Saw one of these when I was five years old. It was in South Carolina. For years I thought I dreamed this thing up because no one could tell me what it was.
I saw a bunch of these when I was a kid in 1982 in Georgia. My mom and grandma called them snake worms. We killed them by pouring on the salt. I’ve never seen them before or since. I’m glad we killed them, as they are an invasive species.
John Paul Keller I think I saw these too when I was growing up in California. I had no idea what they were, but it’s been so long since I had seen them that I had completely forgotten about them. If I recall, the worms were either matte black-brown or black and brown striped like the worm at 0:58
One got in my house before and I had no clue what it was. I'm used to or despise many of the various invertebrates crawling around northwest Florida but I'd never seen one before.
I saw one in NC about 5 years ago under a rock and figured it was some kind of leech. It was a light tan color, pretty skinny, and there was a lot of rain at the time. I have never seen it, or anything like, it again.
That's exactly what I was thinking. "My gosh its colors...its still a worm...its still a worm...so sleek and shiny...flipping worm...disgusting worm...where is it's face?...it has no face...what?"
It is quite common for reptiles, amphibians, insects, sea creatures that are toxic to eat to be colorful as a warning to other predators. "Do Not Eat'.
@@MrBonners True! It's funny that humans can see those colors and think, "Ooo, that's so cool!" when they're supposed to be off putting. But I think the message is still clear when you see shocking yellows, reds, etc.
If you only sat there looking cool and alien, it wouldn't have to be this way, but the internet says it do have to be this way, so a shotgun blast it is. Farewell, wormy!
My ex and I made noodles and watched youtube, we ended up on this weird surgury I seriously don"t know how we ended up in that part of youtube, but they removed worms from a mans intestines, like ALOT! We changed it to something funny and ate a few minutes later haha
Cuiucuiucatfish AJ i dont think anyone has every tried that. Most people would tend to avoid them, let alone try to handle one as fish bait. Theyre pretty gross sort of like slimy colorful flat mucus that causes irritation on contact, but much worse
@@junodisarapong6635 Probably not. They kinda look like an aquatic animal with a color display indicating they're toxic to eat, and you probably are introducing some of their stuff to your fish. Might as well skip that.
Ngl at first I was wondering why you proposed such an offer, and after watching a couple of vids I have to admit you actually do have a good narrating voice 😂
DARKSTAR 7567 I am only assuming the head functions somewhat the same way of the hammerhead sharks head, and other animals with similar morphology. The frayed head filled with sensory organs gives a better image to the creatures on where their prey is. I can imagine the worms using the hammerhead in the soil to pick up small vibrations that earth worms (their prey) make when tunneling.
Best guess: 'The heads are dotted with chemoreceptors (a sense organ) and organs that scientists call eyes, though it's not really clear how much light those "eyes" can detect, Ducey said. No one knows for sure why the worms' heads are so weird-looking, but it could have to do with the positioning of these sensory organs, he said. "If you have a big, broad head and you have chemical receptors on both sides of it, you can compare the right side and the left side," Ducey said. If one side detects more earthworm scent, he said, it could signal the worm to crawl in that direction.' - LiveScience [Peter Ducey is a biologist at The State University of New York, Cortland.]
I came across this worm a year ago and was thinking I maybe discovered a new species. I would have killed it if I knew it wasn't native to France and eats earthworms. There are still many earthworms when I dig, so maybe it died from the cold
They are invasive in the San Fransisco Bay Area. Thank you for a concise summary of important facts about this exotic species that is showing up in temperate and mediterranean climates
I used to play with these as a kid, they ran rampant under our mobile home. It was like another world under that house, since it was built where a ranch previously was, huge groups of mushrooms (psychedelic, cubensis more specifically but unknown to me the time) completely covered the ground under there. It made no difference to me though, I would gather up hammerhead worms and play with them in a small stone "arena" in the center of the mushrooms, where the fungus didn't grow. They're very soft to the touch and don't leave a slimy residue on your hands like slugs do.
