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David Attenborough's Weirdest Micro Monsters | Nature Bites 

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Meet some of the most weird and wonderful creatures David Attenborough encounters throughout his series studying insects, bugs and other creepy crawlies: Micro Monsters!
From David Attenborough's Micro Monsters: Over the course of three episodes, Sir David Attenborough takes viewers deep into the world of bugs. Pioneering macroscopic techniques allow Attenborough to explore in unparalleled detail the intricate, sophisticated behaviours of fascinating creatures and the complexity of the environments they build and inhabit, in a world normally hidden from the human eye. Each of the three episodes explore a different aspect of the little-known lives of insects, from the deceptive defensive mechanisms harboured by spiders and scorpions, to the creation of colonies and how social arrangements develop.
Welcome to Nature Bites the OFFICIAL Nature Hub Channel. Bringing you closer to the remarkable animals that inhabit our natural world.
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25 авг 2022

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Комментарии : 213   
@fazeghost7319
@fazeghost7319 Год назад
Sir David Attenborough is a gem
@RageOfTheTiger
@RageOfTheTiger Год назад
Wish he could live for another 50 years, making documentaries for us lol
@lesmith939
@lesmith939 Год назад
Sir David, Thank you for so many years of dedication to our planet, and for helping to educate us about the natural world in which we live. I could listen to your most comforting voice all day long. Such wisdom, dedication and patience. God bless you.
@nsmcgirt
@nsmcgirt Год назад
He reads a script. What’s wrong with you. He didn’t film or write anything
@dnwm82
@dnwm82 Год назад
@@nsmcgirt oh shut up let him thank sir David
@nsmcgirt
@nsmcgirt Год назад
@@dnwm82 For what ? That’s what I’m asking “. Reading a teleprompter no thanks
@BudgetFilmmaking
@BudgetFilmmaking Год назад
Frfr
@ailuriidae895
@ailuriidae895 Год назад
@@nsmcgirt he is on site while filming ontop of having actual knowledge, he is a zoologist which people tend to forget
@TheTuttle99
@TheTuttle99 Год назад
It absolutely blows my mind the complexity in the behaviour of insects
@wolfehayashi4209
@wolfehayashi4209 Год назад
Mr. Attenborough, You are one of the two reasons I love nature. I hope you know the impact you have had on so many people and the amount of knowledge you shared with the world. A true gem no doubt. Much respect and appreciation to you.
@mCblue79
@mCblue79 Год назад
Can't imagine watching these awesome docos without Sir David's voice. I want SDA to live forever 🙏
@vanmann8347
@vanmann8347 Год назад
One of few narrators that can hold my attention for hours. Thanks for your educational videos that I send to my grandchildren.👍👍👍
@MeeRamudu
@MeeRamudu Год назад
Another classic from a legend, thank you for educating me about mother nature, as usual, you always manage to be my mentor🙏
@Keat
@Keat Год назад
thanks for that nice comment ramesh
@Sebassie
@Sebassie Год назад
"Hey Jerry! Have you seen that really big creature that's clearly not one of ours? I think he is a threat!...Smells nice though..familiar even." "Yeah it reminds me of Stephen. You know the guy we lost two days ago? Guess he got buff."
@topartshow4909
@topartshow4909 Год назад
😂😂😂😂 funny
@magnificentmuttley154
@magnificentmuttley154 Год назад
Right- - thats some really good comedy writing there 😂😂 'That really big creature must be the reason Stephen is missing. Look how buff he became!'
@Claymann71
@Claymann71 Год назад
Sam: Hey Max? Did you see that swole ant earlier with 20 corpses smashed all over it like some kind of insane hat & cape costume of horror? Max: Maybe if we just nod & ignore it, it will go away? Assassin Bug: _Drags another ant away like Cannibal Freddie Kruger_ *YES! ANOTHER VICTORY FOR THE MASTER-PLANNER!*
@taraschumacker
@taraschumacker Год назад
That assassin bug is brutal! Can’t believe I’ve never heard of it before 😮
@mCblue79
@mCblue79 Год назад
The Jeffrey Dahmer Beetle??? 😂
@superflyherb
@superflyherb 9 месяцев назад
and i came to talk about it but everyone’s taking about Sir David Attenborough passing 🙄 and he ain’t even gone yet. i had to see what it looks like without all the corpses. Nature is WILD !
