I watched this so you don't have to, and no, regardless of what the thumbnail might teasingly imply, they don't turn into mutant monstrosities that recapitulate all stages of arthropod evolution. They turn into dead caterpillars. Hope I saved you 15 minutes.
A caterpillar typically transforms into a butterfly through a process called metamorphosis. However, if a caterpillar cannot complete this process for some reason, it does not transform into another creature. Instead, it may remain a caterpillar and eventually die without undergoing metamorphosis. There are several reasons why a caterpillar might not transform into a butterfly:
There is a fungus that the monarchs get here in south fl and they will form into a chrysalis but then they never would get to finish their transformation into a butterfly. They just turn into a black liquid and die.
The "mayday" call from cabbage is shared among the plant family known as crucifers. This includes raddishes, horseraddish, mustard, and wasabi, and it's what gives them their unique spicy "spark." The spicy "spark" occures when the plant's flesh is broken. This causes two chemicals to bond; a chemical reaction qhich creates a new chemical called _"Isothiocyanate,"_ which quickly equalizes when exposed. This is why the spice does not last. Compare this to the spice in chili peppers, which is due to a chemical called _"Capsaicin,"_ which is always present in the plant and doesn't equalize, which is why the taste hangs around.
There is a similar chemical in paprika (which actually comes from a pepper) that when damaged it does the same thing, but it takes about a week to normalize again- if they want it to be spicier, a day before they harvest, they hit the plants with a soft whip of sorts (it kind of looks like a head of wheat seed, but without the seeds- just the then they immediately start drying them after picking, sometimes in some kind of smoker. (regular ones are sweeter & dry over the course of a few weeks.)
@@elvendragonhammer5433 Ohh. That's interesting to know. I figured they were ground pepper. I didn't know capsium changed when disturbed, but I guess it's not surprising. Ah, plants. So secretly complex.
I’m terrified of caterpillars but decided to face my fear when I saw a beautiful orange caterpillar on my walk to the store. This caterpillar was about the thickness of my middle finger and very long. At first I freaked out and realized OMG it’s a caterpillar. However, my 9 year old son was right next to me and looked at me, I quickly reacted grabbing a leaf scooping up the caterpillar and bringing it to safety. I’m so thankful I did that, I felt it smiled at me. It reminded me of the hungry caterpillar as a pumpkin. It was actually kind of cute! But did I touch it with my hand? No, I saved it though lol put it back to the bushes, my son was proud, one day I’ll get there.😅
There is also at least one species of butterfly that once the chrysalis has hardened, the caterpillar's body, skin, its organs, nerves, etc- literally everything completely dissolves into a protoplasmic goo of sorts then it entirely rebuilds itself at the cellular level. Scientists still don't know why, or exactly how it does this; their closest guess its that it can somehow turn all it's existing cells back into stem cells again, allowing them to grow into anything in their library evolutionary bluprints. (In theory)
From what I've read, it is likely that not everything dissolves into the soup. Apparently in one experiment butterflies remembered something that the caterpillars had been taught. I think it was with monarchs. This implies that there is a small part that remains untransformed.
You are correct about them retaining memories, however unlike us, many other creatures don't need a brain to store information, hence it can completely dissolve into the soup. Nearly all worms, (especially nematodes, & flatworms), tardigrades, starfish, slime molds, etc all have either molecular or DNA based memory storage instead. Flatworms are by far the strangest. Some researchers ran a single flatworm through multiple mazes that if they touched a wall they got shocked. There was also some food in very tight corridors that would make it difficult to get at & eat. After the worm (1-ONE) could solve the all the mazes repeatably (this took months of learning) They killed the worm, cut off it's heads, at each end & dried out only the smallest part of the central body, Freeze dried it, crushed it into powder & fed it to other new flatworms. (all of those steps should have destroyed tremendous amounts of cells, making it nearly impossible for this to work but it did anyway) They waited a week for it to consume the most from it they could. Every one they fed the original worm to could get all the difficult to reach food, & solve the maze perfectly; without touching any of the walls on their first try just like they were the first worm. If our memory worked like that, we would have evolved to cannibalize each other; & the top dog would be like Braniac from DC comics lol. But that also means on your death bed a bit of your cells would pass along your entire family histories, culture, traditions & lineage, & the knowledge to your kid of how to fix that Pontiac Sunfire in the garage. @@gibbogle
This video provides some interesting information, but unfortunately includes a lot of mistakes, such as showing the caterpillar of one species while discussing another.
