How Do Animals Survive Freezing Winters? | How Nature Works | BBC Earth
Вставка
- Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
- As temperatures in this winter forest plummet, different animals have different ways of surviving.
Subscribe: bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
#Moose #NorthAmerica #Nature
Watch more:
Best of BBC Earth 🌍 bit.ly/BestOfB...
Best Animal Fights 🥊 bit.ly/BestAni...
Videos over 10 minutes ⏰ bit.ly/3SHJCEJ
Planet Earth III 🌍 bit.ly/PlanetE...
Frozen Planet II ❄️ https:/bit.ly/FrozenPlanetIIPlaylist
Blue Planet II in 4k 🌊 bit.ly/BluePla...
Taken from How Nature Works.
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.
This is a commercial page from BBC Studios. Service information and feedback: bbcworldwide.co...
Beautiful scenery of winter together with its beautiful animals.
Thank you sir I think the same (peacemaker)
@@NathanSalapokni Were you involved in the making of the video?
Nature's adaptations are inspiring, and these animals have evolved over time to thrive in even the harshest conditions.
I'm delighted to be watching this from my trip to south Greenland during a snowy early summer! Nature is amazing
Just amazing
Anti freeze in frogs is amazing. 🤯
Seeing the freezing of frogs and turtles is truly awe inspiring. Sacred life, love is all!
Nature take care of its own 😍
don't you know? hokkaido
Being able to freeze and reemerge in the spring is amazing.
This wolverine is living its best life, traveling 30km a day. Me: Walks to the fridge and back and needs a nap 😂😂😂
Moose is Tallest. Bison heaviest. Maybe that's what they meant
glad this is the top comment. My ears picked up when he said that.
Both are the 2 largest land animals in Europe and north America
Since the previous sentence was "2,5 metres tall", it automatically implied length not weight.
Neat, always wondered about this sort of thing. Thanks.
Winter is coming...🙂
Good video but the music is distracting
In summer, this video is heaven 🗿
Penguins....bitterly cold -70 C temps/ colderand then if that's not cool enough, horrendous windchills...while huddled together in a circular pattern (protecting their young - those little ones, oh so delicate) like a representation of how this Earth generates heat from within for it's exterior...survive while some of the colony hunts for food, only to 'navigate' back through treacherous winds.
Incredibly resilient.
Penguins are savage like that. And they'll stay huddled up for months at a time.
The heat from Earth's core doesn't reach the exterior, the surface is heated by the sun. But penguins are tough, you're right about that
@@ZakFierce try not to forget about the interactions between the Sun's cycles that majorily influence Earth's core via the surface absorption and the Sun's cycles of various energies undiscovered by the modern Mind (so far).
It's All good tho.
*Edit: interior volcanic activity (core), helped develop the layers upon layers of aged sedimentary layers, over time (as oUr modern Minds know it).
So the referance is inregards to how the penguind create 'penguin rings' around the centre point (huddling), incomparison to the Earth's sedimentary layers due to ongoing volcanic-growrh avtivity, which inturn is initiated by the influence of many factors, working 'together' including the Sun.
Is the cameraman freezing his butt off filming these animals? Give that guy a raise!
Never seen a frog freeze in time-lapse before, pretty damn cool 😂
outstanding nature ⏩
Not all rainforests need to be in the tropics, some like the ones in the Pacific Northwest just explained in this video can be located in temperate seasonal enviornments like North America. Like how not all deserts need to be hot because the Antarctic Desert and Mongolian deserts can be cold with snow.
I did some google searching and found out moose is taller but bison is heavier and longer
Sehr schön Gruss Jürgen 🤠
So nice
Does anyone know anything about the background track?
I know it’s annoying
Wow
enjoyed the video
Strong beaver 20
Anyone know what breed bird that is at 1:29? It’s gorgeous 🥰
❤❤❤
2:05 2.5 meters is a bit of an overestimate.
I guess you've seen all the moose in North America?
Hibernation, body mass, insulation or migration
Sad to know many deers in my neighborhood will succumb to winter 😢
And that is how Bambi dies. Nothing is more cruel than nature.
Well, they don't all make it.
In winter, animals have a pitiful and harsh nature
God is amazing with all his works.
stop doing wrong, read the bible, believe in Jesus Christ the Son of the living God only He can forgive you sins & redeem your life & save from hell
Amen! I was thinking the same thing! Hallelujah! What a Savior and Creator! God’s richest blessings to you all 🙌🙌🙏🙏
What music piece is that from 1:49 to 3:11? I'd love to know what that song is.
Tall part 99
Bison is the largest land mammal in NA, just saying.
Noticed that too. Was like, nah. Bison bruh
You're talking about mass. The argument they will take is height.
With global warming it really isn't much ofca problem any more
“How do animals survive freezing winters”?
*shows dead deer*
Sajnos nincs Magyar nyelvű felíratozás lehetősége ! Így NEM érdemes megnézni !!!
Uhhh... why does the narrator sound like the standard British AI voice???
In winter, animals have a pitiful and harsh nature😑😑😑😑😑
How Do Animals Survive Freezing Winters? | How Nature Works | BBC Earth 0028am 23.5.24 give it a rest....... we aint entered full summer season yet and yer harping on about winter. if it aint depressing enough....
Horrible music
Frogs are amphibians not animals, and turtles are reptiles.
Amphibians also belong to kingdom animalia..
Amphibians are a type of animals, so are reptiles. Amphibians can live both in water and on land
Wait, what? Frogs aren’t animals? Are they plants, fungi, bacteria?
That's like saying gorillas are apes not animals 🤦♂️
Those poor deer.
What do white tails eat in the winter?
Grass and plants they manage to dig out from the snow, along with pine needles and bark similar to the moose.