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Can natural disasters be good for nature? | Earth Unplugged 

BBC Earth Unplugged
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Natural disasters can cause vast devastation but can there be a silver lining for some species? Maddie Moate investigates whether natural disasters can ever be beneficial for nature. Subscribe to Earth Unplugged for more amazing animal videos - bit.ly/Subscrib...
Watch more videos from Earth Unplugged
Animals In Slow Motion And Stunning Time-lapse Photography bit.ly/EarthUnp...
Expeditions and Location Films bit.ly/EarthUnp...
Big Questions With Maddie Moate bit.ly/BigQuest...
Wilderness Sessions bit.ly/Wilderne...
Check out the other two channels in the BBC Earth network:
BBC Earth: bit.ly/BBCEarth...
BBC Earth Lab: bit.ly/BBCEarth...
About BBC Earth Unplugged
We're Earth Unplugged, and we make films about the incredible natural world and the animals that live here exclusively for RU-vid. We investigate the conundrums, quirks and beautiful science of our amazing planet, delving into the BBC vaults and mixing it up with our own stuff to take a brand new look at Earth. From animal behaviour in slow motion to expedition films we’ve got you covered.
Our planet is mind-blowing. Join us as we explore what it has to offer.
Subscribe for more: bit.ly/Subscrib...
You can also also find the BBC Earth community on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Want to share your views with the team behind BBC Earth and win prizes? Join our fan panel here: tinyurl.com/Yo...
This is a channel from BBC Studios, trading as BBC Studios, who help fund new BBC programmes.
Creative Commons images used in order of appearance:
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Tuxyso / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
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H. Zell / Wikicommons / CC BY-SA 3.0
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Toby Hudson / Wikicommons / CC BY-SA 3.0
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(In Public Domain)
commons.wikime...
B. Navez / Wikicommons / CC BY-SA 3.0
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(In public Domain)
commons.wikime...
Al Mare / Wikicommons / CC BY-SA 3.0

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17 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 84   
@MarkShaneHansen
@MarkShaneHansen 7 лет назад
I can't tell whether the monkey walking through water at 4:52 really _is_ funny or whether it's just because it's 5:30 and I haven't slept yet.
@kamron_thurmond
@kamron_thurmond 7 лет назад
All I can think is how that mouse might have been the number 1 apex predator of its time after the meteorite hit.
@SpeedOfTheEarth
@SpeedOfTheEarth 7 лет назад
Kamron Thurmond +
@grahamstobbs6369
@grahamstobbs6369 7 лет назад
Nature is Amazing and Dangerous at the same time and this is why I Love Nature ❤️❤️❤️❤️
@MasterAppels
@MasterAppels 7 лет назад
Maddie Moate is love, Maddie Moate is life.
@PantsB4Squares
@PantsB4Squares 7 лет назад
Master i yeah
@andrew_2913
@andrew_2913 4 года назад
SIMP
@bruceschneider4928
@bruceschneider4928 7 лет назад
Great overview. The music added nothing--in fact, it was a distraction. It's okay to go without music.
@GregRiceTarantulas
@GregRiceTarantulas 7 лет назад
1:18 So, lava contains electrolytes? "Lava by Brawndo; it's what plants crave!"
@Amy-zb6ph
@Amy-zb6ph 7 лет назад
We have at least one species of pine whose seeds are stuck inside the pine cone until there is a fire. We used to find those pine cones and throw them in the camp fire while camping because the seeds sometimes explode out of the cone and it's kind of cool. Then there are other plants whose seeds won't sprout unless you water them with smoke water, which is basically what happens naturally during the first rain after a fire. In the lab, we bubbled smoke from a fire through the water using some chemistry flasks, but the same effect happens in the wild as the rain water passes through the charred ground. We tried to sprout those seeds without the smoke water and nothing else we did to them to convince them to sprout actually worked.
@nikhilchauhansportsmanor
@nikhilchauhansportsmanor 3 года назад
And this explains why the pine was the plant that occupied the earth after the devastation left from the meteorite that wiped the dinosaur era. I often wonder if water and extremely hot or what you called a "charred" surface could be the key to life. If I remember right, pine seeds started appearing right at the dent left by the meteorite. The surface was once again extremely hot because of the objects that fell from the sky, the explosion, and the tsunami that followed with the impact.
@johnburgess92
@johnburgess92 7 лет назад
Usually enjoy Maddies videos but gave up after two and a half minutes of this one, the "music" was driving me nuts.
@katng5576
@katng5576 3 года назад
Haha
@ChristaHernandez-j1n
@ChristaHernandez-j1n Год назад
I learned a lot . THANK YOU!!!
