The Tiny World Of Insects | BBC Earth
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- Опубліковано 28 кві 2024
- Just because these insects are small doesn't mean they're not mighty. Watch as these tiny creatures return form the dead and protect themselves from predators!
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#Insects #LongFormNatureDocumentary #BBCEarth
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Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of entertaining and thought-provoking natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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The little lizard trying to run and look like the beetle was just too cute!
"But the hurling habit dies hard" was incredibly funny.
It was cold pimpin...is what is was!
29:02 😂😂😂
I don't get it, could you explain?
Hahahahahhah even after his done. Off the tree you go.....
that bombardier beetle just kicking the ants around is one of the funniest things I have seen lately 😂
I was just going to comment exactly that lol this is such an incredible video!!!lol
for me it's the lizard creeping around like him at 8:15 LOL. that beetle is the MAN of the area, everyone wants to be like him
Wow! This video Shaw clearly insects and Animals living life.
Funniest moment: "But the hurling habit dies hard..."
😆😆😆
Cool
6:10This ant has taught me a valuable life lesson - to never give up, no matter the obstacles. Their persistent efforts are truly inspiring and a reminder that with enough determination, we can overcome any challenge that comes our way.♥
The camera shots never cease to amaze me.
I know Wright someone has their shit together 😊
The BBC has tiny camera crews, have you ever seen - "Honey I shrunk the kids!?" That's how they do it, shrink em and hope they don't end up predated upon themselves.
I like the part how the red ants look down at that sand insect hahaha
Absolutely mind blown
antlion
I noticed that too, it was very illustrative! Like "WTF was that!?"
28:23 The beetle beat 5 other males to get to her just for her to be like "no thanks, not interested" 🤣
Female beetle: Let me see your wallet.
Like “ain’t THAT a bitch!” 😮😅.
the Scott Pilgrim story sad ending edition
Nature is simply beautiful when we truly contemplate on its grandeur.
Good nature
I read this just as a swarm of ants decapitated a preying mantis
The stag beetle one killed me lol. Nature is brutal and does not pull any punches.
This video serves as a reminder of the fragility of the ecosystems that wild animals call home.
The bond between some of these wild animals is truly heartwarming to witness.
I'm in awe of the adaptability displayed by these wild animals in their natural habitats.
Army ants are the best! Another species of ant found in the Amazon forest is the leafcutter ant. Our camera got them on camera, and it's fascinating to see that they're leafcutter but not leaf-eaters. They spend the whole day carrying super heavy leaves around to grow a fungus!
?
Super heavy leaves!? :D
I understand you're trying to use rhetoric but come on!
Okay, I'll admit, at first, I was HIGHLY concerned for those adorable little Japanese bees until I watched them go full on savage mode once that one little bee was caught!
That just blew my mind. Such amazing little teeny tiny BEE-ings😅💖
@@scottjohnstone6204 👈🏾 used to be an ant
@@TheDweeb002 Still am! Now back to work!
Sorry but the moment I heard Sir Attenborough I just chilled out in perfect contentment. Nature programs are the Beebs best shows ever. Their natural history unit is one of the best in the world. The macro lens work is incredible.
No matter what I see on my walk to work, I can't help but smile knowing there's so much going on that I just can't see.
There are still wonders to discover. This makes me very happy.
Upon hearing Sir Dadvid's voice you know it's going to be a marvellous show! What a legend with a legendary voice!!
Bots 😂
@@dickrichard626 Who's gonna carry?
@@soorajmz You both left weird bot sounding comments. 😅 His was worse then yours, but still.
@@dickrichard626 Just admiring Sir. David bro, I'm not going to stop no matter what
I think the insect that can freeze holds a lot of secrets about life's history. Mountain ranges don't appear overnight - similarly, the animals don't adapt in a few generations. It fascinates me to think about the intricacies of the process to adapt over millions of years as the environment changes. We often say things like "this animal is perfectly adapted to x environment" but that completely misses the dynamic aspect of an environment over millions of years.
Smartphones deleted our ability to see the bigger picture, mostly... mostly
That's Darwanism. But what if we look throught the ángel that these 'insects' teach themseleves and so have last so long. Telepathically teaching themseleves to the point of living long enough for us to grasp such beauty both genetically and physcially. Just food for thought ay.
the point of my comment was to point out that we too often simplify things to statements like "that's evolution" or in your case "that's Darwinism" - and to make any reader think one layer deeper, that it's not as simple as "they are from x place, this explains y behaviour or trait," and then to think about how that applies to our own biological responses.