I learned this thing existed when I found a snail trail one left coming out of my floor vent, having died and quickly dried out only feet away. Gross way to learn about a creature, but a fascinating fella regardless
Oh, so that's what those things are. I've seen them quite a few times after it rained. I assumed they were weird slugs at first. I never knew they were earthworm predators with a gruesomely bizarre way of eating, nor I knew they were invincible to predators. Along with octopuses and tartigrades, these worms sure look alien.
Interestin video I didn't know these worms exists. So among animals of the week we have: 12 Mammals 5 Birds 4 Reptiles 1 Amphibian 4 Fish 4 Invertebrates Damm amphibians need some love :/
What a beautiful, disgusting, cruel, strange and interesting creature this is. I had never heard of this worm before. That’s why I watch this channel 😃. One is never too old to learn. Thanks guys.
I have once found one under a rock in my garden here in switzerland, i didnt know what it was or that it wasnt native. Next time I see one I'm probably going to try and keep it in captivity.
I'll looking through the comments and these little bastards really do seem to be everywhere. I know we have them here in Florida, but we have all kinds of invasive pests.
You're going to have to feed it worms. Good luck finding worms every day. Maybe have a worm bin? Make life simple, take a picture of it, then kill it with salt.
I remember finding one of these when I was still in high school in southeastern PA under a cinderblock, over 20 years ago. An all-brown colored version like one of the first ones shown in this vid IIRC. I gave it to my science teacher to try and ID it, but we had no luck back then.
I saw a few in Escondido, CA when I was a teenager in the early 1990s. I saw then during the day and thought they were a type of slug because of the mucus trail the leave.
0:17 this is the one I saw all those years ago that really drilled it into my head not to pick something up before rolling it over first to see what's underneath
Interestingly in the more northern parts of North America where native Earthworms were wiped out by glaciation they have actually become a helpful ally in controlling the nonnative Earthworms that eat the leaf litter native plants have evolved to depend on not getting eaten. I also find it ironic that some of the most invasive predatory flatworms actually come from New Guinea and New Zealand making them probably one of the few invasive species that come from an isolated island rather than the other way around. Of course New Zealand's biodiversity outside of large vertebrates more closely resembles that of other continental flora and fauna due to it really being a submerged continental landmass
I had one of these crawl out of my garden hose a few years back in Northern California. I thought it was some sort of parasite. Thankfully the internet put my fears to rest.
Its a flatworm? Really? A FLATWORM? I was always taught flatworms were either aquatic or parasitic, and that they had simple bodies that relied on diffusion to get oxygen. Then these guys show up with the muscles to chase down and wrap around an earthworm. The things you find in the dark corners of the world.
I found one of these on my porch a couple years back - it was moving exactly like a snake would, and before I got close enough to take a good look at it, I thought it was some incredibly tiny snake!
Toxic, deadly predators, freaky features like a throat that can invert or its weird head, and gorgeous color schemes with high variation? I feel like this could inspire a very interesting Pokémon of some sort. Probably ground/poison.
It is said that the standard earthworm itself is an invasive species that came to North America from Europe. Before their arrival, leaf beds were very deep. After they arrived, forests really don't have the same environment that emerged after the glaciers melted away. WERE earthworms beneficial to North American forests? Is the Hammerhead Worm going to have a result of returning the forest environment before it encountered the immigrant earthworms? Of course, this question is based on the supposition of the standard earthworm's origins in North America. Also, it does not pertain to the European forest environment. What do the Ben G Thomas say?
The best part was after watching this short vid.. I saw a little orange specimen crawling slowly at the side of the house, it was chasing a little earthworm but after watching for a few good 30 minutes the hammerhead worm got side tracked and lost the worm for some reason. It was interesting to observe the hunt in person and a bit funny. It was the slowest chase of all time. Great vid.
