@@ethanzecariahnyanggau2738 while I can’t agree because I’ve never being to Disney land but to other people tide pools aren’t what they like most people prefer rides n stuff.
It's called a farmer jelly or better known as the upside down jelly, while the Floridian species seems to be known to sting, there are variants that do not sting.
Those are upside-down jellyfish and that's how they live. The green crabs are emerald and the red ones are ruby crabs 🦀. You should do a tank that's just decated for stuff u find in tide pools. Just a thought.
He has almost no clue about what he’s doing, you seem to have slight knowledge, so that’s kind of a dumb statement lol. He shouldn’t keep any of these.
Horseshoe crabs are amazing. I was a manager at a pet store years ago and I ordered one and brought it home. A few months after having it I learned they shed there shell. Lol I thought I had two one morning and found out they do that. They are pretty hardy. I guess you can’t get them anymore if they are protected but I completely understand. Such a cool thing to have and watch though. Fixing to set up a new tank and if I can still get one it will be my first pick. I would love to do what you guys do.
I hope you know the white horse shoe crab you found wasnt dead... It wasn't alive to begin with because that was an exo-skeleton shed 😂 you can keep sheds from horse shoe crabs they are actually really cool to have as a decoration.
@@sterbenvr7642 well most people dont know that if something like a sea horse or a star fish is already dead due to the tide going out and drying up because of the sun you can legally take them home. I would still check to make sure 100% if a sea creature is dead or not by placing them in the water. If they dont come back within 3 mins they are more than likely gone forever. And are always cool to keep as a keep sake or decoration! Its just like a sea shell, once dead it just decomposes and goes back into the sand and makes more beach.
Really cool video! I just feel a bit concerned about a few things... Quick sand might actually be around some of these places, Please each of you think about carrying a long walking stick and walk one after another so that if anyone gets Really stuck you can help each other out. Three creatures I know can be deadly are jellyfish(most just sting), sea snakes(often colorful and may be mistaken for eels), and a conch/snail like creature that has a sting that shuts down the nervous system. So please be careful, and thank you so much for sharing this video with us.
@@bjmaguire6269 there is much more than just jellyfish, sea snakes, and the cone snail that are deadly. There are sting ray which lay in shallow water, and also stone fish and a bunch more to name. Quick sand isnt as common as one would think and really it isnt quick sand most people will actually sink for standing in sand for too long and the waves will slowly sink you in the sand. But what your talking about is when you find a air pocket under the sand when tide is going out. You normally will sink to your knees, and actually dont need someone with you as long as you know to distribute your weight out to get out of the sand. How you do that is you sit down and try and wiggle ur feet free. An extra person is just for extra safety but you should always do research about sea life in that region before traveling.
Growing up doing stuff like this, I started diving and swimming with some big fish, I already have the guts to work with sharks at an aquarium, not the best pay but its fun.
10:47 Hey, taking courses on Ichthyology and Marine Ecology of the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts. Those look to be Sheepshead Minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus), at least two of the individuals you caught seemed to be them.
Mantis shrimp are more deadly, I think. They have 2 clubs for arms that are spring loaded. When they attack with them it’s so fast that you can’t see it with the naked eye and for a split second the shear energy produced raises the water around the clubs to equal the temperature of the sun. They also see colors that we can’t even imagine. There’s totally badass.
Pistol shrimps sometimes use their venom on humans, with so much potentcy that one drop can kill 20 humans… it can be more dangerous than the box jellyfish.
Yes the green are emerald crabs...we call them army crabs in NW florida! had quite a bit in our saltwater aquarium..they actually sell them at our local pet stores marketed as clean up crews for saltwater aquariums.
@@Skye_is_cool There is a Jellyfish species that does that, it's the same one in the video, the jelly fish will turn upsidedown and lay on the seabed to expose it's tentacles to the sun, in it's tentacles it has colonies of symbiotic algae.
Do not save the jellyfish, they are fine with what they're doing, they're a kind of jelly that inverts itself and with the help of algae it preforms photosynthesis, "saving" them would be more like forcefully removing you from the dinner table. Unfortunately, as fun as his videos are, Nick doesn't know everything and should focus more on researching and not disturbing things he doesn't know anything about.