@AlexandraShh
@AlexandraShh 7 лет назад
Very well made and interesting video! Thanks! :)
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 7 лет назад
So glad that Australia didn't get ignored for once. :)
@ShirinRose
@ShirinRose 7 лет назад
Yes, I was so glad she mentioned the banksias 😊
@sparrow2016
@sparrow2016 4 года назад
oh wow how cool she mentioned your home country now stop creaming and shut up
@suleimanqaryouti8183
@suleimanqaryouti8183 3 года назад
watching this from school lol
@EdibleOutdoors
@EdibleOutdoors 7 лет назад
Jack Pine trees here in Canada require forest fires to open their cones to spread their seeds.
@mybackhurts7020
@mybackhurts7020 7 лет назад
Bearskinrug exactly I'm in Southern California and the mountains are supposed to burn about every 10 years but people don't get it they just keep putting houses on the hills with the plants that need fire
@EdibleOutdoors
@EdibleOutdoors 7 лет назад
When I was in college one of our units we learned about was how to plan for controlled/prescribed burns. One of our professors had taken part in a few burns of a Black Oak Savannah. So its not just the forest that need a burn its also grasslands.
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 7 лет назад
And Marri and Jarrah trees here in Australia also have fire-retardant bark. This vid was just a summary, not a comprehensive list.
@EdibleOutdoors
@EdibleOutdoors 7 лет назад
@Steve Cheetah Oh! Is that so? That is really fascinating. Thank you for sharing.
@SpeedOfTheEarth
@SpeedOfTheEarth 7 лет назад
Bearskinrug +
@JoeDoeOutdoors
@JoeDoeOutdoors 6 лет назад
Hii awesome page ☺ Keep it up!
@teresamorales7124
@teresamorales7124 4 года назад
Yeah keep it up
@nizar8326
@nizar8326 7 лет назад
if i'm not mistaken, lichen is not pioneering "plant"
@gregoriopardo119
@gregoriopardo119 7 лет назад
Amazing vídeo ...
@carlosmp2043
@carlosmp2043 7 лет назад
I wonder...couldnt lava be "collected" for the minerals in it? Or is it just too dumb an idea 😂
@jonahdelacruz517
@jonahdelacruz517 7 лет назад
Where do you come from Maddie?
@calipiglet6286
@calipiglet6286 4 года назад
jonah de la cruz ontario, canada
@حسينالمالكي-غ5ب
@حسينالمالكي-غ5ب 7 лет назад
💜
@Evixity131
@Evixity131 6 месяцев назад
we love fortnite
@spycozelot
@spycozelot 7 лет назад
actually natural disaster is great because more people die bringing the overabundance of humans to a lower count. yeah part of my family was where the hurricane hit and I still stick to my answer.
@clipzy7749
@clipzy7749 4 года назад
yo i 9 i learned very much
@vss1772
@vss1772 4 года назад
bruh moment
@loujoszai1219
@loujoszai1219 7 лет назад
Disasters are part of life.
@aryajadia2637
@aryajadia2637 4 года назад
so boring but i have to watch it for school-
@calipiglet6286
@calipiglet6286 4 года назад
yuh same 😿
@shinybiju8661
@shinybiju8661 7 лет назад
First
@bridgetteeelgrass5757
@bridgetteeelgrass5757 7 лет назад
I love you madie
@debbieolvera7583
@debbieolvera7583 4 года назад
Anyone else here from schoology 2020 ?😂
@thetemplar3470
@thetemplar3470 7 лет назад
Am i the only one who is captivated only by her and not about what she is saying??
@gregoriopardo119
@gregoriopardo119 7 лет назад
She's beautiful
@Pankaj-rq6mq
@Pankaj-rq6mq 6 лет назад
Amode Zoub No you are not the only one.
@Alex-op4bk
@Alex-op4bk 4 года назад
Henlu
@taniwhab3860
@taniwhab3860 7 лет назад
There isn't such a thing as a natural disaster...
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 7 лет назад
If you listen for just 20 seconds, she uses the term "catastrophic natural events".
@taniwhab3860
@taniwhab3860 7 лет назад
It says natural disaster in the title and description and since that's the part you see first it makes sense to have it correct. Or else it kind of removes the credibility and people like me don't watch it.
@neddyladdy
@neddyladdy 7 лет назад
There are very many events that get called natural disasters. Don't these events really occur ?
@taniwhab3860
@taniwhab3860 7 лет назад
Yes, they get called "natural disaster" because people don't really know any better. A disaster is the relationship between a hazard and an exposed community (of whatever size). There are both natural and human hazards though. Like a volcano exploding is hazardous, but it isn't a disaster unless there is a community (and the infrastructure) in the way.
@joeschmoe5063
@joeschmoe5063 7 лет назад
It's because "natural disaster" is a ubiquitous term and the RU-vid algorithm works better with it.
@TheJenny17sax
@TheJenny17sax 6 месяцев назад
stooped hed
@greimalkin
@greimalkin 7 лет назад
I don't find her that engaging and she looks so generic looking
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