The first time I saw this it was eating an earthworm and I thought it was a snake😂. But seriously I was real mad as I loved earthworms and the next time I saw them I would kill them pretty quickly 👍👍
"they decimate earthworm populations..." so, they reduce it by 1/10? is this per year? over many years? as an educator, and someone i assume has at least a passing knowledge of Latin, please be precise, and stop slurring the word 'decimate'. otherwise, love the channel :P
While I do agree with you on how he should have specified. We still have to consider that these are invasive species. So, the sooner we act, the better it will be. Worms can reproduce pretty fast.
I see these pretty often here in Costa Rica. Though they aren't as colorful as the ones in the video, just drab yellow. In wet weather they are active during the day, even moving over the pavement. I had no idea they were predatory. Thanks for making this video.
I've ever found one of these buggers near a parking lot, and conveniently I have brought a magnifying glass and started to burn them, they secrete those string thingies like a velvet worms does when hunting
"But they are still not edible and could make you ill if you eat one."
Damn there goes my plans for this weekend.
-said no one ever
Were your plans to be *not* ill this weekend?
The Chinese: I’m sorry were you saying something?
*Big things have small beginnings.*
@@laddttt6808 so anyways I started eating...
Saw one of these when I was five years old. It was in South Carolina. For years I thought I dreamed this thing up because no one could tell me what it was.
I saw a bunch of these when I was a kid in 1982 in Georgia. My mom and grandma called them snake worms. We killed them by pouring on the salt. I’ve never seen them before or since. I’m glad we killed them, as they are an invasive species.
John Paul Keller I think I saw these too when I was growing up in California. I had no idea what they were, but it’s been so long since I had seen them that I had completely forgotten about them. If I recall, the worms were either matte black-brown or black and brown striped like the worm at 0:58
One got in my house before and I had no clue what it was. I'm used to or despise many of the various invertebrates crawling around northwest Florida but I'd never seen one before.
I saw one in NC about 5 years ago under a rock and figured it was some kind of leech. It was a light tan color, pretty skinny, and there was a lot of rain at the time. I have never seen it, or anything like, it again.
Alabama 2001
Observing their coloration I'm thinking "there's no way nature gives you those colors without you being toxic."
*Ding ding ding ding!*
... there are non-toxic Animals also - they just look toxic, to get not consumed. Mimicry!
Facts 💯
"Animal of the week. If you see one, kill it."
Alex Ignobilis just use coffee--don't ask how I know...
Hope Rules Ground coffee, cold, or burning hot?
*kill it on sight IF you live in the northern hemisphere
@@unstoppableExodia I'm just joking. It's pretty obvious they should be killed to preserve other species.
@plaguelock Coffee grounds hold moisture well, the worms can eat the organic matter, and the caffiene makes them wiggly.
What an alien and odd creature. It is strange these exist and are carnivorous.
Its outside the recycle cycle... it... must... D i e
Get the flamethrower
Oh yeah yeah
@@NameName2.0 i thought he was describing the elite
worms are sooo weird :/
3:50 any worm that sports that kind of colour pattern is probably trouble.
Imagine eating it in small bites starting from the head and all the way down 🤢
Wow, I've never seen something so pretty and disgusting at the same time, lol. Another great video!
That's exactly what I was thinking. "My gosh its colors...its still a worm...its still a worm...so sleek and shiny...flipping worm...disgusting worm...where is it's face?...it has no face...what?"
Thanks, i was feeling the same why while finding pictures for the video
@@olimthomas6515 Thank you for that! We appreciate you going the extra mile, even if it's nasty lol
It is quite common for reptiles, amphibians, insects, sea creatures that are toxic to eat to be colorful as a warning to other predators. "Do Not Eat'.
@@MrBonners True! It's funny that humans can see those colors and think, "Ooo, that's so cool!" when they're supposed to be off putting. But I think the message is still clear when you see shocking yellows, reds, etc.
"Their prey will most likely not like this..."
Yeah I wonder why you wouldnt like not getting eaten
The best worm to invade my country. I am honored.
I guess it still gotta die though.
Goodbye hammerhead, it's been real but you're killing off the decomposers :(
If you only sat there looking cool and alien, it wouldn't have to be this way, but the internet says it do have to be this way, so a shotgun blast it is. Farewell, wormy!