not all of them though; every species have it's own personality as for the starter of it's own life destination,, which also questions some of us about the st or some of religious act and belief,, and Athens might one of those being wasped from it's own logical perspective of its own nature,, such a core of an earth too as a sign of being a star or as a production process from it's offspring;
Like carlosandleon said, thats not the same thing. Amphibians just grow new parts and have other stuff shrink. caterpillars/moths basically dissolve/digest almost their entire body and reform their goop to form new parts
@@zbantri I found it in a busy city. Took it home. I lived in the country. I relocated a few butterflies and moths. For some reason they stayed on my hand the whole way home. Just about 10 minutes
2:39 That one called "monarch butterfly caterpillar" is actually a member of subfamily Pierinae, probably a mexican cabbage butterfly. 4:41 Those are monarchs, but they do not feed on cabbage, cabbage butterfly caterpillars do.
"Chrysalis" is pronounced "KRI-say-liss." The "i" in "KRI" rhymes with the "i" in "split," "bit," "sit," etc. The "ch" with which the word begins is actual a transliteration of the Greek letter Χ , or "KI," the "I" in which rhymes with the "i" in "time," "pine," "sign," etc.
9:45 And one of the main defenses for seasonal insects is the crowd. If there are 1000 nearby caterpillars, then the bird might be too busy munching on your buddy to get to you. It is just like how all flowers bloom at once -they hope to use volume to get in and out before predators can get around to them. But if you are the last caterpillar? Then you are just the last slice of pizza in a house of frat boys.
In the 1990s I was introduced to a bloke who had a Mandarine (and other fruits) farm near the coast around Yeppoon in Queensland, Australia. This guy had been using mineral rock to improve the soil, supportive ground covers to retain moisture and improve the soil...and, he introduced a tiny native wasp that attacked fruit fly and other 'pest' insects. As a result, his fruit was certified organic and had no blemishes, and personally, his mandarines were the juiciest and most flavoursome of any other mandarine I'd tasted up until then. Natural crop protection is easy to implement.
I think I remember hearing this pronounced in starcraft when I was a kid. I'm just glad he got rid of that intro. The slurping/gulping noises right in my ear made me turn the videos off lol!
In the first minute point five alone, several strangely anthropomorphic descriptors are used to describe evolution as an oppnionated, and active process when it is in fact just passively written by the individuals in a species that don’t fail before they pass on their genes. The content is great but with a little bit more neutral/non-human description of the processes of gradual change over millions of years it could be just a little bit better. Great content!
Everything is a series of happenstance, including what we perceive as human conscience, or freedom of will. Placing anthropomorphic descriptors helps clarify why things worked out the way they did. Although it should always be clarified that evolution is a passive things, because those who are not knowledgeable get the impression that there is an active mechanism deciding how to evolve into the next generation.
I once heard someone pronounce the word chrysalis as "Chris-Sally's" and wrongly thought no pronunciation was worse in English... until today. Bravo for saying "Cry-SĂLL-is", you evil guy. 😄
What a joke! One species "decided" to become caterpillars instead of going straight to butterflies. Other species "witnessed the makeover" and decided to join the club. 🤪
Monarch butterflies are brilliant. They can live on sugar water in a frisbee, you have to teach them how to drink it. They will also take verbal and motion orders in groups. Have you trapped them and yelled at them. They start to listen. Not hard to teach them. They'll just do what you say in no escape.
@@ihaveinsomnia1 @ihaveinsomnia1 I had a bunch caught as a kid. They got noisy at night on the wall. I yelled at them and told them to go over there. They did and all got quiet right away. Then I had them taught by verbal and motion. I could point at a person and tell them to land on them. They just go anywhere I told them. You could walk outside with them on, wants to be with the others inside. They hide all over and not seen. Then it trips you out when they all open. It's scary to anyone, and you're surrounded. It's heart dropping.
