate something while also giving constructive criticism. What I don't understand, however, is how you can tell someone to take their negative downer personality away while being the person with that personality yourself and not seeing the irony of your statement.
Due to their flamboyant coloring and toxins, these guys are bold! They won't be spooked nearly as easily as other frogs, and their wonderful personalities make them extremely charismatic. My phyllobates vittatus duo are wonderful to watch. Bert and Ernie will live like the little kings they are.
Seriously, those little buggers are some of the most BEAUTIFUL creatures I have ever seen. "In fact, they're downright flamboyant." LOL!!❤
completely agree. I can't believe how vibrant and varied they are. how lucky are we to live on this planet with them
Flamboyant Death sounds like a great band name
@@landonfolken03 Yes! Super mega-metal!
Their beauty should inspire respect they are frogs not "buggers"!!!!
what ?? it s the ugliest most disgusting t i ve ever seen
Hey, RealScience team. I really enjoy watching your videos and learn new and enriching facts about different species or lineages. I have a humble request for you. I'd really love if you could make a video about urochordates. These organisms, brothers of vertebrates, are in my opinion one of the most amazing branches of evolution known to mankind. They are like the Mr. Potato of the animal kingdom, presenting characteristics (celulose tissues, placentary viviparism, larvae presenting a self-made bubble for feeding) unimaginable to most of us. Love u all
that sounds interesting! I will do some research about it!
An excellent suggestion! :D
Could this be any more set up. Thx, genuinely, science team
@@realscienceI didn't expect that line at 0:27😅
or bobit worm @@realscience
I discovered this channel recently and i have already watched 80% of the videos on it, you present the information in a very very interesting and entertaining way and i have learned so many new things from these videos, thanks so much Real Sciense!
Solid snake voice: "Yeah, but how does it taste?"
Lol, metal gear solid. My favorite video game.
This would be Naked Snake who wants to eat it lol. It was in MGS3
Spicy froge
If cannibals were to consider eating me, they should think about all the processed foods I’ve eaten.
I would never eat a smoker
@@jwnomadok
This was an amazing episode. I am very glad to have found your channel on Nebula. Keep up the great work guys, this extremely valuable and interesting content.
The 'Science-Anime' Dr Stone is pretty good. Watch it if you havent. Watch it and then help me figure-out some of science cause science is cool
Damn! Talk about "You are what you eat!" Thx for this amazing info packed video on these fascinating frogs RS!
From someone who’s studying Nuerons for the MCAT …. This mini lesson on polarization was probably the best thing I’ve watched all year !
You need to up your game if thats the best thing you watched all year.
Many birds are smart enough to learn through observation and even verbally teach their offspring. They could be taught, during chickhood, to not die from eating a colorful frog like Aunt (name squawk) did.
True but you also eventually get to a point where its an innate response
@@CAMSLAYER13This is evidenced in cats, humans, and other primates' responses to snakes. There is (could be wrong, but this is how I learned it) a genetic code responsible for that fear response to snakes. I imagine because snakes are incredibly dangerous to mammals, particularly tree dwelling cats and primates. So it is innate, it is ingrained in our dna.
A lot of birds can eat some of the frogs with weaker toxins, I would think they have been evolving to tolerate the toxin more.
Or just Hardwired like mentioned in the Video. My Cats are indoor Cats. They never where outside, they attack evey Insect they can find but they totally avoid a Wasp. They just look at them. They know not to deal with them. And like i said. Indoor Cats! They never experienced a Wasp sting or something like that.
@@HansGruberX1 Possibly. Avian language is also a well-documented phenomenon. It'd take some experimentation to determine which cause is more important.
These frogs are cute but deadly. I love these vidoes. Also the thumbnails of these vidoes is always designed to be catchy.
They are super common in (legal, usually captive bred or legally obtained) captivity, or at least some species, which is good given how many are threatened in the wild (among other frogs in general) The coolest other fact is the tiny non-tadpole size of the babies! They leave tadpole phase at a small size, given the nature of their reproductive/life cycle. They are just teeny tiny frogs lol. Super adorable.