@@ForwardSynthesis Cue "That's What Friends Do" from Spongebob's "Wormy"
what if they were put in zoos?
You can make a terrarium for some of them and take care. With the state permission of course.
Learn something everyday. Had no idea there was such a thing as hammerhead worms. Cool.
Shauntell Holm they are killing all of the decomposers definitely not cool
Welcome to the world of.....earth i guess
@@stevejefferson635
It's called population control.
That's pretty stupid.
Al Sp... you stoopid 😜🤪😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Worm week?
Worm week!
WORM WEEK!
Worm week!
Worm week
Nope
Note to self: don't eat a dish with noodles when watching a video about flatworms.
Oh god
My ex and I made noodles and watched youtube, we ended up on this weird surgury I seriously don"t know how we ended up in that part of youtube, but they removed worms from a mans intestines, like ALOT! We changed it to something funny and ate a few minutes later haha
Dock u
I am eating noodles right bow
"They're only noodles Michael "
adamFIVE88 youtube and chill
ive seen these guys in the wild. they look like something straight from a coral reef!
Are you saying they look like hammerhead sharks????
Do these work well as fishing bait?
Cuiucuiucatfish AJ i dont think anyone has every tried that. Most people would tend to avoid them, let alone try to handle one as fish bait. Theyre pretty gross sort of like slimy colorful flat mucus that causes irritation on contact, but much worse
@@junodisarapong6635 Probably not. They kinda look like an aquatic animal with a color display indicating they're toxic to eat, and you probably are introducing some of their stuff to your fish. Might as well skip that.
@@louisvictor3473 ive seen one in person once when i was a lil kid the one i saw was blue and they look very alien X'D
Invasive species: we’ve won, but at what cost?
“World is literally destroyed and near uninhabitable”
That sorta looks like a nightmare planaria.
It is a terrestrial planaria
What is a planaria
@@ED11169 google it and hit images
@@ED11169 they are tiny worm that have awesome ability
I had no idea planarians could get so... fleshy
That's looks scary as hell. Imagine that being human sized.
I think any human sized bug would be scary lol
They honestly look cool the varieties of colors are what makes it cool to me, but i'd still burn it tho.
You'd really not like a Bobbit Worm then
Where's its counterpart, the Sickle Worm?
Together they are too powerful, we cannot untie them or they will seize the means of production
Oli M Thomas they will take all our vodka and earthworms
We’ll have none of that commie shite around here!
(It’s more funny in my head as I hear Frankie Boyle yelling it)
They can be Creeping Soul Mates
It starved, or might be in an internment camp somewhere.
Love this channel, if you ever need/want a guest narrator let me know.
Ngl at first I was wondering why you proposed such an offer, and after watching a couple of vids I have to admit you actually do have a good narrating voice 😂
I know you
But what is the physiological function of the head shape
DARKSTAR 7567 I am only assuming the head functions somewhat the same way of the hammerhead sharks head, and other animals with similar morphology. The frayed head filled with sensory organs gives a better image to the creatures on where their prey is. I can imagine the worms using the hammerhead in the soil to pick up small vibrations that earth worms (their prey) make when tunneling.
Maybe the head can smell the slime trails. That is actually a thing for predators of worms in the sea.
Might be for better grip seems hard to do that with a round head it looks like it uses the head to wrap around the prey
Best guess: 'The heads are dotted with chemoreceptors (a sense organ) and organs that scientists call eyes, though it's not really clear how much light those "eyes" can detect, Ducey said. No one knows for sure why the worms' heads are so weird-looking, but it could have to do with the positioning of these sensory organs, he said.
"If you have a big, broad head and you have chemical receptors on both sides of it, you can compare the right side and the left side," Ducey said. If one side detects more earthworm scent, he said, it could signal the worm to crawl in that direction.' - LiveScience [Peter Ducey is a biologist at The State University of New York, Cortland.]
Easier to enter your nightmares and feed on your terror
The fact that this worm was inspiration for the Hammerpede in Prometheus makes this even more disturbing
I thought so.