@@rodagrail3231 Yeah, I had them trained like circus bugs. Then I let them go. Caught most in boxes and baiting them with sugar water. You teach one and release them, they teach that's food. Then not unable to be caught.
I ordered some caterpillar/butterfly kits. The little caterpillars munched on leaves for a week or two before they formed a chrysalis. Then after awhile the butterflies came out. I tried to transfer one to a bigger cage but it got away from me a flew off into the room. I couldn’t find it. Oh well… a day later I found it had been trapped in a spider web and wrapped up in web into a spider meal.
God is a non-English origin word used in comments. It was a word of equivalent meaning as Father.. So my interpretation is that in some aspects, there are SOME comments that don't make sense. Also, some fathers didn't or don't make sense nor create anymore. The definitions sometimes change as much as the scenery does. I have ALWAYS been hated and occasionally I was hostage.d. because of my knowledge. Thus,I do have foes. The hostager.s. change the deemed "age" of adulthood or competentcy deemed appropriate for departure, liberty, freedom such as access to one's own clothes, food, water, residence, pillow, keys....
Honestly, watching this stuff just confirms to me that evolution is impossibly complex. Seeing the thing of "baby butterflies" coming out of the eggs as being how they were before they evolved the ability to go through metamorphosis is just ridiculous...
a human baby does grow to 20 times its size in 3 weeks - in utero during the third month of gestation. it's not having to move or feed, but the metamorphosis is at least as impressive.
7:08 The real trouble kicks in during the POOPAL stage. If I had a big breakfast, some fruits and maybe some grains, it’s usually hard but easy to pass. Spicy or greasy foods will often result in the stool being rather soft and sticky, sometimes a “spicy” bowel movement.
That and chrysalis. Its hard to tell anymore if its some sort of text to speech voice that cant pronounce the words correctly.. or.. somebody who's never spoke the word. lol
Insects evolved from sea creatures, without wings. Logically I would think that the juvenile (wingless) state is the primitive form and the adult stage (winged) is more derived.
I've learned SO MANY new facts about bugs and butterflies watching this video. I had no idea any bugs could survive and thrive in the artic circle 😮 so cool!!!! Thank you for sharing your knowledge ✨️
At 14:59 - 15:12, the photos don't match the description. Those are maize, slime producing aerial roots of a Mexican landrace that can host bacteria capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen.
I had some caterpillars when I was young who had the NPV virus, the one shown in the video. My first set of painted ladies all grew up fine except one that was deformed. But my second set later on, it turned out the virus was in there and one day I woke up in the morning to find all of them except 2 lying at the bottom of the container. I thought they were asleep and went ‘aww’. Turned out they were dead. The other 2 were at the top of the container. One of them was ‘panicking’, squirming aimlessly, while the other was hanging in a V shape, while dripping green fluid out of its melting head. Eventually that and the other one dropped dead. The container also spelled TERRIBLE. I had nightmares for ages after 😅 poor lil guys…
SUPER thumbs up. I was going to correct this channel after googling what percentage of animals undergo metamorphosis thinking that number was way too large and in fact it's a little too small, supposedly 80% of animals go through Metamorphosis sometime in their lives! This is just the first source I saw but still it confirms the 65% or more lol wow, never ever would have thought that I would have thought maybe 15% at the most.
I still remember the caterpillar my teacher gifted me at end of year, in a jar. One day it hardened up into a cocoon. I thought it died or disappeared. But I left its jar alone. My Dad found it and since he couldn’t see anything moving he threw the contents out in trash and emptied the jar …. I would never get to see the butterfly hatch
2:17 that's my baby caterpi, guys😸 I've taken I around 7 of them and they all became beautiful limebutterflies that always come back to lay eggs on the lime trees.
I was baffled when I heard that caterpillar to butterfly was considered heresy, because that’s something that we had to have found out by the stone age.
I watched this so you don't have to, and no, regardless of what the thumbnail might teasingly imply, they don't turn into mutant monstrosities that recapitulate all stages of arthropod evolution. They turn into dead caterpillars. Hope I saved you 15 minutes.
The mispronunciations were so painful I couldn't watch the whole thing.
I'm reading comments - not bothering with what I thought would be a bad video.