I don't think these animals teach themselves to act in this way. You don't teach yourself to breathe, you just do it. @@Sk8erMorris
it's actually been observed in fish & flies that they do adapt in a few generations
I know what you're getting at, but adapting and evolving aren't the same. Elephants changing their migration patterns to match changing water distribution isn't evolution, but if it turned out that they have electromagnetic sensory in their big ears that helps them find water, they might get smaller bodies while retaining big ears. That would be evolution.
Whether an adaptation has the staying power to become an evolution is determined by how the environment around them changes over those same millions of years. That hopefully colours in my personal perceived grey area of evolution.
The fruit will explode when it is watered, I used to play when I was young so happy
The Mantis is a menace... But the ants are GANG GANG!!! 😩😂😂😂😂
الله خالق کل شئ وھو علی کل شئ قدیر۔۔۔
ھذا خلق الله فارونی ماذا خلق اللذین من دونہ۔۔
سبحان الله...
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
سبحان الله وبحمده سبحان الله العظيم عدد خلقه ورضاء نفسه وزنه عرشه ومداد كلماته
This BBC Earth video exploring the tiny world of insects is nothing short of mesmerizing! 🐜🌿 The intricate details and fascinating behaviors of these tiny creatures showcase the incredible diversity of life on our planet. Nature's miniature wonders never cease to amaze. Kudos to BBC for bringing us such awe-inspiring content!
カメラマンさんの根気強さと集中力、反射神経にただただ尊敬の一言です😊
特に日本ミツバチ🐝の生態も撮って下さって嬉しく思います😍
自然の大きさ、昆虫達の強さと面白さを楽しめました🤗💕
ありがとうございます❤
6:25 A.. What?😂
The bees dealing with th3 hornet is amazing!
23:50 is the perfect example of "Dont start nothing, wont BEE nothing"
😂 Right!!!!
One of the best nature compilations on the entirety of UA-cam! Thank you BBC for this phenomenal work. The beetle that battled his way to the female, got rejected initially the chucked her off after having his way had me dying laughing. What a male shovenist! And who needs sci Fi aliens with those mantis. Nature is mind boggling.
Chauvinist is the word!
Yes, best I've ever seen
Spoilers! Also *chauvinist lol. Friendly advice, try saying words you don't know the spelling of into voice-to-text and see what it comes up with haha. Lemme try it- chauvinism. Perfect lol it works
@GeoffSquire-lm8hr I think that it was meant a play on words. Shove as the male shoved his girlfriend off the tree.
🥲 🎉
What a wonderful, vast world of insects
Wonderful photography -- and most of it would have been impossible without recent years' technologies. If only the narration matched the visual aspect. Only Sir David Attenborough is consistently understandable with his unexaggerated but perfect enunciation.
A Beautiful program show us how we miss mother nature who can teach us so much what we have lost and what we dont know , We Miss Mother Nature Her wisdom and knowlegde is so great .
What's that mean, "we miss mother nature"? You said it twice and it didn't make sense either time.
*The Caterpillar have two totally different DNA∆RNA's in one which is only one of the infinite macro & micro examples of just how intelligent God is.*
@@hebrewyisraeliteyahawadahite how do you get your text bold like that?
@zion9856 ~ Excuse me, but what do you mean by your post ~ 'We Miss Mother Nature, Her Wisdom and Knowledge is so great'? Who is 'We'? All this falls under the Great Intellect and Creation of Our God Almighty. Good Day, Sir.
@@Mr.Plant_man I used the website code(s), to create the different desired character (letters, numbers or symbols) effect.
UA-cam now allows users to post comments with three different types of text:
1) Bold
2) Italics
3) Strikethrough
Here are the special codes you need to add in the front and in the back of the character(s) to create the special effects.
• To bold a word, put *asterisks*
• For italics, put _underscores_
• For strikethroughs, put -hyphens- (or dashes)
Your sentence(s) will appear like this:
*asterisks*
_underscores_
-hyphens-
The videography is amazing, but the sound!
Incredible
Life in the Undergrowth is probably my favourite documentary, ever. Loved seeing clips from it here and I hope it brings attention to the older programme.
Amazing👌🏻 thank you team bbc earth for filming this marvellous documentary🤩
The camera quality is insane.... the intricate detail down to the fine hair on the spider. The 'Kung fu Mantis' vs spider is absolutely stunning detail- the fact the insects look like they'd be massive, the colour and even the detail of the leaf.... Just wow 😊AMAZING 🎉
Wow , another BBC Earth with the wonderful treasure of Sir David Attenborough narrating and the amzing film crew . Thank you very much .
8:58 the smaller stick insect caught in the bigger one's backdraft 😂 man between this and the beetle just yeeting ants left and right, this stuff is natural comedy gold. **takes another puff**
I swear every clip feels like im watching an epic movie, awesome video!
