Ocean Wonders: Babies of the Briny Blue

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  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2024
  • Whether they’re as cute as a button or have a face only a parent could love, babies big and small fill the ocean. And if they’re able to survive those perilous first days and weeks of life, they’ll chart a unique path through the sea. So watch this final Ocean Wonders episode to find out why each and every one of these newborns has a birth story worth telling.
    Hey, teachers! Here’s a cheat sheet of what’s included in this episode of Ocean Wonders:
    - Sexual (i.e. spawning) versus asexual reproduction (fission, fragmentation, polyps)
    - Babies born from eggs and live births
    - Where are ocean babies born?
    - How big or small are ocean babies?
    - Some babies look like their adult selves while others look very different
    - Some ocean babies are completely independent at birth while others rely on care from one or both parents
    - What are the odds that ocean babies will survive to reach adulthood?
    - Fish, coral, sea urchin, crab, mussel, anemone, sea cucumber, sea star, sponge, shark, angelfish, octopus, whale, dolphin, seahorse, blue whale, sea otter, plankton, killer whale, sea turtle
    This episode is part of our series Ocean Wonders, where we dive beneath the waves to explore the mysteries of life underwater-everything from how sleep and the sense of smell work in the murky depths of the ocean to how animals build homes, survive sickness, and grow to some of the oldest, ripest ages on Earth.
    Created by the Hakai Institute
    Executive produced and written by Meigan Henry
    Edited and narrated by Kristina Blanchflower
    Videography by Grant Callegari, Tavish Campbell, Markus Thompson, and Bennett Whitnell
    Additional footage provided by Storyblocks, Adobe Stock, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Liquid Guru, Frankincense, Juha Taskinen/WWF, Tom Kirschey, and Terry Farr
    Illustrations by Mercedes Minck
    This publication is endorsed by the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development as a Decade Activity. Use of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development logo by a non-UN entity does not imply the endorsement of the United Nations of such entity, its products or services, or of its planned activities. For more information please access: forum.oceandec...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4

  • @osmia
    @osmia 5 місяців тому +1

    The filming on this is fantabulous!

  • @felicitytilley6773
    @felicitytilley6773 4 місяці тому

    Very well done at keeping the script simple and likely to generate curiosity that leads to stimulate scientific advances in related fields by audiences.

  • @contempl8ive
    @contempl8ive 5 місяців тому

    I am constantly recommending your channel to others, especially youth I work with on Vancouver Island. I first found you through your whale bones series. Thank you so much for all these. Do you ever take apprentices? 😊

  • @iancanuckistan2244
    @iancanuckistan2244 5 місяців тому +1

    Hakai Institute should have 100,000 subscribers by now.
    The UA-cam algorithm must be broken.