Short natural history videos. Join Marc Griffith as he explores the stunning variety of life forms at all levels from large mammals to microscopic protozoa. In the process we will touch on some environmental issues that are causing the steep decline in biodiversity on this planet.
Hated the choppy editing of random things while the spider was eating, and I wish we could have seen how she takes her web down. Oh well. I'll keep looking for it.
I’ve been doing a lot of hedge work, an enormous spider almost collided with my face in the back corner of my yard 😱 I guess I bothered it too much so now it’s relocated a web attaching to corners of my roof spanning 15’+ across right freakin next to my back door 🤦🏻♀️😂 want to get it to go back in the corner but not sure how to relocate and I’m not getting close enough to catch it, watching this made my heart race lol. Fantastic quality video and audio.. crunch crunch.
We call them Mimosas in Texas. Beautiful, messy, invasive. But definitely have a nostalgic draw because of how they were planted so frequently in the early 60s-70s. I grew up with them in everyone's yard. Now I'm excited to see one, most have been cut down. It is an acacia
Really good video. I'm searching for red-backs because as I went to dip my hand into my compost bin I saw, my eyes took me to a spider that was the same shape and size as the female red-back but, this one had a distinctive whitish stripe on upper abdomen. I'm curious, was I looking at red-back? I don't think it was the male because of its size.
Hi, I have a plant which is indoor one, along with that a small wild plant is growing which has small pods which look like tiny okra. They too explode reddish tiny seeds. I was just wondering if u know about this. I find it very amazing because they explode on my face of I stand near by