The world of insects is not social at all, hey we sre also going down that path so we will soon be living the movie mate. Prepare for swarming up and cannibalism of our own weaker blood. 😂 im sorry its a bad joke..
@@badmanners7652lol
insects are incredibly social. at least some of them, ants and bees for instance@@badmanners7652
the reason that snail can suck down a worm so easily is exactly the thing mentioned at the end, it's "thousand teeth" are effectively a pad that has spikes not unlike a cats tongue, only that a snail is designed to only lick, so it can do it very rapidly. the result is that it looks like suction as its gulping down a worm, but its actually more akin to an eel's second jaw, which pulls whatever it can touch further into the mouth
Those sound effects crack me up.
Nothing like a bug background when feeding bugs 😆
What else can I say besides absolutely intriguing? Im fully aware of the amazing world of insects, but theres always something new to learn and always a new spectacle to marvel.
Yeah! I think so. This always new for me, because we just know less percent of the world mystery.
If it wasn't for the giant beetles I could live at that waterfall for as long as my Shire weed lasted.
I wanna see more episodes on parasitic fungus! Please 🙏
BIGG AGREE
@@LLunaloops we want more videos on cordyceps and other parasitic fungus. There is a lot to learn about them.
@Twicce.Switzerland
Oooou fantastic fungi is a great place to start!! It's a documentary :3 But I will do up a little content 4 everyone very sonn!! lol SOON even ^^'
Subscribe if you're into buggy wings and all sorts of sciencesy things!
Something about nature documentaries cheer me up when I'm feeling depressed. More so than comedy. It's good to laugh but often the laugh feels shallow. Something's missing. Something deeper. For whatever reason this does it for me.
24:01
One bee: gets eaten
Other bees: That's the signal! BANZAAAAAAIIII!
I amazed how anyone ever saw these events to capture in the first place. Amazing!
love the sounds of nature. We can't lose these beautiful animals.
You can "fish" for antlion! We here in Florida call them doodle bugs. Get a stick, find some spiderweb or cobwebs attach it to the stick and start fishing! When the antlion grabbed the web it gets stuck! Pull it up and boom, you've caught a doidlebug! Be kind and catch and release!
PS
We also have the devil sticks that squirt turpentine in Florida!
We basically have every kind of scary bug, spider and reptile
The lives of social insects are amazing. Never knew how crazy it was until I read The Selfish Gene.
Agreed. It's like they're magical
The quality of these visuals show you fine detail you'd never of seen without this absolutely amazing detailed filming.. never ceases to amaze me the deeper look into the lives of something I'd shrug off as a pesky lil ANT , or a basic boring insect, never will i think that again, these insects lives are much more detailed and complex then once thought .. I'm telling you ants will take over the world!!😮😂
All the other narrators are no where near as good as David Attenborough.. they all sound like they're falling asleep.
Just listening to Attenborough, you can feel this enthusiasm, his motivation and his professionalism in this subject.
I hope they AI his voice for future episodes.. then we can listen to him forever.
I get more enjoyment watching insects and interstellar traveling then I do watching tic tok. 😂
That lizard was so goofy copying the way bombardier beetle walked.
I love the guy that throws everyone off the tree.
The little red and black mantis put me in the mind of a dominatrix wearing a red latex bodysuit 🤷🏾♀️🤣🤣🤣
Amazing video sequences!! This show was so fascinating, I couldn't pull my eyes off it 👀 and with David Attenborough narrating, even better! Thanks so much for this fabulous video @BBC Earth 🤩
I just subcribed... just for David Attenborough... he may have been an insect , in past. J/K these BBC Nature shows in UA-cam are so addicting and informative. 😊
we recently witnessed an ant war between fire ants and small black ants in our desert yard, very cool 😲
Incredible filmography! Amazing life forms. What a unique jewel is our planet that humans are just mucking up, possibly beyond any way to redeem it at this point.
All those locusts are terrifying 😮
Thanks to micro camera and team for giving us perfect knowledge..💕
congratulations to BBC Earth for the excellent video
Man oh man! Whoever had the idea about the popping sound effects for the first clip. Thank you for the laughs. 🙂
Gotta say the ants getting kicked was prrtty funny
It's amazing!
I have never seen such a high quality video👍
The insect that got bit in the leg by the army ants and knew it couldn't move so they moved past it had me dead.
Wow! I am amazed of insects intelligence! They are all warriors! Ants know to bury certain victims too like humans! I'm gonna be kind of every insect and creature i encounter again!
It’s crazy how we can watch insects through there ways of survival but as humans, we are about to walk right off the planet 😢.
