So much patience and hardwork by the team and the fish... The camera shot of half above & half underwater is awesome... This fish is really a silent predator...thanks to BBC EARTH
@@dariocaporuscio8701 aye possibly the shinyness of the eye. we also have to think from there perspective and how differently there perception of sight is that a shiny object a meter above the water flickers slightly and that must be like a beacon for there perception. meaning his eye moving. its brilliant stuff
I can confirm that these fishs are amazing. I live in the Eastern Asian part of the world, you can buy archerfish at the local fish street here. They live in brackish water (not salt, not fresh, in between) and I had a 80 gallon tank setup. I had 3 archerfishs living with some Sliver Moonys and Spotted Scat. I couldn't really get crickets to feed them because the top of my tank wasn't fully sealed, but I could replicate their natural environment the best I could and put branches above the water and gave them hiding spots with some fake roots under water. The fun part was, I would put dried shrimps on drifferent locations on the branches and just watch the archerfish takes aim at the target and shoot them down. Some archerfish are actually capable of jumping out of the water to catch a meal too if its close enough to the surface.
We always appreciate how beautiful and awe inspiring the filming is from BBC, but these videos show us how difficult it can be to obtain. Thank you for your fantastic work! 😊❤
It’s fascinating that these small fish have this vision to see through water then out of water and so accurately spit water to catch their prey. Great work by the team to share with us such knowledge.
@@davidpalen2543Just because you can't think of a way they could have evolved does not prove that there is no way. I recommend the books by Richard Dawkins. Evolution is absolutely magnificent and incredibly complex and learning about it is so much fun!
Certainly is fantastic the way these fish kept practicing this skill for millions of years until they got it right, all the while going hungry. The reason fish have schools is so they can teach about the refraction of the light as they spot their prey from below the surface of the water; the calculation of the parabolic path of the water jet; the physics of water moving through the air to hit the target with enough force to dislodge it; calculate the trajectory of the insect falling and begin to move to the point it will land in the water. Most of all teaching perseverance - when the exercise seems so pointless keep trying because sometime one of us will get it all figured out and then have the intelligence to teach the rest of us what we needed to know to get our food.
We are indebted to these amazing people that have dedicated their lives to bring the wonders of our planet for all of us to see in the comfort of our homes. Beyond gratitude’s
All this effort so we can, in the comfort of our homes, witness our amazing planet's life. We are so lucky to have these beautiful people do what they do.
One more great,,adventurous,,,filming,,& uploading with innumerable,,hardship,,hazard,,deep in water by BBC team. Simply,,incredible,,& to learn “ archfish” can even catch the bullet,,by water spout,,cannon. “” invaluable “”
When I was a kid, I used to play a Yoshi game on the Nintendo 64. In one of the levels (water level) you had fish just like these, shooting water at you, to try and get you to fall into the water; so they can eat you. It used to scare the shit out of me playing through that level. Absolutely amazing animals.
'These waters are infested with giant man-eating crocs but don't worry we put googly eyes on the back of your heads' 'Will that really work?' 'Of course' 🤭😏
Indian villagers who share their homes with tigers employ an almost identical technique, by wearing masks on the back of their heads. Tigers like to ambush the unwary from behind, so as the villagers travel through forest trails, they'll wear these masks. Can't knock it if it works.
Learned something new about these "Archer fish". How amazing this was to watch. TY ik filming was incredibly challenging at times. But I'm sure rewarding simultaneously. Perhaps we can get like a full episode of whatever you guys put out for us 😉
These damn fish have been filmed for more than 30 Years 😂, I'm 34,m and even I remember watching these fish talked about on old Nature VHS Tapes. What i found funny though is that it seems that the people are well aware of how much these fish have been filmed, they are not starting to talk about the aspects around the shooting itself 😂 It is nice to see the fish become clearer and clearer over time with new Cameras.