Yes mantis shrimp are the deadliest type of shrimp in the world even though pistolshrimps have a clogged that is large to make a bubble and Pops it into a very big force that mantis shrimp is even more stronger than a pistol shrimp because the pistol shrimp only has a force of a big bubble in the water the mantis shrimp is much stronger and tougher than the pistol shrimp because of that the mantis shrimp can hit faster than the blink of the eye it's so powerful that it can really break a piece of glass in a tank or some mantis shrimp has hit claws that break glass but some have spear claws do not break glass. Okay okay I need a rest
Watching these videos makes me want to just buy a HUGE plastic pool, and just fill it with little rocky caves, sand, water, and fish. But I also know that I don't have the time, nor money to give the animals the care they'd need. It's a shame I can't live my dream, but at least I can watch someone do it, and pretend I'm there for the ride.
Hey nick I’m biggest fan love all your videos man you’ve inspired me in the saltwater hobby and I know own five fish tanks the largest is 150 gallons. But you should see about keeping a brackish fish tank so you can keep some cool puffers or maybe a Barracuda
for the "comment down below" on the sea anemone looking critters, pretty sure those are jellyfish. certain species will bottom up like that as a way of hunting, my thinking is the undulations at the "base" near the sand looks like the undulations from a jellyfish's bell. Awesome video! 😃👍
I'm actually working on a tank like that for the summer, gonna do a 10 gallon tank, with a crab or two, maybe some minnos and possibly some crawfish/shrimp.
I live right next to the Atlantic in France and tide pools are my best source of entertainment. There is just something about the thrill of not knowing what is going to be hiding in the tide pool you find.... AIght ima go there now peace out ✌
DUDE Im heading down to the keys right now... I'm going with my parents pulling our 30 foot center console. It would be crazy if we could meet up... Ill be in marathon, what part of the keys are you in?
Wow you saying horseshoe crabs are rare there? Whenever you get a chance and go to Long Island NY, checkout a place called oyster bay. Horseshoe crabs are every where by the shore, the low tide areas you can see a lot of them. Even 1 on top of the other doing the nasty lol
5:32 those are Cassiopea jellyfish or upside down jellyfish! Fun fact, they can release some kind of stinging stuff that can sting you in the water when you don’t even touch the tentacles. They go upside down to look like seaweed I think too. I am 97% sure this is true, but if you want to know more there is always google search and safari!
Hey nick, from what I saw in that clip you seemed to have found an upside down jellyfish. It looks like an anemone but it is classified as a jellyfish and that’s what that upside down “fish” was in that tide pool
When I was a kid, I thought tide pools were more fun than Disney Land.
your not wrong
Yeah it's more fun to see sea creatures
@@ethanzecariahnyanggau2738 while I can’t agree because I’ve never being to Disney land but to other people tide pools aren’t what they like most people prefer rides n stuff.
@@archieoutdoors3340 ok
Same
5:50 that thing moving is called an "inverted jellyfish" And yes it's poisonous. Is a jellyfish but upside down and works like an anemone.
You mean 5:43
It's called a farmer jelly or better known as the upside down jelly, while the Floridian species seems to be known to sting, there are variants that do not sting.
2:05 99% sure that's an emerald crab. Great for aquariums, have one myself, they eat bubble algae. Super popular in the aquarium trade.
Nice
@Giuli Nice nine times out of ten with most things I hear.
@Giuli when emeralds get big they can snatch fish out of the water column, but only in nano tanks. My yashia goby learned that too.
Thought Emerald crabs were poisonous. Was I wrong?
@@takugenji490 No, they aren't.
I used to love wondering around tide pools when I was young. There are so many tiny creatures out there.
Those are upside-down jellyfish and that's how they live. The green crabs are emerald and the red ones are ruby crabs 🦀. You should do a tank that's just decated for stuff u find in tide pools. Just a thought.