Me, seeing the thumbnail & title: "ah hell nah!"
*proceeds to watch anyways*
Yes it felt like a duty for learning. I'm glad it has no mouth.
I came across this worm a year ago and was thinking I maybe discovered a new species. I would have killed it if I knew it wasn't native to France and eats earthworms. There are still many earthworms when I dig, so maybe it died from the cold
Killing them is quite difficult as they are planarians which means if you cut them apart each piece will just grow into a new worm.
Dragrath1 I’m sure crushing and stomping it will do the job though
Cast Firaga👌
KILL IT WHIT *salt*
Kill it with fire
3:35 damn I was really looking forward to eating those
They are invasive in the San Fransisco Bay Area. Thank you for a concise summary of important facts about this exotic species that is showing up in temperate and mediterranean climates
"Oh! So a bag'o'salt will deal with the bugger." Said earthworm Jim , as he cackled manically.
I used to play with these as a kid, they ran rampant under our mobile home. It was like another world under that house, since it was built where a ranch previously was, huge groups of mushrooms (psychedelic, cubensis more specifically but unknown to me the time) completely covered the ground under there. It made no difference to me though, I would gather up hammerhead worms and play with them in a small stone "arena" in the center of the mushrooms, where the fungus didn't grow. They're very soft to the touch and don't leave a slimy residue on your hands like slugs do.
I learned this thing existed when I found a snail trail one left coming out of my floor vent, having died and quickly dried out only feet away. Gross way to learn about a creature, but a fascinating fella regardless
I was ready to get some and go fishing till he said they were toxic, bummer. Still prettiest worm I've ever seen.
this thing is an actual demon but tiny. amazing.
plaguelock r/woooosh
plaguelock dude chill you must be fun at parties 😂
Walter You’re probably that one dude everyone is “friends with,” until you exit the vicinity.
They’re oddly beautiful but they also make me feel like scratching all my skin off.
Me: **eating chips**
Ben: **starts describing how the worm eats its prey**
Me: **immediately stops eating chips**
R u a chip
I never knew they even existed. And I spend the majority of my free time researching different biology/zoology topics..... so well done!!
MonsterBaby Steve Wilson theyre pretty common in south east asia. EVERYONE here hates them. Hard to kill, slimy and very disguisting.
Oh, so that's what those things are. I've seen them quite a few times after it rained. I assumed they were weird slugs at first. I never knew they were earthworm predators with a gruesomely bizarre way of eating, nor I knew they were invincible to predators. Along with octopuses and tartigrades, these worms sure look alien.
Interesting that one has similar, though not the same, coloration to a coral snake.
I used to have a pet one I caught in my front yard after a hard rain. I found it feeding on a large earthworm.
Careful they're poisonous
I didn't even know this was a thing. The more you know!
Interestin video I didn't know these worms exists.
So among animals of the week we have:
12 Mammals
5 Birds
4 Reptiles
1 Amphibian
4 Fish
4 Invertebrates
Damm amphibians need some love :/
Ill have to get on that and chose an amphibian for the next video
Invertebrates are even more underrepresented, and are way more interesting though.
Myobatrachus gouldii (turtle frog) and the Nasikabatrachus (purple frogs) would be good candidates for amphibian episodes.
@@olimthomas6515 Glass Frog would be interesting
The amphibians will all be dead soon anyways.
What a beautiful, disgusting, cruel, strange and interesting creature this is. I had never heard of this worm before. That’s why I watch this channel 😃. One is never too old to learn. Thanks guys.
I have once found one under a rock in my garden here in switzerland, i didnt know what it was or that it wasnt native. Next time I see one I'm probably going to try and keep it in captivity.
Probably a good idea since is not native I mean there's really only two choices death our life in prison.
I'll looking through the comments and these little bastards really do seem to be everywhere. I know we have them here in Florida, but we have all kinds of invasive pests.
@@thespookyvaginosisnut5984 shots fired
You're going to have to feed it worms. Good luck finding worms every day. Maybe have a worm bin? Make life simple, take a picture of it, then kill it with salt.