It's just wonderful to see how those villagers live in harmony with the driver ants
This is just absolutely gorgeous.
I love this kind of documentary. So many amazing animals out there, each with it's own little secrets. I grew up watching things like this and always said that's what I'll do when I get older. I am a nature guide, now and run a channel. Nowhere near this good, though!!
David Tennant narrating on BBC Earth❤❤
It shows what unity can do.....Beautiful!
7:26 AMOGUS 🗿
"Stag beetle throws girlfriend out of tree" but when I do it I go to prison. Smh
This's a gorgeously fantastic work...Thanks to all powers worked behind ❤🎉
I am always humbled by such presentations, I strive, but can't hold a candle to this kind of work!
Bro how'd i end up here😭
The story:
It all started today when my youngest sister wanted to play a two player game them i installed a quiz game, THEN, it had a question “which animal from a popular video sneezed and scared its mother?” (the answer was “giant panda”) so i searched it up!, Then i kept watching these videos and subscribed to this channel and now im here😅😅
Living things are just organic robots. Nothing demonstrates that so terrific as insects, at least not as beautiful and actually visible to the naked eye.
The Army ants are fascinating as well as horrifying…….and that snail! Never saw anything like that!! Just sucked that worm up like spaghetti!! Mother Nature is amazing in her diversity. ❤️❤️
Evolution blows my mind. Ants are said to be over 50 times older than humans. We literally just got on the scene. Hopefully we don't destroy the planet much more than we already have.
Great creature powerful god 🤯 see these architects physically yeh bebe como bebe
So I wrote this as I watched the show after it went live 😂
I was at work when you were live, but I have really enjoyed the phylogeny videos and would love to see one about birds! Finding your channel was such a treat for me, I'm always looking for evidence based animal content by experienced and trained staff/creators/etc. Not to take away from content creators without formal educations or training, but I can always be confident of information in a Clint's Reptiles video. If I didn't live on the other side of the country I would love to visit the reptile room! I enjoy all of your content, even videos about amphibians or other non-reptiles (even when they are actually reptiles). Not only is your knowledge on biology vast, but your excitement is contagious.
Hearing more about animal consciousness and feelings would be amazing. I'm an animal science major and one of my favorite classes, so far, was animal behavior. Specially reading things that Dr. Griffin has written in regards to animal consciousness. He believed that all animals experience some level of consciousness and feelings, possibly as far back as the 80's.
Ants, one of the smallest creatures on the face of the planet, but also the strongest, productive, and lethal insects alive. Quite intimidating. 😳
Its so intriguing how this small world gets around
THE LIZARD ACTING LIKE THE BEETLE I CRIED LAUGHINGGG
Better hope the beetle does not take offense.
The lizard walking a beetle is the funniest shit I've ever seen
I love watching these videos since I was a kid🥰
No wonder the moth went nearly extinct. It's food is explosive 😏
💀
The footage, editing and theatrics on this one are superb!
07:12 lol that beetle YEETing those ants and @08:34 the creeper xD
Exelente la vid a animal me gusta mucho
i love these videos.
Oh my... those japanese bees just killed that hornet by overheating it. Amazing behavior!
29:01 menace 😂😂😂
The little ant escape from the lion ant and looks back down. Not today pal 😅
Fantastic filming! I'd love to see some behind the scenes on how these documentaries are made - they're incredible!
🐜 my favourite photography models
Many thanks to the creator of this video. the scenery is amazing
"Stag Beetle Throws Girlfriend Out Of Tree" there are so many jokes to make I don't want to choose any particular one over the others
They could not have picked a worse soundtrack to accompany this my god
Isolate the chemical compound of the pheromone that tells the locus to move on to new feeding grounds. If that pheromone could be synthesized, squadrons of large agricultural drones could be flying in front of the swarm leading it to an area not as affected by a swarm. Also. If able to even with agricultural crop dusting aircraft, keeping the swarm flying, could physically tire the individual locus to land and rest on the ground, making it easy for a agricultural crop dusting aircraft to come in and spray pesticide.
Yeah I know that's a lot of technology, and most of the countries these locust swarms affects the most, can't afford such technology.
Yea no, a drone would simply be enveloped with locust and ultimately fail due to the amount of locust guts and bits
7:27 „Among us“
The videographers who go through hell and more to get these shots for us don't get near the recognition they deserve‼️‼️👍🏼📹🏆🌍🌎🌏😊
29:15 Wow.... Beatles haven't got the Me Too meno huh? Basically forces himself on the lady and talk about insult to injury... Throws her off the tree??? Damn! Thats some cold pimpin!
That moth caterpillar at the beginning... I've come across those where I live in Surrey!?!🤔
8:45 devils fire terps? Who knew