Which kind of species is it?
I was wondering about that, when they mentioned that a non-toxic diet yields a non-toxic frog. Now, THAT would be cool! Is the barrier to entry very expensive?
@@cpfs936 no, not very expensive, we suggest you start with Dendrobates species, and even you can buy from tadpoles which cheaper, but before that, you must have nice terrarium/vivarium for them, which humid, relatively cool and of course have many plants, inside
@@cpfs936none in legal pet trade are toxic. They are in CITES Appendix II B i believe, so cites makes sure of a captive lineage, no wild specimen, and if you do want them you’ll have to report the fact you own them to local authorities. Also only buy from reputable sellers that give you the proper documentation of lineage. Dendrobates, Phyllobates, Oophaga and co, so poison darf frogs, are not a beginner kind of frog. They have complex social dynamics, dietary and climatic needs that a beginner won’t be able to consistently and appropriately provide without a lot of research and money. But if you wanna get into frogs, ones that are small, perhaps look into reed frogs
great video and the explanation of the nerve shutting down was amazing.
Really enjoy your videos. I’m not a chemist or biologist. My Mom was a PhD in virology, not me. I grew up in the shallow end of that gene pool, I’m afraid. So some of your script I have to pause the video and google certain things and resume. Still, I love it! Thank you and keep your Real Science videos coming. BTW, congrats Stephanie on your recent wedding!
Ask her why the US government will not investigate the origin of covid 19 since we all know now it didnt come from a mammal
that doesn’t make you “the shallow end of the gene pool” if anything it puts you in the higher side because you have a willingness and want to learn
It has been over 50 years since I unexpectedly encountered a poison dart frog in a southern california creek, scaring the living daylights out of my child self. Better late than never to discover that, so far from its native diet, it probably wasn't poisonous after all. Also, thanks to the entire Real Science team for such great topics, video footage, and understandable science that is never dumbed down--you are a UA-cam gem as beautiful as the frogs in this episode!
"mighty little murderers". I'd call that pretty dumb
@@dustman96 Let the poetry be
I'd be more scared running into a snake than a poison frog. It's not like the frog is going to leap-attack you Monty Python style.
@@SB-qm5wgHe's got huge, long-- eh-- he can leap about-- look at the colors!
There was in no way a poison dart frog in California, you were mistaken.
they quality of your videos keeps getting better. Thanks for this, i really enjoyed it.
Pitty about the loud music
I do enjoy hearing your tech talk. Came from Real Engineering. Happily so. Subbed.
Few years ago I was at the Minnesota Zoo in their jungle area. They had a bunch of these frogs in cases on one side of the walk way, but on the left there were a few just chilling outside of their cases, hanging out on leaves... like 5 feet from where people were walking... no protection.
👏
Literally seen the same thing! How are they out with no protection!
She said in video they get fed a diet that results in no poison being created
@@connerrabbe5093because they aren’t poisonous without their native diet.
Really appreciate these amazing videos!
Thank you so much for this video, very interesting to learn! As someone who also has a science UA-cam channel and is science obsessed I love your educational videos. Keep posting!
I can't pay Nebula in my country but i can deduce from this video that if this is the free content the paid content is WAAAAY better Keep up the hard work
Wow, great video and very well-researched. I would also be very interested in a video about the Draco lizards.They are small, arboreal reptiles found in Southeast Asia that can glide between trees using specialized wing-like structures built of elongated ribs and a membrane of skin to achieve controlled gliding. It is a unique adaptation for aerial movement
The Poison Dart Frog - The most poisonous creature in the world... after politicians
Edgy
Thanks!
Another interesting fact about the golden and predominantly red ones and the orange ones is their main staple (food and poison source) are the nasty south american fire ants. The interesting bit is they lay a single egg in a pitcher plant (bromeliad etc.) which then catches flies and such for itself and the tadpole. When the tadpole starts to develope legs and grows more frog like but not a full fledged frog, the parent returns and deposits a unfertilized egg in the plant to ensure food for the final stage of developement. Truly amazing little creatures.