I hope you have a pleasant day, you're doing God's work.
My hero!
Not all heroes wear capes
First time I heard someone pronounce chrysalis like that. It hurt.
same.
Yes, and he did it in two different ways. Both wrong. How does that happen?
I came to say that. Still in shock
Chris Sallis Phase
it was so jarring. how does someone make a video about caterpillars without knowing how to pronounce that word?
The way he says “chrysalis” upsets me greatly.
It happens all the time in similar videos. There's no excuse.
I know. It takes literally 2 seconds to look up words you don't know.
Chrysalis was pretty bad... but, pronouncing Pupate as Poop-Ate... that made my teeth hurt from how hard I clenched my jaw.
Yeah it made me stop watching ngl
It's just an accent.
A caterpillar typically transforms into a butterfly through a process called metamorphosis. However, if a caterpillar cannot complete this process for some reason, it does not transform into another creature. Instead, it may remain a caterpillar and eventually die without undergoing metamorphosis. There are several reasons why a caterpillar might not transform into a butterfly:
Yes, it doesn't want to identify as a buttrrfly so they drink the blood of a trans person to get puberty blockers.
There is a fungus that the monarchs get here in south fl and they will form into a chrysalis but then they never would get to finish their transformation into a butterfly. They just turn into a black liquid and die.
@@coreyhamby2989 Can you drink it?
well that was underwhelming i was expecting them to just keep growing
@@colorpg152i think thats also a thing
The "mayday" call from cabbage is shared among the plant family known as crucifers. This includes raddishes, horseraddish, mustard, and wasabi, and it's what gives them their unique spicy "spark." The spicy "spark" occures when the plant's flesh is broken. This causes two chemicals to bond; a chemical reaction qhich creates a new chemical called _"Isothiocyanate,"_ which quickly equalizes when exposed. This is why the spice does not last. Compare this to the spice in chili peppers, which is due to a chemical called _"Capsaicin,"_ which is always present in the plant and doesn't equalize, which is why the taste hangs around.
There is a similar chemical in paprika (which actually comes from a pepper) that when damaged it does the same thing, but it takes about a week to normalize again- if they want it to be spicier, a day before they harvest, they hit the plants with a soft whip of sorts (it kind of looks like a head of wheat seed, but without the seeds- just the then they immediately start drying them after picking, sometimes in some kind of smoker. (regular ones are sweeter & dry over the course of a few weeks.)
cruciferous. also brocolli and Brussel sprouts-- it's why these "stink" -
@@elvendragonhammer5433 Ohh. That's interesting to know. I figured they were ground pepper. I didn't know capsium changed when disturbed, but I guess it's not surprising. Ah, plants. So secretly complex.
True & things like fungi & slime molds are by far the most complex "plants" out there.@@Graphomite
MY CABBAGES!
I remember someone bringing a butterfly to school that only transformed on one side. It was like a cater-fly or butter-pillar.
Like those Icy-Hot lobsters that are blue on one side and red on the other 😂😂
I remember seeing a caterpillar with wings. No, it was not a butterfly or a moth. It was a caterpillar with wings.
This is super cool I'd love to see this!
That's completely impossible.
@nunliski nothing is impossible when it comes to mutations/deformities
I’m terrified of caterpillars but decided to face my fear when I saw a beautiful orange caterpillar on my walk to the store. This caterpillar was about the thickness of my middle finger and very long. At first I freaked out and realized OMG it’s a caterpillar. However, my 9 year old son was right next to me and looked at me, I quickly reacted grabbing a leaf scooping up the caterpillar and bringing it to safety. I’m so thankful I did that, I felt it smiled at me. It reminded me of the hungry caterpillar as a pumpkin. It was actually kind of cute! But did I touch it with my hand? No, I saved it though lol put it back to the bushes, my son was proud, one day I’ll get there.😅
I'm glad that of the Mistys of the world, you decided to be the brave one
@@jaschabull2365 thank you so much! I’m beginning to like them more and hope to hold one soon. 🥹🙏🏽💪🏽🎄happy holidays!
A kind heart in the face of one's fear makes you stand out from those who destroy what they don't understand. You did a good thing.