I am very glad, that there is no 2 m version of this fish..... * Imagine standing on a cliff, minding your own business and suddenly....SPLASH!... you fall into the water.. and after a split second you see a very big fish speeding at you with an open mouth... *
Wow nice discovery sir tnka for sharing you so amazieng sir..Godbless your ifort sharr that knowledge your so royal blood sir..so much apriecieting discovery for you new
First learned of archerfish from the TV series The Silent Service about American subs in WW2. Archerfish was the name of a sub and they explained how archer fish obtained prey.
What the actual heck ... Like ... I mean ... Why the behind the scenes from the first episode is more colorfull and visually beautiful than the episode itself? 🤨
Fish spitting at cameraman be like "did you just call me shy? Prrrttt"
Lol
" Damn paparazzi!" 😂😂😂
Lol amazing fish.
😂😂😂
😁
Honestly, the dedication to film a small fish is really amazing. Thanks for bringing it to us, and the shot in the eye was the highlight.
😅 yeah stop talking start filming
lol go away shooo be gone @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist1
So much patience and hardwork by the team and the fish... The camera shot of half above & half underwater is awesome... This fish is really a silent predator...thanks to BBC EARTH
Super interesting how they knew to go for the human eyes.
Maybe they assumed it was some kind of insect
@@dariocaporuscio8701 aye possibly the shinyness of the eye. we also have to think from there perspective and how differently there perception of sight is that a shiny object a meter above the water flickers slightly and that must be like a beacon for there perception. meaning his eye moving. its brilliant stuff
I can confirm that these fishs are amazing. I live in the Eastern Asian part of the world, you can buy archerfish at the local fish street here. They live in brackish water (not salt, not fresh, in between) and I had a 80 gallon tank setup. I had 3 archerfishs living with some Sliver Moonys and Spotted Scat. I couldn't really get crickets to feed them because the top of my tank wasn't fully sealed, but I could replicate their natural environment the best I could and put branches above the water and gave them hiding spots with some fake roots under water. The fun part was, I would put dried shrimps on drifferent locations on the branches and just watch the archerfish takes aim at the target and shoot them down. Some archerfish are actually capable of jumping out of the water to catch a meal too if its close enough to the surface.
You should have made your own youtube channel, and recorded it, you'd get millions of views.
HAIL SATAN@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist1
@lorddevil863 Would love to see a clip of your archerfish in action!
they are south American, they live in south America mostly
I have 2 of these thats been in fully freshwater for years and 4 clouded ones from Myanmar and Thailand, those are freshwater only
This footage is worth all the patience, hard work, and pain!
The footage is insanely clean. Well done, the patience is amazing for these type of crews.
This really captures what it was like for us to film the Archer fish for Planet Earth 3. Very proud to have filmed the underwater for this sequence.
Which camera did you use for the slow motion?
@@davidedebenedictis A Phantom Veo 4K
thankyou for your awsome work sir
Amazing footage!! Kudos to the crews for working hard on getting these!!
😮
We always appreciate how beautiful and awe inspiring the filming is from BBC, but these videos show us how difficult it can be to obtain. Thank you for your fantastic work! 😊❤
Just don’t get your “news” from them..
It is nice to see the people behind these amazing shots. Give them a chance to some notoriety among the viewers
Awesome documentaries! Hope you guys never stop making these!
Absolutely gorgeous
I really appreciate the filming crew's work, it's an amazing educational and conservation service to humanity.
It’s fascinating that these small fish have this vision to see through water then out of water and so accurately spit water to catch their prey. Great work by the team to share with us such knowledge.
love this "behind the scene" kind of documentary. props to the team!
This is really amazing how can fish see through water surface precisely! Evolution is fantastic! 👍
there is no possible way these fish evolved
@@davidpalen2543Just because you can't think of a way they could have evolved does not prove that there is no way. I recommend the books by Richard Dawkins. Evolution is absolutely magnificent and incredibly complex and learning about it is so much fun!