Yea he should no matter what happens right :o
Casiopea casiopea
@@raahimzworld7793 it would be a nice change to see that rather than it always being about getting bait fish to feed the 3000 gallon
@@Autst yea that’s why I said no water what to make a huge tank for just ride pool creatures maybe even a pond :O
He has almost no clue about what he’s doing, you seem to have slight knowledge, so that’s kind of a dumb statement lol. He shouldn’t keep any of these.
Horseshoe crabs are amazing. I was a manager at a pet store years ago and I ordered one and brought it home. A few months after having it I learned they shed there shell. Lol I thought I had two one morning and found out they do that. They are pretty hardy. I guess you can’t get them anymore if they are protected but I completely understand. Such a cool thing to have and watch though. Fixing to set up a new tank and if I can still get one it will be my first pick. I would love to do what you guys do.
Smartest person ever “I’m not gonna touch it I don’t know much about it”
Claps to this person.
Thats what she said
@@lotsofstuff123official (sips my water) and then I see this comment:PFF-
(Spitting my water-)
@@hdr-mj9du very original
@@hdr-mj9du this is supposed to be funny? 🤔🤷♂️
I hope you know the white horse shoe crab you found wasnt dead... It wasn't alive to begin with because that was an exo-skeleton shed 😂 you can keep sheds from horse shoe crabs they are actually really cool to have as a decoration.
If only he knew☹️
@@sterbenvr7642 well most people dont know that if something like a sea horse or a star fish is already dead due to the tide going out and drying up because of the sun you can legally take them home. I would still check to make sure 100% if a sea creature is dead or not by placing them in the water. If they dont come back within 3 mins they are more than likely gone forever. And are always cool to keep as a keep sake or decoration! Its just like a sea shell, once dead it just decomposes and goes back into the sand and makes more beach.
Really cool video! I just feel a bit concerned about a few things...
Quick sand might actually be around some of these places, Please each of you think about carrying a long walking stick and walk one after another so that if anyone gets Really stuck you can help each other out.
Three creatures I know can be deadly are jellyfish(most just sting), sea snakes(often colorful and may be mistaken for eels), and a conch/snail like creature that has a sting that shuts down the nervous system.
So please be careful, and thank you so much for sharing this video with us.
@@bjmaguire6269 there is much more than just jellyfish, sea snakes, and the cone snail that are deadly. There are sting ray which lay in shallow water, and also stone fish and a bunch more to name. Quick sand isnt as common as one would think and really it isnt quick sand most people will actually sink for standing in sand for too long and the waves will slowly sink you in the sand. But what your talking about is when you find a air pocket under the sand when tide is going out. You normally will sink to your knees, and actually dont need someone with you as long as you know to distribute your weight out to get out of the sand. How you do that is you sit down and try and wiggle ur feet free. An extra person is just for extra safety but you should always do research about sea life in that region before traveling.
This was your comment
Growing up doing stuff like this, I started diving and swimming with some big fish, I already have the guts to work with sharks at an aquarium, not the best pay but its fun.
Those are jellyfish upside down probably you should put those back in the ocean
10:47 Hey, taking courses on Ichthyology and Marine Ecology of the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts. Those look to be Sheepshead Minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus), at least two of the individuals you caught seemed to be them.
“The worlds deadliest shrimp” still doesn’t really sound all that scary
There is another type of shrimp called the mantis shrimp. It can shatter the bones in your for in one hit. It punches stuff.
Yeah you right
Mantis shrimp are more deadly, I think. They have 2 clubs for arms that are spring loaded. When they attack with them it’s so fast that you can’t see it with the naked eye and for a split second the shear energy produced raises the water around the clubs to equal the temperature of the sun. They also see colors that we can’t even imagine. There’s totally badass.
Pistol shrimps sometimes use their venom on humans, with so much potentcy that one drop can kill 20 humans… it can be more dangerous than the box jellyfish.