@netweed09
@netweed09 3 месяца назад
Sir David the Ultimate Teacher! 😄
@TheAshCooper
@TheAshCooper Год назад
It's wicked how assassin bugs wear trophies.
@rhondahuggins9542
@rhondahuggins9542 Год назад
Fascinating, as always...but I grew up where ticks were abundant and watching them on video strains my ability to appreciate their adaptations!
@magnificentmuttley154
@magnificentmuttley154 Год назад
E e e yeah- - Learning that they lay hundreds of eggs at a time (this one lays 1500) just adds to my disgust for them. It appears that use of insecticides on the land & eradicating them from pets & farm animals has nearly eliminated ticks from the rural county I live in. I havent seen a single tick on a farm animal in about 15 years. Yuk! Thankfully using insecticides on the crops isnt nearly as intense as it used to be 😝
@r3nzoxB
@r3nzoxB Год назад
I just hope that when Sir Attenborough passes away, many years from now, he receives a big homage as the queen has been receiving this last days. Because, contrary to the queen, Mr Attenborough has spent most of his life WORKING and teaching us about our fascinating world. Thank you so much for your hard work Sir Attenborough.
@Eric-vz3vd
@Eric-vz3vd Год назад
He leisurely explored but as far as WORKED. He read a script into a microphone for most of his life 🤷‍♂️
@johnwayne3085
@johnwayne3085 Год назад
He can read and has a nice speaking voice. Wouldn't call that deserving of a state funeral. Let's just hope he doesn't end up being like Jimmy Saville and appreciate the nice videos about nature that he made. Nothing more, nothing less.
@LMB222
@LMB222 Год назад
The day he passes, I will take a day off, and then every year I will remember him by watching a nature movie.
@ImmortalWombat
@ImmortalWombat Год назад
He's old it won't be "MANY YEARS" Also God has taken all good people from earth already so what's he doing here
@ladytech52
@ladytech52 Год назад
Obviously you people haven't seen his early films when he went out to the far reaches of our world interacting with wildlife and indigenous peoples. You should be ashamed of yourselves. He deserves every homage we can give him.
@sproutsisters5398
@sproutsisters5398 Год назад
Hard to believe David is still alive at a stunning 96 years old!
@DieFlabbergast
@DieFlabbergast Год назад
Like someone else we used to know until a short while ago.
@johnthorpe1349
@johnthorpe1349 Год назад
The assassin bug totally amazing never seen anything like that ever Migwech Mr Attenborough 🇨🇦🙂
@twinflowerfioretta
@twinflowerfioretta Год назад
i missed Sir Attenborough, he is the Master for explaning even such unpleasant "ugly" creatures Life as a Wonder ! Thanks a lot for this post, i will never stop learning....
@DieFlabbergast
@DieFlabbergast Год назад
* Sir David (The Title "Sir" is used with the person's first name, not his family name.)
@The_Story_Of_Us
@The_Story_Of_Us Год назад
David Attenborough is approaching 100 years old and my man has more energy than I do!
@mikeoliver198
@mikeoliver198 Год назад
I just love these productions so much!!!
@kkkerr4103
@kkkerr4103 9 месяцев назад
david... you da MAN in the nature info bizness... gold, jerry, GOLD...
@TheSushiandme
@TheSushiandme Год назад
Imagine a monster human size that drains the life out of corpses then glues them on himself...
@perthyren601
@perthyren601 Год назад
Sir, your presentations are world-class
@sonder7115
@sonder7115 Год назад
Another certified intellectual classic
@macjack5978
@macjack5978 Год назад
Dam sum where'd you learn that
@sproutsisters5398
@sproutsisters5398 Год назад
@@macjack5978 big words make my head hurt
@crayculture851
@crayculture851 Год назад
This 🔥
@Spacey7
@Spacey7 Год назад
Those Roaches were so cute 😊
@b.o.b2738
@b.o.b2738 Год назад
Everyone has their favourite narrator. For me Sir David Attenborough is the Ultimate, Pinnacle… narrator.
@mattheweburns
@mattheweburns Год назад
“… The firetruck will have to wait its turn…“ Lol
@festuskg2764
@festuskg2764 Год назад
Sir David Attenborough has enlightened mankind globally and many generations on the natural world and the importance of protecting our natural heritage. Hope the mankind will heed to his clarion call. May he lives long.
@AestheticVibes114
@AestheticVibes114 Год назад
An inspiration for generations sir. Wanna meet you.