@@davidpalen2543 If you have time for it like millions years, it is possible 😁
Oh bless you x@@davidpalen2543
Certainly is fantastic the way these fish kept practicing this skill for millions of years until they got it right, all the while going hungry. The reason fish have schools is so they can teach about the refraction of the light as they spot their prey from below the surface of the water; the calculation of the parabolic path of the water jet; the physics of water moving through the air to hit the target with enough force to dislodge it; calculate the trajectory of the insect falling and begin to move to the point it will land in the water. Most of all teaching perseverance - when the exercise seems so pointless keep trying because sometime one of us will get it all figured out and then have the intelligence to teach the rest of us what we needed to know to get our food.
I was introduced to the Archer Fish in a PC game; “Impossible Creatures” beautiful fish !
That's amazing. The BBC crew should at least interview one archer fish to know how they developed their shooting skills
The shape & color of a fish that looks ordinary but becomes extraordinary when it can search for prey in an unusual way.
Thank you for the dedication this crew have :)))
Spitting fish is my kind of fish
I heard Tom Cruise likes the swallowers
@@thatrogueguy123projecting 😅
This was so cute and funny.... What an honor to be that cameraman 💚 thank you!
Never knew these fish exist. Amazing.
We are indebted to these amazing people that have dedicated their lives to bring the wonders of our planet for all of us to see in the comfort of our homes. Beyond gratitude’s
I love BBC❤
🤨 📷
Ayo
Me too, just not the BBC news
All this effort so we can, in the comfort of our homes, witness our amazing planet's life. We are so lucky to have these beautiful people do what they do.
Крутезна творча група BBC, дякую вам. Надхнення і удачі вам. Сподіваюсь очі оператора не постраждали. Рибу не навчили в дитинстві поводитись чемно.😘
One more great,,adventurous,,,filming,,& uploading
with innumerable,,hardship,,hazard,,deep in water
by BBC team.
Simply,,incredible,,& to learn “ archfish” can even catch
the bullet,,by water spout,,cannon.
“” invaluable “”
Thanks for filming such wonders of the nature and bringing them to us, Hats off to your perseverance and efforts
I just know there is such super fish like "archer fish" wow 😮 tks BBC for sharing this video...
When I was a kid, I used to play a Yoshi game on the Nintendo 64. In one of the levels (water level) you had fish just like these, shooting water at you, to try and get you to fall into the water; so they can eat you. It used to scare the shit out of me playing through that level. Absolutely amazing animals.
Can’t believe how accurate this fish’s shooting aim is! It’s like a professional marksman underwater 👏
Can't we just see how amazing Raja Ampat is, hope I'll be able to visit it someday 🥰
This is whole another level of documentary shooting. PE is king of dedication and clarity in shooting.
4 seconds in and the cameraman is getting spit water thrown at him violated 😂😂😂😂 0:04
'These waters are infested with giant man-eating crocs but don't worry we put googly eyes on the back of your heads'
'Will that really work?'
'Of course' 🤭😏
Indian villagers who share their homes with tigers employ an almost identical technique, by wearing masks on the back of their heads.
Tigers like to ambush the unwary from behind, so as the villagers travel through forest trails, they'll wear these masks.
Can't knock it if it works.
@ianmacfarlane1241 Except for the time it doesn't.
@@wyldflwr well of course it ain‘t 100% safe, but it‘s definitely better than nothing and it does have an effect
Crew: Archer fishes are shy
Archer fish: "bombarding the crews' eyes with water cannon"😂😂😂
Awesome, stunning and mesmerizing photography.
Thank you BBC and Sir Attenborough.
We have real life fish that can use Water Gun! 😂 4:42
Fish was telling BBC to go back to England.
Learned something new about these "Archer fish". How amazing this was to watch. TY ik filming was incredibly challenging at times. But I'm sure rewarding simultaneously.
Perhaps we can get like a full episode of whatever you guys put out for us 😉
The water is so clear. Incredible.