@@michelles1250 aww thank you! 🥰I am proud I battled my fears and my son is too, he likes them now🥹😁happy holidays my friend, I appreciate you!💚
Never touch any caterpillar, esp. fluffy ones. They're either poisonous or irritating to the skin.
There is also at least one species of butterfly that once the chrysalis has hardened, the caterpillar's body, skin, its organs, nerves, etc- literally everything completely dissolves into a protoplasmic goo of sorts then it entirely rebuilds itself at the cellular level. Scientists still don't know why, or exactly how it does this; their closest guess its that it can somehow turn all it's existing cells back into stem cells again, allowing them to grow into anything in their library evolutionary bluprints. (In theory)
From what I've read, it is likely that not everything dissolves into the soup. Apparently in one experiment butterflies remembered something that the caterpillars had been taught. I think it was with monarchs. This implies that there is a small part that remains untransformed.
You are correct about them retaining memories, however unlike us, many other creatures don't need a brain to store information, hence it can completely dissolve into the soup. Nearly all worms, (especially nematodes, & flatworms), tardigrades, starfish, slime molds, etc all have either molecular or DNA based memory storage instead.
Flatworms are by far the strangest. Some researchers ran a single flatworm through multiple mazes that if they touched a wall they got shocked. There was also some food in very tight corridors that would make it difficult to get at & eat. After the worm (1-ONE) could solve the all the mazes repeatably (this took months of learning)
They killed the worm, cut off it's heads, at each end & dried out only the smallest part of the central body,
Freeze dried it, crushed it into powder & fed it to other new flatworms. (all of those steps should have destroyed tremendous amounts of cells, making it nearly impossible for this to work but it did anyway)
They waited a week for it to consume the most from it they could. Every one they fed the original worm to could get all the difficult to reach food, & solve the maze perfectly; without touching any of the walls on their first try just like they were the first worm. If our memory worked like that, we would have evolved to cannibalize each other; & the top dog would be like Braniac from DC comics lol. But that also means on your death bed a bit of your cells would pass along your entire family histories, culture, traditions & lineage, & the knowledge to your kid of how to fix that Pontiac Sunfire in the garage. @@gibbogle
That's a myth that their insides liquify
I shall call this process flesh sculpting
@@elvendragonhammer5433 Our memories likely have a DNA component as well. We understand our own brains very little.
This video provides some interesting information, but unfortunately includes a lot of mistakes, such as showing the caterpillar of one species while discussing another.
Fun Fact Butterflys not only drink Nectar but also other liquids Tears,Sweat,Urin and Blood
They really love over ripe bananas.
not all of them though; every species have it's own personality as for the starter of it's own life destination,, which also questions some of us about the st or some of religious act and belief,, and Athens might one of those being wasped from it's own logical perspective of its own nature,, such a core of an earth too as a sign of being a star or as a production process from it's offspring;
wow butterflies are just like houseflies. fucking.
Yeah, that last one is a bit unnerving to witness... A corpse covered in feasting Monarchs.....
I once had a butterfly drink the sweat off my hand for fifteen minutes.
1:40 you forgot frogs and toads. They have bones, which makes metamorphosis even more impressive on them.
not the same
Like carlosandleon said, thats not the same thing. Amphibians just grow new parts and have other stuff shrink. caterpillars/moths basically dissolve/digest almost their entire body and reform their goop to form new parts
well, yesn't.
I'm intrigued by the Hermit Crab Caterpillar. I found one once. It was so cool.
It's a fascinating creature that one
@@zbantri I found it in a busy city. Took it home. I lived in the country. I relocated a few butterflies and moths. For some reason they stayed on my hand the whole way home. Just about 10 minutes
@@PennyPlant-fr1gd wow that's so cute
Leaf Case Moth is the ultimate natural outcome
2:39 That one called "monarch butterfly caterpillar" is actually a member of subfamily Pierinae, probably a mexican cabbage butterfly. 4:41 Those are monarchs, but they do not feed on cabbage, cabbage butterfly caterpillars do.
"Chrysalis" is pronounced "KRI-say-liss." The "i" in "KRI" rhymes with the "i" in "split," "bit," "sit," etc. The "ch" with which the word begins is actual a transliteration of the Greek letter Χ , or "KI," the "I" in which rhymes with the "i" in "time," "pine," "sign," etc.