@@AzureHeartSongthey aren't actually shrimp
The jellies are Cassiopeas, it’s a upside down species that photosynthesize using algae. They also can sting you without you touching them
thats not fair
Hey that’s not fair don’t use you’re god powers on me I’m just smoll
Byrfbyrcuncrybrcfvrdbgrdtvdrtvrdbyedbyrdvtdetvedvtevtdnyedgdbrvtrdvtrdhndrnydrbydrgbrdgbundrybdrgbfrybrfynrfunrfunrfunybrfybrfybrfhnrfjnrfuhfrhyrfybrfhbhrufyhrfyhrfuhrfyhrfhyfrynybfrybrfhyfrybfrybfrhyhryfbyfrybfrbyrfybrfybrfhyfyhrbyfrybfryhrfyhfrhnrfhnrhfnhnrfjnfrjnfrjnrfjnfrjnrfjnfrjnfrnjfrjnrfnjrfnjjjjfffhb
No spamming
Do you mean they are known to leave pieces behind in the net or in the water that can continue to sting?
5:33 I’m not a professional at this, but I think it’s an upside down jellyfish. Not a jellyfish that’s upside down, but a type of jellyfish.
Cassiopea 👌🏻
Yep that exactly what those are
I agree. I’ve only ever seen upside down jellyfish in an aquarium. So it’s neat to see them in their natural habitat.
I'm sure the crabs at 2:30 were emerald crabs, I've kept them in the hobby before. Watching them eat is soo cute
That hose shoe crab wasn’t dead it was the exo skeleton of one
That green crabs are called emerald crabs and the red ones are the same species just a different color (ruby Mithrax crabs)
@DANA FROST nah look it up that’s right
Yes the green are emerald crabs...we call them army crabs in NW florida! had quite a bit in our saltwater aquarium..they actually sell them at our local pet stores marketed as clean up crews for saltwater aquariums.
@@Charliesangel79 yes they are very popular in the saltwater trade for eating hair and bubble algae.
its sold as green emerland crab in the aquarium store near my house
Me when hear Ruby or Emeralds or diamond : MONEY
Those jellyfish were upside down jellyfish, they live like that
What
i can tell yiu dont know alot about jellyfish
@@Skye_is_cool There is a Jellyfish species that does that, it's the same one in the video, the jelly fish will turn upsidedown and lay on the seabed to expose it's tentacles to the sun, in it's tentacles it has colonies of symbiotic algae.
The jellyfish are like my life is potato
I love this kind of videos, saludos desde México 🇲🇽
Loved the video.Thank U Nick!!
Super interesting video! I love tide pooling and man do i miss the keys!
These Nick the Explorer are my favorite videos!!!!!Go save the Jellies!!!!!
Thanks for sharing😊Be safe and have a great weekend❤️👍🏻
Do not save the jellyfish, they are fine with what they're doing, they're a kind of jelly that inverts itself and with the help of algae it preforms photosynthesis, "saving" them would be more like forcefully removing you from the dinner table. Unfortunately, as fun as his videos are, Nick doesn't know everything and should focus more on researching and not disturbing things he doesn't know anything about.
Yeah, we didn’t have to sit there called upside down jellyfish😂
“We gotta watch out for stingrays.”
Proceeds to not shuffle his feet
Fr fr
😄
Barnaby Dixon reference
Ive been binging these types of videos, I love the beach 🏖 and I love the vibes
i think the "dead" horseshoe crab was actualy just a exoskeleton
nick i always like what you're doing, reminds me when i was younger, youre so fun to watch, just keep going, love from Philippines
OMG SAME
The green crab is an emerald crab. Love the vids
your excitement makes the video 10x better
Love that you haven’t seen upside down jellyfish before. Pretty cool to see them.
him: its a pistol shrimp the worlds most deadly shrimp
mantis shrimp: am i a joke to you
fax
They aren't shrimp
Nick great vid also I found it funny when you said the sea cucumber was inflating instead of deflating
I enjoyed this video till end, this is banger 💥 video, love ❤ your video nick...
Cool vid . You should take some of those cool plants and creatures for the aquarium
Pistol shrimp: Worlds most deadliest shrimp that has never killed anyone
It might be the most dangerous but if the others are so safe it kind of misleads the sentence.
Deadliest to fish
The Mantis shrimp will be so disappointed
@@BoomgoC4 i mean. Mantis shrimp easily take down pistols. And knock out smaller fish in one punch
Those are some crazy Finds! I have a few pistol shrimps!