@itsnotrightyouknow
@itsnotrightyouknow Год назад
Whoever puts adverts in when Sir David Attenborough is speaking well! And especially those such as Instagram and what not. My dad used to say anything that is not selling very well is advertised a lot
@drgarcha1964
@drgarcha1964 Год назад
kudos to Monumental work Done bY you and your team work Sir .
@mm93mustwin13
@mm93mustwin13 Год назад
I love this stuff
@soheilak6208
@soheilak6208 Год назад
WOW Just WOW
@bird271828
@bird271828 Год назад
This is so interesting and scary at the same time.
@helenafourie8502
@helenafourie8502 Год назад
That nature for you
@christinemaccalum350
@christinemaccalum350 9 месяцев назад
I love the story Line ❤❤❤❤
@tedoychorizo6434
@tedoychorizo6434 Год назад
The wasps with their wings cool off the babies too
@alecbrown66
@alecbrown66 Год назад
When you think of the greatest environmental,,and natural world educators since the start of the television age, at first to the English speaking people, and then globally to the rest of the world by closed captioning and language translators, Sir David has been the founder, exponent, and educator of environmental issues to the whole planet. As an educator, I doubt there will be another as influential that will replace him. God bless you sir!
@christineMaccallum-uo3qx
@christineMaccallum-uo3qx 25 дней назад
Nature is unpredictable 😮
@donaldwhittaker7987
@donaldwhittaker7987 5 месяцев назад
Wow. RU-vid has some very useful stuff
@Sunrisesunset999
@Sunrisesunset999 Год назад
Perfect BGM🤣🤣🤣
@The_Story_Of_Us
@The_Story_Of_Us Год назад
Yo, the assassin bug is pretty fucking metal, ngl
@automategames
@automategames Год назад
pretty sure we are over 20x the size of that bug... digging down 1 Meter as a tiny bug is fucking amazing.... imagine us digging down 100M to create a safe house.
@Shweaty7
@Shweaty7 Год назад
David among many has really been such a pivotal role in portraying nature in all its beauty. I remember the first Planet Earth series and being in complete awe.
@DukeOfTheBLVD
@DukeOfTheBLVD Год назад
Sir David was knighted, if you could kindly use his title.
@richardtucker5938
@richardtucker5938 Год назад
@@DukeOfTheBLVD I don't think David would care if someone did or didn't, he is a fellow human, and his name has always been David.
@DukeOfTheBLVD
@DukeOfTheBLVD Год назад
@@richardtucker5938 just simply a thing or respect and admiration
@bladactania
@bladactania Год назад
Those assassin bugs remind me of that movie with the mobile cities
@1MSally1965
@1MSally1965 Год назад
Assassin bugs are COOL!
@Mark-nz9ek
@Mark-nz9ek Год назад
Hear hear,all thru my life I've loved everything he's done,it started with Life on Earth
@ManicallyMellow
@ManicallyMellow Год назад
David Attenborough is classed as a national treasure in the UK but really he should be classed as something more world renowned.. like Daddy Earth or even David the Demigod. If you have any better suggestions then please feel free..
@wagonstation3709
@wagonstation3709 Год назад
I have enjoyed his videos for decades, and I love hearing his voice. As far as the ant recognizing another ant by it's scent, that makes sense. But recognizing another ant by it's face?! How could that be proven-- since all ants would have a scent anyway.. And many ants don't need eyes because they communicate so well through touch and scents.
@infostudy101
@infostudy101 Год назад
It was wasps that were said to recognise faces.
@Pontiki1977
@Pontiki1977 3 месяца назад
I am going to try that idea with the corpses on my back.
@yogs8571
@yogs8571 Год назад
The Goat 🐐
@rickgillis1613
@rickgillis1613 Год назад
I can't fault Mr Attenbrough's ability to clearly articulate the material the 'script' the show writers present him with. Without Narrators, shows like Nature would be exceedingly boring as we would often have no idea what we were seeing. That in no way means he deserves to be nominated for a Nobel Prize ...a Nobel Prize for doing his job for decades ...really ? the world is filled with people like that.