Virus cells... :/
👁🧠👁
Chris-a-liss
Chris Alice
There you go. Easy. :-)
Kris-uh-luhs*
Look up the pronunciation if you don't believe me.
9:45 And one of the main defenses for seasonal insects is the crowd. If there are 1000 nearby caterpillars, then the bird might be too busy munching on your buddy to get to you. It is just like how all flowers bloom at once -they hope to use volume to get in and out before predators can get around to them. But if you are the last caterpillar? Then you are just the last slice of pizza in a house of frat boys.
Love this analogy 👏🏾
Flowers have predators?
In the 1990s I was introduced to a bloke who had a Mandarine (and other fruits) farm near the coast around Yeppoon in Queensland, Australia.
This guy had been using mineral rock to improve the soil, supportive ground covers to retain moisture and improve the soil...and, he introduced a tiny native wasp that attacked fruit fly and other 'pest' insects. As a result, his fruit was certified organic and had no blemishes, and personally, his mandarines were the juiciest and most flavoursome of any other mandarine I'd tasted up until then. Natural crop protection is easy to implement.
*cough* *cane toads*
i feel like a caterpillar who never became a butterfly.
I'm 5", I'm literally smaller than a caterpillar. 😊
But with wings you'd be taller . 😁
Ok but where is the red thing in the thimbanil?
“Chris-a-liss”
First time I’ve heard someone pronounce pupa like this. It hurts
chri- sahh - lis
your pronunciation of chrysalis killed me..
I think I remember hearing this pronounced in starcraft when I was a kid. I'm just glad he got rid of that intro. The slurping/gulping noises right in my ear made me turn the videos off lol!
Booo on this click bait.
True!!!!!
In the first minute point five alone, several strangely anthropomorphic descriptors are used to describe evolution as an oppnionated, and active process when it is in fact just passively written by the individuals in a species that don’t fail before they pass on their genes. The content is great but with a little bit more neutral/non-human description of the processes of gradual change over millions of years it could be just a little bit better. Great content!
Everything is a series of happenstance, including what we perceive as human conscience, or freedom of will. Placing anthropomorphic descriptors helps clarify why things worked out the way they did. Although it should always be clarified that evolution is a passive things, because those who are not knowledgeable get the impression that there is an active mechanism deciding how to evolve into the next generation.
Chrysalis is pronounced 'Chris Aliss'===I'm sure it's been repeated a million times already
I appreciate how you assert things as fact without any lack of certainty whatsoever, even though that's not what the scientific process does.
I once heard someone pronounce the word chrysalis as "Chris-Sally's" and wrongly thought no pronunciation was worse in English... until today.
Bravo for saying "Cry-SĂLL-is", you evil guy. 😄
What a joke! One species "decided" to become caterpillars instead of going straight to butterflies. Other species "witnessed the makeover" and decided to join the club. 🤪
Monarch butterflies are brilliant. They can live on sugar water in a frisbee, you have to teach them how to drink it. They will also take verbal and motion orders in groups. Have you trapped them and yelled at them. They start to listen. Not hard to teach them. They'll just do what you say in no escape.
What...seriosly?
Last year I raised and released over 350 Monarchs, this year maybe 200. I never yelled at them.
@@ihaveinsomnia1 @ihaveinsomnia1 I had a bunch caught as a kid. They got noisy at night on the wall. I yelled at them and told them to go over there. They did and all got quiet right away. Then I had them taught by verbal and motion. I could point at a person and tell them to land on them. They just go anywhere I told them. You could walk outside with them on, wants to be with the others inside. They hide all over and not seen. Then it trips you out when they all open. It's scary to anyone, and you're surrounded. It's heart dropping.
@@ihaveinsomnia1 Their attention span. And ability to understand is seconds.
@@rodagrail3231 Yeah, I had them trained like circus bugs. Then I let them go. Caught most in boxes and baiting them with sugar water. You teach one and release them, they teach that's food. Then not unable to be caught.
"Chris-a-liss" not "cry-sah-liss"
It was so bad.