@@cadenrolland5250 don't that's cruel.
I found one of these in southern California. It freaked me out. 😶
Wow. What a strange varmint. Mother Nature never disappoints!👍👍👍
I've never heard of these before. You guys never cease to amaze!
Thank you, I love learning about new creatures and this is definitely one I had not heard of before!
Channels like this are really underrated. And you really got a good voice for documentaries.
I remember finding one of these when I was still in high school in southeastern PA under a cinderblock, over 20 years ago. An all-brown colored version like one of the first ones shown in this vid IIRC. I gave it to my science teacher to try and ID it, but we had no luck back then.
Someone said they can't survive in PA. Too cold. They need warm weather climates.
The variety of color schemes this worm has is fascinating! Natural art even.
I saw a few in Escondido, CA when I was a teenager in the early 1990s. I saw then during the day and thought they were a type of slug because of the mucus trail the leave.
I love these animal of the week shows. Seeing these bizarre creatures I've never heard of is amazing.
i would love to have one of these as a pet... it seems like something that would work well in a vivarium
0:17 this is the one I saw all those years ago that really drilled it into my head not to pick something up before rolling it over first to see what's underneath
Thanks for introducing me to an animal I didn't know before!
Dang the variety of colors of this worm.
I live is Southeast Asia and back at my old house in the country side, these guys would climb out of the cracks and crevices everytime there's rain.
As long as they don’t get indoor. 😁
Interestingly in the more northern parts of North America where native Earthworms were wiped out by glaciation they have actually become a helpful ally in controlling the nonnative Earthworms that eat the leaf litter native plants have evolved to depend on not getting eaten.
I also find it ironic that some of the most invasive predatory flatworms actually come from New Guinea and New Zealand making them probably one of the few invasive species that come from an isolated island rather than the other way around. Of course New Zealand's biodiversity outside of large vertebrates more closely resembles that of other continental flora and fauna due to it really being a submerged continental landmass
They're beautiful worms. Thank you for making this video, wouldn't have learned about them otherwise.
Beautiful, and they didn’t ask to be in Ontario but dangerous, destructive and invasive. I will have a bucket of soapy water!
Before watching the video, I thought It was a beautiful cane. Invasive yes. Also beautiful.
Reminds me of the movie Prometheus.. with that weird cobra worm alien thing that acts like a facehugger..
That was my first thought also.
It was named as a hammerhead btw.
Same thought
Both the hammerhead shark and worm can't really hammer stuff with their heads. They work more like vacuums but vacuumhead doesn't sound as good.
That's a cool worm!
not if you see them in real. Theyre pretty gross.
Watching this in celebration of Worm Week!
Looking at the thumbnail, I was like "WHAT IN THE WORLD?!" You gotta admit tho, their skin patterns are pretty.
I just spotted one today and it felt so surreal because I've never seen one before, it's like meeting your teacher at the mall
0:58 Hammer Head shark.........."and THAT kids,is how i met your mother!"
Michael Kelligan omg ;-;
@@Starpentine lol you know you laughed! 😁
Found some in my backyard a few weeks ago in Charlotte, NC. Didn’t know what it was so I left it live.
I’ve found more and have terminated them.
"it's not edible"
East Asia: Challenge Accepted
Thank you, now I know more of my little friends. Every time there's a lot of rain they just like to hang around my open garage.
Never heard of this animal, thanks for the video. God I love our planet, what amazing evolution.
A Hammerhead Worm?
A Hammerhead Shark?
A Hammerhead Bat?.....But wait the Hammerhead Bat doesn't really have a "Hammer- Shaped Head,thou.
WORM WEEK!
WORM WEEK, WORM WEEK, WORM WEEK!
Dude worm week is actually turning out to be fire af
It has a "Creeping Soul"!
I had one of these crawl out of my garden hose a few years back in Northern California. I thought it was some sort of parasite. Thankfully the internet put my fears to rest.
Well.
It is an invasive dangerous animal.