@DunkinBiscuits
@DunkinBiscuits Год назад
A Nobel Prize for teaching the world about the world. Yes the world is full of people who are good at their jobs but there are very few who have made the kind of impact Sir David Attenborough has made. The man is a true legend and if you knew anything about him you would know he is far more than just a narrator
@magnificentmuttley154
@magnificentmuttley154 Год назад
*@Rick Gillis* I cant criticize you for seeing David Attenborough as a mere narrator. Explaining him to you gives me the opportunity to learn more about him myself, so here goes. For *@Dunkin Biscuits,* applause to you for being a fellow David A. fan 👋! David A. began making nature documentaries of his own in b&w film as far back as the 1950's. RU-vid has a handful of these. I have a weblink below to one where he is in the African Congo. In some of them primate expert Jane Goodall is his guest. He wrote & narrated hundreds more nature documentaries for the BBC & wrote & narrated scores of one-time PBS specials & PBS mini-series throughout the 70's, the 80's, & 90's Being a kid who grew up watching David in the 70's & 80's, I took him for a degreed ornithologist. His biography on Wikipedia recognizes him as a biologist, & mentions that he holds a Master of Arts degree from Cambridge University. However, the field of study for his arts degree isnt given. So it makes me think that his education in ornithology & in biology is self made. He has, afterall, been active in those fields for 60 years now. Additionally he must have learned even more about ornithology & biology from being in close association with England's finest biologists, zoologists, & nature photographers over the decades, through the BBC In conclusion, although documentary writers & producers have handed David more than one script to read, being the authority he is in Natural Science, he's well qualified to write the script himself. Narrating to hundreds of millions of people makes him personally responsible for what he is reading, so you can be sure he first scrutinizes & proofreads the material himself Thank You for this opportunity to write just a little about David A. I hope it is helpful! 💜💜 David Attenborough in the Congo, early 1960's (b&w) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-QPCRoNlQiWQ.html
@DunkinBiscuits
@DunkinBiscuits Год назад
Try David Attenborough and the giant egg that’s a good watch. He really is far more than a narrator and has dedicated and given his whole life to teaching us all about the world. He narrates now but in his younger years he explored everywhere himself as well as the narrating. He would venture deep into the jungle for example to be with the animals that he is filming, at a time when the world had no internet and very little was known about the rest of the world and the wildlife within it until David Attenborough introduced them all to us. He is the voice of nature and the world has gained so much from him
@rickgillis1613
@rickgillis1613 Год назад
@@DunkinBiscuits The only world shaking advance he has ever made was when a research vessel "Boaty McBoatface" was changed to the Davey Attenborough...He will forever be remembered fondly as Boaty over here in Canada
@DunkinBiscuits
@DunkinBiscuits Год назад
@@rickgillis1613 ah well it’s your loss dude, although I guarantee if he was from Canada you would all think very differently of him. Make fun if you want but the man has done nothing but good in his life and he has devoted his life to showing us all the world. Have a nice day
@alastairjhunter3666
@alastairjhunter3666 Год назад
Another WEF follower
@johnsteiner3417
@johnsteiner3417 Год назад
"This one is carrying at least 20 corpses." No wonder people want David Attenborough to narrate Warhammer 40,000.
@michaeljordan215
@michaeljordan215 Год назад
The paper wasps has the perfect dictatorship.
@napatony5532
@napatony5532 Год назад
Had a VERY large underground wasps nest near the front door..... fed them every day.... NEVER GOT STUNG, NOT ONCE, and we had kids coming in and out all day..... they NEVER BOTHERED ANY OF US ... EVER.... they eat meat, give them some, they like eating honey too..... feed them .. leave th4m alone... they leave you alone
@magnificentmuttley154
@magnificentmuttley154 Год назад
Very large underground wasps? Those are _GROUND HORNETS._ Whoof! I get scared at just the thought of them Theyre more intelligent than we give them credit. They recognize the scent of any human who they see around the house everyday. And they will encounter you out in the field, too, not just near the nest. They also recognize humans visually, too More than once yellow jackets would build a nest above the front porch at the house I grew up in. Being a gardener, my mother insisted we leave the nest alone, "because the wasps are natures pest control." Me, my sister, the postman, & any of our friends came & went uneventfully. But when someone leaving flyers on doors, someone else doing a public survey, or any other new person knocked on our door, they were swarmed immediately. The yellow jackets wouldnt sting them, but they would bounce their bodies off of the person. They