So many things wrong here where would you like me to start?
For some reason I read, "The Insane Biology Of The Poison Fart Dog". Could you do that topic next?
lmao
That’s what they called me in high school
I have one! Maybe I should do the video. I'm pretty sure they also practice sequestration and use the toxins in the food they eat to poison their enemies, in this case by expelling the poison into the air.
Can there be subtitles to these videos too? Much easier to follow.
No
If you wait long enough, they usually do. In some hours they'll make closed captions
@@lennarthagen3638are you this useless on a daily basis?
Push the CC button
I'm guessing they aren't there on upload but UA-cam computers add them from analyzing the audio? Because they're available now at least for men
best sciene channel on UA-cam . Yall work too hard for this .
SAY IT LOUDER, i learn more in 1 hour from this channel than I did through all of highschool lol
@@tallymudasia5163 Im a 32 yrs old ass man that love science and this channel is too close to perfect 👍🏻
at 0:33 you said that "just 2/10 of a μg could kill a human". but your own slide shows otherwise.
it says 0.2μg PER KG for LD50. meaning for an average 75kg human, a dose of 75*0.2=15μg has only 50% chance of killing him.
Quick maths bro bravo 👏
1 Poison dart frog can kill 20 people or 20,000 mice. The math might not add up cause she made a mistake in the video but shes not wrong. Why dont you eat one and see how that works out for you bro.
@@SuperMuppy you should improve your reading comprehension and math skills, I never wrote that it was not poisonous, just pointed her math mistake.
@@elraviv Ok smart guy. 😂😂😂😂😂
That's assuming a dose is actually 15μg. It's probably way higher so you can forget about maybe making it out alive.
So...Drop a thousand of these in King Kong's mouth and Bob's your uncle.
Most science channels offer species bios that simply hint at the surface of fascinating processes of these animals whereas this channel gives all the details and imagery and the writing is terrific. Awesome channel new subscriber!! The toxic bank account and chemical conversion of Dart frogs along with their other worldly colors and patterns makes them one of the most exotic and coolest species on the planet.
Truly amazing video as always, but I had a suggestion, a rather ambitious one tbh, can you make a video summarising all of evolution? like explaining and visualising the evolutionary tree or something along that sorts, would be the cherry on top of your already phenomenal content!
Have a great day and never stop Real Science!
These frogs are VERY noisy! I saw them at a reptile zoo and they never shut up, and they only had a handful of them. They were very beautiful though, and small.
These frogs are basically alchemists of the Amazon.
Man I love these videos, but the thing I love the most is the vibe and sci-fi music, the footage, graphs. Excellent work.
You've got a frog going mental, killing thousands a people, then you've got a turkey whos whistling for elp
Mighty Little Murderers?
I am a nephrologist and I didn’t expected a revisit to synapse and neurotransmitters when i clicked on the video. Great work 👍
As a proud Australian I am profoundly disappointed that the Worlds Most Deadly Animal is not found here. We Aussies need to lift our game in this regard,
Maybe you can import some frogs to live in Australia. Something like that could never go wrong. 😳
Gotta make better spiders. Maybe a Huntsman with botulinum?
Hey, you may not have the strongest, but you have the most variety, and they're all 1000x scarier looking 😂
Neat finding out about it being through sequestration. I've heard about it being a method of acquiring poisonous status for geckos and garter snakes, it's interesting to know it's also the method for those lethal cuties.
Just love the insane biology series❤❤❤ , keep 'em coming
It's a horrifying thought that someone killed 20.000 mice for science using this frog.
150 years in, and blind evolution of frogs keeps outsmarting scientists.
Could you do this sort of video on the Amur Tiger?
Hi ^^ Great video, as always! If you ever want to make a video on velvet worms I might be able to get you into contact with one of the leading experts on the topic since he's my zoology professor. I don't know if that ever becomes relevant, but if you do and you remember this, let me know.