Hey you did this video on my Birthday lol!! Cool catches!! Love all your videos!!
I love your videos!!👍👍👍👍👍
uhhhhh pistol shrimps aren't that deadly compared to a mantis shrimp
Mantis shrimp are much bigger
Yes mantis shrimp are the deadliest type of shrimp in the world even though pistolshrimps have a clogged that is large to make a bubble and Pops it into a very big force that mantis shrimp is even more stronger than a pistol shrimp because the pistol shrimp only has a force of a big bubble in the water the mantis shrimp is much stronger and tougher than the pistol shrimp because of that the mantis shrimp can hit faster than the blink of the eye it's so powerful that it can really break a piece of glass in a tank or some mantis shrimp has hit claws that break glass but some have spear claws do not break glass. Okay okay I need a rest
True COOKIE
The thing you're missing is the pistol shrimp can heat water up to 8000 degrees with its claw
Very true
I like how nick’s subs know more than him 🤣
He's a marine biologist on the extreme DL
Ike
I mean ikr
I mean. Most youtubers subs no more than them. Its just that Nick admits that he doesn't know everything.😆
Lol
That look great man
Thank you god blessed the videos
That 'dead horseshoe crab' was just a horseshoe crab molt cus it was so white floppy
I would live to find something like that molt.
Great vid! And that was an upside down jellyfish. And pistol shrimp aren’t the deadliest. I’m pretty sure it’s mantis shrimp.
The world deadlist shirmp is the peacock mantis shirmp
Yea they can do stuff like boil water around their fists because thats hao fast they move
That’s how I got to this video lol
I got it I get punched 3 times when i tried to catch them
Yeah that is what I was thinking in my mind when I saw the intro
@@President_buzz_lightyear no the pistol shrimp can shoot very hot bubbles that could break skin easily
"These are all hermit crabs, the whole bottom is hermit crabs" then continues to walk all over and likely crushing every one that he steps on...
😭😭😭😭
..You're ignorant, they're buried in the sand and come out easily anyway
What did you want him to do? Turn around and end the video?
@@Yekkooi true but they don’t go deep.They’d still die,
Actually the shells are INCREDIBLY durable! They can easily withstand human feet lol
nick bingo your a great UA-camr you impaired by your work eveyday keep up the good work :)
Your enthusiasm cracks me up and you get everyone else wound up.🤗
Verry nice Crabs
I love all your videos
First , i love getting a nick bingo noti while im snackin on some fried chicken and fries 🤙🤙🤙
That's a whole meal my guy😂
Ahhh yes
You not wrong 😭😭💯 sittin there munchin while bingo watchin 😂
🐸🦇🪱🐜
the upsidedown Jelly fish That's is so yummy you can cook that
What
@@zazo1564 some people here in Philippines cooks jellyfish
Love your videos nick
Nick Bingo Is The Brain And Paul Cuffaro Is The Star
Yoo love your vids man, cant wait to watch this banger!
I’ve never seen someone so excited to get crabs!
LOL. How is this not the top comment? :)
Wild krat brother
bro........ u gotta do more of these
Fun fact the pistol shrimp when it snaps it’s claws the water around it becomes hotter than the surface of the sun!
Really?
That would kill you
@Last Samurai Thanks I did not know it was that hot thanks for the temperature!
@@amybuechler1796no shit
Those things at 5:42 are upside down Jellyfish. (Cassiopea sp.) They're photosynthetic btw, and they like lower flow where they can sit at the bottom.
The red crab was so cute!
Hi love your videos 😁
I think the second horseshoe was a molt, they split the shell and crawl out to grow, like lobsters. Bill
Watching these videos makes me want to just buy a HUGE plastic pool, and just fill it with little rocky caves, sand, water, and fish. But I also know that I don't have the time, nor money to give the animals the care they'd need. It's a shame I can't live my dream, but at least I can watch someone do it, and pretend I'm there for the ride.
I love the thumbnail and wow tysm for the great vid :D
Hi love your vids
This is straight up just 2 dudes having mad fun. Love it, tide pooling is a blast.
