Nice video but do take care of captions and the measurements can be more specified also in centimeters, meters and weight in kilograms. Apart those all the origins explained are awesome
At 4:20, you were talking about Great White Shark teeth. However, the picture of shark teeth was actually a Sand Tiger Shark. Although it is related to the Great White more than it is related to the Tiger Shark, they have numerous differences.
Giant Pacific Octopus? Colossal Squid? Oarfish? I think the scrawny Portuguese man of war and the giant sea star could have been left off. Maybe even the giant isopod, though they are pretty cool.
We ate a spider crab once... What's effed up is that we later went to an aquarium where we saw some spider crabs and I leaned in to the tank and went "I have feasted on your sibling"
When you make these videos you should try to show pics of the animals you're talking about. You talk about Great White sharks and show pics of a Sand Tiger and you talk about Blue Whales and show pics of HumpBacks.
every once in a while, I lose a couple of minute to watch this kind of vid, just to remind me how inacurate, approximative thrill seeking pseudo-scientific attempts piles of crap they are.
great vid fun to watch. note during Blue Whale vids at the end only one still was a Blue whale. The other still shot was Humpback breaching the other vids clips were all Sperm Whales except the first, it appear to be the Fin Whale from earlier in your vid. Great education format and video. please do more research as this Blue Whale ending as the Largest Mammal is very misleading to the Id a Blue Whale correctly.
The box jellyfish is actually an active swimmer so they are actually "out to get you" in a sense. They also have I believe 24 different special function eyes. One of the only species of jelly fish to have eyes.
Jellyfish do have a nervous system, a simple net of primitive nerve cells throughout their bodies that allows them to coordinate their movements when swimming and hunting.
i would just like to point out that although on the endangered list, the narrator of the video is wrong in saying you would be lucky to see a fin whale, they're spotted all the time off the coast of Newfoundland and even sometimes spotted in towards Quebec as well when they chase their food sources. i would also like to add that sea stars or "star fish" aren't only found on the western coast of north america as they have been found on beaches in eastern Canada and i would guess eastern america as well
Recently off California near Los Angeles, out on a Whale watching boat the came upon a Blue Whale that was estimated to be between 160' and 170'. I've heard of many Blues off California over 120' so I think this video needs to re-examine some of their stat's.
Cassy Heredia like the guy above me said they are 2 different types of whales the killer whales are smaller and are more in common with sharks, the Blue Whale is harmless unless it washes up on shore and crushes you but that’s never happend 😂
I got stung by a Man-O-War at Bondi Beach when I was about 8, I started screaming 'SHARK! There's a shark!' because I couldn't imagine anything could cause that sort of pain other than a shark. Thankfully, nobody took me seriously. Even though I was serious... Aussies I guess. Well, Aussies and lobster coloured Brits.