Also, he says it more like “crih sal iss”
I ordered some caterpillar/butterfly kits. The little caterpillars munched on leaves for a week or two before they formed a chrysalis. Then after awhile the butterflies came out. I tried to transfer one to a bigger cage but it got away from me a flew off into the room. I couldn’t find it. Oh well… a day later I found it had been trapped in a spider web and wrapped up in web into a spider meal.
good spider! :D
Que the Lion King theme song.
WATOP reporting this like it's the first time he ever heard of butterflies.🤣 The excitement throughout all the mispronunciations is so cringe-cute!
I'm convinced we livin in Hell and just don't know it.
fr. That's why i'm a vegetarian
Sheesh man i love ur vids!
You definitely know how to pronounce all those words that you definitely wrote. You make Illuminaughty look competent.
That's not how you say 'chrysalis'. Betting you say 'nukular' instead of 'nuclear', too.
Can someone explain what the hell is going on with the comments? Most of them are absolutely nonsensical.
God is a non-English origin word used in comments. It was a word of equivalent meaning as Father.. So my interpretation is that in some aspects, there are SOME comments that don't make sense. Also, some fathers didn't or don't make sense nor create anymore. The definitions sometimes change as much as the scenery does. I have ALWAYS been hated and occasionally I was hostage.d. because of my knowledge. Thus,I do have foes. The hostager.s. change the deemed "age" of adulthood or competentcy deemed appropriate for departure, liberty, freedom such as access to one's own clothes, food, water, residence, pillow, keys....
Yeah I don't know either. That or they're sttangly hateful. I know this is the internet but even still.
It turns into Joe Biden
Wdym
@@Crustaceanking50it’s a troll. It barely speaks English
@@patriciaflickner5392 I mean there’s a joke I just don’t get it
@@Crustaceanking50 that’s cuz it’s in court
CHRIS-a-lis. Chrysalis has the emphasis on the first syllable.
Anyone else bugged by the way he pronounces chrysalis?
I’m guessing the dozen other comments before you’re, probably, maybe (but I don’t know) we’re also bugged by it. But again, I could be wrong
Nvm. It’s more like 30 other comments before yours, that you didn’t bother reading, before asking if anyone else feels like you
That's not how you say "Chrysalis".
That last caterpillar got the low down and perfected its process
Bro destroyed the word "chrysalis". "Chrisálas". He also said "poopate" and "poopal".
Honestly, watching this stuff just confirms to me that evolution is impossibly complex. Seeing the thing of "baby butterflies" coming out of the eggs as being how they were before they evolved the ability to go through metamorphosis is just ridiculous...
a human baby does grow to 20 times its size in 3 weeks - in utero during the third month of gestation. it's not having to move or feed, but the metamorphosis is at least as impressive.
Bring the Coffee sipping video back. I loved it. It was pretty original!
Oh my god… you changed the voice back to the less annoying one… thank you so much I can now enjoy your videos again.
Chris-a-liss not cry-salis fml have you never heard words before
LOL, that Elden Ring, frost status effect.
7:08 The real trouble kicks in during the POOPAL stage. If I had a big breakfast, some fruits and maybe some grains, it’s usually hard but easy to pass. Spicy or greasy foods will often result in the stool being rather soft and sticky, sometimes a “spicy” bowel movement.
That and chrysalis. Its hard to tell anymore if its some sort of text to speech voice that cant pronounce the words correctly.. or.. somebody who's never spoke the word. lol
Metamorphosis is like when Bruce Wayne transforms into a bat.
A caterpillar called Kafka.👍👍
Insects evolved from sea creatures, without wings. Logically I would think that the juvenile (wingless) state is the primitive form and the adult stage (winged) is more derived.
Caterpillars are also "aware" when they're inside their cocoon.
They turn into a kickass lvl 100 Caterpie you can wreck the elite 4 with.
Thank you.
"Cry Solace Stage" aw geeze rick
He didn't transform them into butterflies, though. He let them do it on their own.
Love your videos. I don't usually say anything but chrysalis is pronounced kri-suh-luhs. Keep up the good work!
Thank you. That was bugging the heck out of me.
Who cares
Hope you had a happy thanksgiving steve
Thank you fpr the fun video and the sheer amount of information ptovided.