The part when u said God is ganna have something waiting for us made my day
I enjoyed watching this so much and died laughing.
This is like Pokémon hunting it’s so cool to watch these kinds of videos
Everytime he says look at this over here, I can barely see poob, he needs a more steady cameraman or a new stabilizer
uhhh the horseshoe crab seemed to be a shell, not a dead one
That horseshoe crab was around from the time of the dinosaurs 🦖🦀
Literally the best tide pools ever!
Hey nick I’m biggest fan love all your videos man you’ve inspired me in the saltwater hobby and I know own five fish tanks the largest is 150 gallons. But you should see about keeping a brackish fish tank so you can keep some cool puffers or maybe a Barracuda
for the "comment down below" on the sea anemone looking critters, pretty sure those are jellyfish. certain species will bottom up like that as a way of hunting, my thinking is the undulations at the "base" near the sand looks like the undulations from a jellyfish's bell. Awesome video! 😃👍
Yep upside down jellyfish!
That cool, GET IN THE BUCKET!!
5:47 are Upside Down Jellies if I’m not mistaken. Really cool animals, sick find
The strongest hitting shrimp is the mantis shrimp its top 10 for hardest hitting animals
The mantis shrimp is not a shrimp it's actually a stomatopod.
Still called a mantis *shrimp*
Next episode please make a DIY fish trap
kids....what wonderful narration
Awesome😄😄
What if you made a aquarium that is tide pool themed with like rocks sand crabs small fish sea stars
And a sump pump system to simulate tides
I'm actually working on a tank like that for the summer, gonna do a 10 gallon tank, with a crab or two, maybe some minnos and possibly some crawfish/shrimp.
Need more vid while you in the keys
Yeah and how TF do you get to cool places? You know a guy ?
i love your videos
I live right next to the Atlantic in France and tide pools are my best source of entertainment. There is just something about the thrill of not knowing what is going to be hiding in the tide pool you find.... AIght ima go there now peace out ✌
You should make a saltwater Jeremy crab tank that would be so sick
DUDE Im heading down to the keys right now... I'm going with my parents pulling our 30 foot center console. It would be crazy if we could meet up... Ill be in marathon, what part of the keys are you in?
Swssasws2xe
Wsqs
AW
Aaaazaaz
Lol he thinks the UA-camr will meet up with him LOL
So cool 😎
Bro whipped out the sea tingling💀💀
i’ve never met anyone that doesn’t just… pick up the crab w their hands… i’m just,,, weirded out
It was poisonous, didn’t u hear him? lol
When have you heard of poisonous crabs lol
Wow you saying horseshoe crabs are rare there? Whenever you get a chance and go to Long Island NY, checkout a place called oyster bay. Horseshoe crabs are every where by the shore, the low tide areas you can see a lot of them. Even 1 on top of the other doing the nasty lol
Hi I love your video’s 😊🐟🦀🐙
You are so blessed to live in the Keys.
he doesn't live in the keys you wold know that if you listened or watched the vdeo
5:32 those are Cassiopea jellyfish or upside down jellyfish! Fun fact, they can release some kind of stinging stuff that can sting you in the water when you don’t even touch the tentacles. They go upside down to look like seaweed I think too. I am 97% sure this is true, but if you want to know more there is always google search and safari!
I new that same fact also
@@Grayzipe12 cool!
Upside down jellyfish. Not everything needs “rescuing “
Stfu bro he has good intentions
@@fifthdayaquatics8690 just like the guy who threw a tortoise in the water
@@Daan_015 was just about to say that. 😂
@@michaelrasmussen9630 hes seriose i think
Postal shrimp world deadliest shrimp 🤣🤣🤣 that thing my be the most harmless thing lol
I’m pretty sure that second horseshoe crab wasn’t a full crab it was a molt or just the shell it sheds
i agree
The world deadliest shrimp is actually a mantis shrimp just letting you know
oh
Stop & go crabs 🦀 lol
I like your vids
Hey nick, from what I saw in that clip you seemed to have found an upside down jellyfish. It looks like an anemone but it is classified as a jellyfish and that’s what that upside down “fish” was in that tide pool