“Didn’t I tell you all to clear out? *spit*
2:10 "You can have a nice bright, sunny day one day, and the next you have this"
Yep sounds just like the UK
These damn fish have been filmed for more than 30 Years 😂, I'm 34,m and even I remember watching these fish talked about on old Nature VHS Tapes.
What i found funny though is that it seems that the people are well aware of how much these fish have been filmed, they are not starting to talk about the aspects around the shooting itself 😂
It is nice to see the fish become clearer and clearer over time with new Cameras.
Excellent, Dedicated Efforts. What an observation and focus, just excellent
Thats amazing
I LOVE TEAM.....❤❤
AND LOVE RAJA AMPAT INDONESIA..... 🇮🇩🇮🇩❤❤
I also seen these amazing fish in person. The accuracy is 100%true! It is amazing
Imagine if that fish as big as whale they can shoot helicopters or planes flying.😅
First 10 seconds of the video and I have already liked! Such an amazing work, love those fishes ❤
Wonderful video. Thanks.
I have one of these fish and he is absolutely amazing. My favorite fish by far.
Please tell me it's called Rex Hunt or Robin Hood or something
I learned about the Archerfish as a kid because they are in Impossible Creatures... used an Artillery unit. I liked them. :)
Love how the fish spitting at the team lol
Hello from Seattle, WA. (North West USA) This is truly great work. Thank you all. 😀👍👍👍❤
Much respect to all involved... I guess my great-grandfather was an Archerfish in his past life (11 kids) lol
Amazing
Generally I hate BBC for the biased coverage as news service but BBC Earth is exception. Its amazing.
Really amazing captures....
One of the best bits of the first episode were these fish!
Archer fish can be found in the fresh water river. I did catch one many years ago and bred it in the aquarium tank.
That was a kiss from fish 😘😘😘😘😘
I am very glad, that there is no 2 m version of this fish.....
* Imagine standing on a cliff, minding your own business and suddenly....SPLASH!... you fall into the water.. and after a split second you see a very big fish speeding at you with an open mouth... *
Those crickets are really good stuntmen.
Good
Nice Work Dear, Weldon
Amazing video
Now we need naration from sir David, make this a perfect video
Must be such an awesome job to have, rewarding over the pain points
Best nature guys 😮 1:20
How absolutely amazing!!
Hats off great work ❤🙏
Cool footage of a fish that I have been curious about for a long time, thanks a lot
Water is so beautiful ❤
Well FISHSPIT,takes on a new meaning now!
Wow nice discovery sir tnka for sharing you so amazieng sir..Godbless your ifort sharr that knowledge your so royal blood sir..so much apriecieting discovery for you new
The fish have been learning this since Mahabharata, to take revenge!
Priceless!
hats off to the team!
"Bro, shoot that human's eye"
"Why? We don't hunt humans"
"Cause it's hilarious lmao"
First learned of archerfish from the TV series The Silent Service about American subs in WW2. Archerfish was the name of a sub and they explained how archer fish obtained prey.
incredible!
Good video.
Watching Batangas City.
Philippines.
Great!
Toxotes jacularix is a pretty cool name for a fish that shoots wicked loads. All jokes aside, these guys are pretty cool little guys 😎
Pretty cool to see the behind the scenes
Wonderful 👍🥳🎉
Cool:)
Wao! 😲 Spitting Tilapia 🐠
Mind blowing. 😵💫
imagine just swimming around randomly with your pet crocodile and getting spat on by a shoal of fish
You say this, as if the spitting fish is the crazy part... 😏
Waooov perfect creation system ❤❤️❤️
Archer fish has developed a technic of shooting water out of its mouth .
What the actual heck ... Like ... I mean ... Why the behind the scenes from the first episode is more colorfull and visually beautiful than the episode itself? 🤨
A dynamic trick indeed!
If a fish spits in your eye and you're a camera person, stop shooting footage immediately!!! 😆
The bright shining eye was taken as an insect by the Archer !
I'd like to know the evolutionary steps that took place to lead to this result.
Gorgeous animals