A priest once refused to say the world wasn't round and they crucified him, tied gunpowder charges to his belly, and burned him alive.
Nice
I like this channel
And this channel likes you
@@davidbelen7199 +
I've learned SO MANY new facts about bugs and butterflies watching this video. I had no idea any bugs could survive and thrive in the artic circle 😮 so cool!!!! Thank you for sharing your knowledge ✨️
At 14:59 - 15:12, the photos don't match the description.
Those are maize, slime producing aerial roots of a Mexican landrace that can host bacteria capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen.
I had some caterpillars when I was young who had the NPV virus, the one shown in the video. My first set of painted ladies all grew up fine except one that was deformed.
But my second set later on, it turned out the virus was in there and one day I woke up in the morning to find all of them except 2 lying at the bottom of the container. I thought they were asleep and went ‘aww’. Turned out they were dead. The other 2 were at the top of the container.
One of them was ‘panicking’, squirming aimlessly, while the other was hanging in a V shape, while dripping green fluid out of its melting head. Eventually that and the other one dropped dead. The container also spelled TERRIBLE. I had nightmares for ages after 😅 poor lil guys…
This just reminded me how many butterflies we had around as kids and the last 10 years theyve had a steep decline. Sad af
This kind of sounds like Dead Rising with the bees.
neat to learn stuff like this
8:30
Its so wild that humans do the same thing but evidence of natural healing is "anecdotal" 😂
Chris-a-lis, I think.
Minecraft reference kept me laughing 😂
Cabbage: BATMAN WE NEED YOUR HELP
Parasitic Wasp: It's not who I am... but what I DO that defines me... *lays several eggs in caterpillar*
Nature's systems always amaze me. Ty for the video.
Butterfly's are pretty incredible when you think about it.
SUPER thumbs up. I was going to correct this channel after googling what percentage of animals undergo metamorphosis thinking that number was way too large and in fact it's a little too small, supposedly 80% of animals go through Metamorphosis sometime in their lives!
This is just the first source I saw but still it confirms the 65% or more lol wow, never ever would have thought that I would have thought maybe 15% at the most.
A tadpole and then a frog. When the frog sheds it's skin it becomes a turtle.
Steve : Where do You get all these intricate scientific details ?
Brother asked a very good question
Wikipedia?
when it's ready to poop ate, it becomes a cry SAL iss. . .
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pyoo pate, cris uh liss. . .
I’m surprised I was able to watch this episode. I was creeped the hell out the entire time! 😱
I still remember the caterpillar my teacher gifted me at end of year, in a jar. One day it hardened up into a cocoon. I thought it died or disappeared. But I left its jar alone. My Dad found it and since he couldn’t see anything moving he threw the contents out in trash and emptied the jar …. I would never get to see the butterfly hatch
What Does a Caterpillar Turn Into When It Can't Become a Butterf-
A corpse. It becomes a corpse.
You missed the opportunity to say "catterpillar vs the world"
I love the video ❤
If Caterpillar dies Wasp wins
If Caterpillar lives it wins and Cabbage loses.
I know others have said this but chrysalis is pronounced more like "chris-uh-liss" than "cry-sal-iss"
13:10 that is an absolutely wild sentence
THANK YOU
You forgot to talk about wingless moths.
the hungry caterpilar needs to be
heavily revised
Oh wow. So, caterpillars invented fibreglass.
i actually did see hundreds of dead monarchs before and i didnt know why they had just dropped dead in that one area
poopate? cry-salis? man who told this man how to pronounce these words.
2:17 that's my baby caterpi, guys😸
I've taken I around 7 of them and they all became beautiful limebutterflies that always come back to lay eggs on the lime trees.
I was baffled when I heard that caterpillar to butterfly was considered heresy, because that’s something that we had to have found out by the stone age.
The poople stage 😂
Every species has to have pizza guys not all us csn sprout wings some of us live in moms basement forgoing metamorphosis
So, there are some caterpillars that fail to launch. Got it.
Before I watch the video I want to make a guess: Is it a crab? There are rumors that crab is the ultimate goal.
2:06 The cry sallis stage.
There’s no way a caterpillar is older than me