Hope you have a great day!
a few years ago during a trip, my friend's kid briefly held one of those (it had multiple colours, idk if thats important) with their hands... out of innocence/curiosity. The only thing between them and death was the ""protective"" clothing and accessories the mother had put in them, which I guess worked as a thick-layered barrier between the venom and the kid's skin. Nevertheless, they were rushed to a hospital just to be sure... idk the details, but the kid is fine today. It was af to the parents, to the point my friend (dad) continues in therapy due to PTSD today, 6~7 years later. Bizarre...
That's dope
what?
@@xINVISIGOTHxI'm confused by the style too lol
Ptsd from touching a frog? I have dart frogs in my living room... Lol
@aero-space541 I think op meant that the kid's dad got ptsd from the kid being so close to dying. He probably feels he should have watched his kid better and that he should have better prepared the kid before getting into a potentially dangerous environment.
Imagine a crossover between these guys and the rare occurrence of raining frogs
Frogs are terrifying. I never thought id say that
Such a fantastic video to watch with the fam on Thanksgiving weekend!
Imagine the lab where they tested how many mice it could kill
I love poison dart frogs. The local zoo has a few colors blue, red, and orange might be more hiding because they have an all natural live plant enclosure.
If they are so dangerous, why do I want to put one in my mouth?
Years ago in Costa Rica, we went on a Zoo tour. The a lady had a Golden Dart Frog jump on her.
We all thought that she was going to die.
She didn’t, but everyone was certain (including the staff) that she was a goner.
Luckily it was just a golden dart frog and not the golden poison dart frog so false alarm 😸 Seriously, they had a zoo where poisonous _anything_ can just jump around and get out? 😆
@@SB-qm5wg It was wild and I think that zoo got shut down.
Oh yes, in one room all of the Poison Dart Frogs were free to roam.
The staff is very stupid considering you can technically hold them. You don’t want to eat them or rub them in a cut.
@@acephas3 golden poison frogs are from Colombia, not Costa Rica. It was not wild.
I was obsessed with poison dart frogs as a kid. They look soooo cool
“Nobody calls me yellow” - This guy.
Wow that spider eating that frog was awesome
Very informative video!
I wonder if the frogs see poisonous mites and think "ooh, that looks spicy. Yum!"
Great video, thanks for sharing your knowledge
Honestly, the way that other animals learnt to not touch the bright frogs is kind of like this:
Steve: "YO LOOK EASY FOOD"
Andrew: "Steve... Are you... Why are you not moving?"
...
Andrew to other birbs: _"Yo if you touch those frog things you f*cking _*_die."_*
Who else just ate a yellow frog and is freaking out.
I...I... 💀
❤ I'd like to understand the physical sensations, and perhaps the thought process of a predator after it has bitten down on a dart frog. For example: when you showed the clip of the snake eating the frog. Did the neuro toxins cause the snake to feel sensations similar to a brain-freeze, an acidic burn, scalding heat, extreme bitterness similiar to Buckley's cough syrup?
In other words, how can I best imagine the sensation of a fatal snack through common experiences that we all HAVE experienced or likely will in the future?
bro the phrase: "they are natures way of saying fuck around and find out" was crazy :0
Once indigenous people use the poisoned darts on animals, how are they able to eat the poisoned animal without getting poisoned themselves?
This was pleasantly way more informative then i was expecting.
These frogs are better chemists than most humans with PhDs
Australia: We have the deadliest animals in the world
America: Hold my beer
Another wonderfully made, informative video!! Love this channel ❤
4:01 the ability to eat something poisonous and use it for your own body may be uncommon in nature but lepidopterans (butterflies/moths) do it all the time the monarch butterfly being a common example, though unlike the frogs those caterpillars HAVE to eat those toxic leaves in order to survive (even in captivity) as they’d rather die than eat anything else.
4:01 quite the handsome fella
Oribatid mite: "My poison will protect me from being eaten!"
Poison Dart Frog: "Mmmm....oribatid mites! I could eat these things all day!!"