So I guess it counts as a "parasite"
Its a flatworm? Really? A FLATWORM?
I was always taught flatworms were either aquatic or parasitic, and that they had simple bodies that relied on diffusion to get oxygen. Then these guys show up with the muscles to chase down and wrap around an earthworm. The things you find in the dark corners of the world.
Bro. Love your channel. You're literally showing strange species that I haven't seen before.
1:56 I'm never touching another HB pencil again!
I found one of these on my porch a couple years back - it was moving exactly like a snake would, and before I got close enough to take a good look at it, I thought it was some incredibly tiny snake!
I saw one in the garden of my church at California
I was 8 or 9 years old.
Toxic, deadly predators, freaky features like a throat that can invert or its weird head, and gorgeous color schemes with high variation? I feel like this could inspire a very interesting Pokémon of some sort. Probably ground/poison.
They inspired the hammerpedes in Prometheus
I enjoyed the video but doesn't it seem glaring we dont get an explanation for what purpose the hammerhead body part has or why it evolved?
It is said that the standard earthworm itself is an invasive species that came to North America from Europe. Before their arrival, leaf beds were very deep. After they arrived, forests really don't have the same environment that emerged after the glaciers melted away.
WERE earthworms beneficial to North American forests?
Is the Hammerhead Worm going to have a result of returning the forest environment before it encountered the immigrant earthworms?
Of course, this question is based on the supposition of the standard earthworm's origins in North America. Also, it does not pertain to the European forest environment.
What do the Ben G Thomas say?
Guy, guys, guys, I cannot stress this enough....do not eat them.
Imma eat one.
@@SluttChops same
This is the coolest thing I’ve seen all week.
Beautiful worm, but I'd prefer snails and earthworms.
I saw the the beautiful coloring of these worms and immediately thought 'poisonous'.
holy shit , If reincarnation is a thing , I don't want to come back as it's food source ..........
The best part was after watching this short vid.. I saw a little orange specimen crawling slowly at the side of the house, it was chasing a little earthworm but after watching for a few good 30 minutes the hammerhead worm got side tracked and lost the worm for some reason. It was interesting to observe the hunt in person and a bit funny. It was the slowest chase of all time.
Great vid.
Spider: "I'm creepy!"
Hammerhead worm: "Hold my beer."
Goblin shark : hold my fins
I found one of these under a rock when I was a kid and it really freaked me out for some reason.
The first time I saw this it was eating an earthworm and I thought it was a snake😂. But seriously I was real mad as I loved earthworms and the next time I saw them I would kill them pretty quickly 👍👍
Ok...
Kinda messed up since you did not know these things were dangerous....
But you did good
That worm in the thumbnail picture looks straight out of a Silent Hill game or movie!.
3:30 - chinese be like: "are you charrenging me"
a little racist
Didn't know these existed. This species has eluded me during my childhood of watching documentaries and my adulthood with an internet conection. Cool
"they decimate earthworm populations..."
so, they reduce it by 1/10? is this per year? over many years?
as an educator, and someone i assume has at least a passing knowledge of Latin, please be precise, and stop slurring the word 'decimate'.
otherwise, love the channel :P
While I do agree with you on how he should have specified.
We still have to consider that these are invasive species.
So, the sooner we act, the better it will be.
Worms can reproduce pretty fast.
I see these pretty often here in Costa Rica. Though they aren't as colorful as the ones in the video, just drab yellow. In wet weather they are active during the day, even moving over the pavement. I had no idea they were predatory.
Thanks for making this video.
I remember seeing this thing for the first time ever, in north Texas, and didn’t know what the hell it was.
I saw one of these back in elementary school, squirming along the cement
I live in NC, and its not too "tropical" here.
The forbidden gummy worm
If they have no natural predators how are the kept in check in their native habitat?
I found one of these years ago and had no idea what it could be. Thanks for giving me closure.
I've ever found one of these buggers near a parking lot, and conveniently I have brought a magnifying glass and started to burn them, they secrete those string thingies like a velvet worms does when hunting