Question: at the start of the video she says 0.2 ug could kill a human, but the stat on screen shows 0.2ug/kg, so for a 70kg person like myself wouldn't it be 14ug?
:26, hearing you say, "... nature's version of f*** around and find out" made my day. :)
Perfect example of I go down you go down with me
They are sooo cute ❤❤ I own two kind, Dendrobates Azureus (blue one, with back spots), and D. Auratus (green and black) 😊 Obv capt breed. The auratus pair just started to breed, now I need to learn to deal with tadpoles 😅
It's so hard to get small exotic frogs to breed! Still nobody has done it with rain frogs.
@@Aliandrin Srry, I dont get it.... It is sure not hard et all to breed them. A proper housing and care, and baby frogs will start to jumping around :DDD Even I managed it.... And the wast majority of the hobby has capt-breed frogs (in a developed county at least). Maybe some breeder gest some wild cut for genetical upgrade.
Okay, you sold me.
I bought a whole box of the Chocolate Thinmint Dart Frogs. The website said it was safe lol
Really cool and interesting video. Subscribed, cant wait to see more.
They are definitely some of the coolest looking creatures on Earth, the colouration is amazing. Plus they're cute, tiny little frogs.
That can kill you 💀
They are like tiny Sith Lords. Love them.
The golden poison dart frog is found only in Colombia 🇨🇴. In the CHOCO jungles, most humid place on earth.
One small correction: around 7:20 you describe the neuron's charge in units of mV (millivolts). But charge has units of C (Coulombs), not V (volts). Did you mean to say neuron voltage, rather than charge? If so, I assume you mean neuron voltage with respect to the muscle beneath it (since voltage is always a measure of potential between two points).
I saw them in my local aquarium/reptile shop and was disappointed when they said theyre not poisonous because theyre not wild
They are absolutely nature’s version of fuck around and find out 😂😂. But they truly are awesome ❤
Forbidden candies. Want to munch the whole glossy bunch 😋
Such beautiful and bright vivid colors, And so small That you wouldn’t think that such a tiny creature could do so much damage and kill you
I swear when I read the title in the thumbnail I thought this was a documentary about my mother-in-law lol
Also interesting are critters that mimic poisonous or venomous species to trick predators.
I have two captive bred dart frogs - an Azureus named Rico and a mint Terribilis named Zim. Underrated hands-off pets
As a Dart Frog owner. I'd like tonjust add that most ofnusninnthe hobby are interested in conserving the species and most frogs sold in the hobby are captive bred. We don't condone wild caught frogs. Side benefit captive bred versions without access to their native food are actually non toxic.
Sequestration is definitely a word-of-the-day candidate.
an Arachnophobia warning when showing close ups of really big spiders would be appreciated, i knew a close up was coming, but didn't scroll down the screen quickly enough."shivers"
And yes they are soooo adorable.
Hold on, the phrase "Frog around and find out" was *right* there. 😂
I love this channel so much.
Glad you included cute, look at that wittle face!!🥺
I got in a customers car. She was a collage student and the headliner of the car had fallen down. She covered the whole inside roof of her car with plastic poison dart frogs.
Nitpick: LD50 is not proportional to toxicity, but inversely proportional.
I don't think there is a problem with the way the graph is layout. it means the same amount that reaches LD50 doesn't reach so high when it comes from the snake.
However she does say that 0.2μg is enough to kill a human, while the slide says 0.2μg/kg, a human usually weigh more than 1 kg, and LD50 is not 100% so it's not enough.
@@elraviv Uh.... I get the idea that the video wants to convey is that frog toxin is more poisonous than snake venom. However, the picture put LD50 on the y-axis, and LD50 is, by definition, the amount of poison needed to kill 50% of subjects. The frog has a lower LD50, but it has a higher bar on the graph, making the graph technically incorrect.
It'd be completely fine the y-axis was 'toxicity' or 'mortality rate' or 'LD50^-1 on the graph.
This video is awesome. Loved it