ran off every stranger they met! Some years there was a red wasp nest above the porch, but it was usually yellow jackets. They sentried the front door, too. But instead of "bouncing" on people, theyd swarm & get in their face And I would _NEVER_ recommend anyone do this. But remember, I was just I kid. I could hold my hand right up to the nest & there was no reaction. Some of the wasps would look at me for a second, but they all just went about their business & ignored me. Ive loved wasps & bees ever since. And Ive learned that the key is if youre not nervous, _THEY_ wont be nervous. But if you are nervous they will sense that & look at you as a potential threat. Again- - I recommend against anyone trying this stunt! But even strange wasp & bee's nests are friendly to me because Im unafraid... I found out in adulthood that my great grandfather was a beekeeper/ bee tamer
@napatony5532
@napatony5532 Год назад
@@magnificentmuttley154 that was a cool story, yes I love bees too, bees are so important and of course not sting unless they absolutely have to because they die when they do, i find with most animals it is about your energy and how your projecting, dogs, horses, a horse will try and kill you if they feel you are fearful! husband had a friend who had racehorses ( SOME HATED HIM, he was a bastard .... this one tried killing g him in a stall, i could go in and be with her never a problem, had feral cats that wouldnt go to anyone in years come and lay in my lap..... when I was a teen there was an animal sanctuary, I would go visit it as much as I could, there was a jaguar there his head was MASSIVE he was so beautiful He would come up to the fence and push his head real hard and want me to rub his head, I LOVED THAT ANIMAL, he was so beautiful.... I wished he could be more free than he was, it made me sad to see him there, if I had land I would definarely have bees i watch beekeepers here on uoutube, so cool some of those vids .... thanks for responding
@BGRUBBIN
@BGRUBBIN Год назад
The assassin bug, amazingly disgusting!
@JohnPulliam82
@JohnPulliam82 Год назад
A Sir David Attenborough piece and only 738 likes!? 🤦🏻‍♂️🐼 How dare that be the case! We must change this!
@monibracamonte2890
@monibracamonte2890 11 месяцев назад
Ticks ❤
@emesar5233
@emesar5233 Год назад
1:52 Instinct is proof of design. Without it a creature wouldn't be capable of being fertilized let alone learning to communicate by smell or sight. INSTINCT DEFENITION: "A largely inheritable and unalterable tendency of an organism to make a complex and specific response to environmental stimuli without involving reason." - Merriam-Webster
@nickcounsell8912
@nickcounsell8912 Год назад
Am I the only one who wants some of dat sonic tic caviar 😩👌
@daltx7gatsuga
@daltx7gatsuga Год назад
am i the only one that thinks the way the paper wasps move looks almost like stop motion?
@lizxu322
@lizxu322 11 месяцев назад
Psychologist: tick eggs are not edible please don't seek them out Me: but if no eat why caviar shaped 🥺👉👈
@wobbegong4366
@wobbegong4366 Год назад
That assassin bug is straight out of dark souls.
@automategames
@automategames Год назад
the strongest will be the queen... something humans have lost track of.. for Humans is all about what family was able to keep and give power down to its offspring.
@thehellyousay
@thehellyousay 10 месяцев назад
Pity he's lent the gravitas of his voice to that Prehistoric Planet tripe.
@christinemaccallum756
@christinemaccallum756 17 дней назад
Nature can be bad and more stories and other events take advantage and different events and more characters so interested and more so let's find out from this video for more information 😀
@magnificentmuttley154
@magnificentmuttley154 Год назад
Theyre more intelligent than we give them credit. They recognize the scent of any human who they see around the house everyday. And they will encounter you out in the field, too, not just near the nest. They also recognize humans visually, too More than once yellow jackets would build a nest above the front porch at the house I grew up in. Me, my sister, the postman, & any of our friends came & went uneventfully. But when someone leaving flyers on doors, someone else doing a public survey, or any other new person knocked on our door, they were swarmed immediately. The yellow jackets wouldnt sting them, but they would bounce their bodies off of the person. They ran off every stranger they met! Some years there was a red wasp nest above the porch, but it was usually yellow jackets. Red wasps wouldnt bounce on the person, but they swarmed strangers & ran them off, too, just the same And I would _NEVER_ recommend anyone do this. But remember, I was just I kid. I could hold my hand right up to the nest & there was no reaction. Some of the wasps would look at me for a second, but they all just went about their business & ignored me. Ive loved wasps & bees ever since. And Ive learned that the key is if youre not nervous, _THEY_ wont be nervous. But if you are nervous they will sense that & look at you as a potential threat. Again- - I recommend against anyone trying this stunt! But even strange wasp & bee's nests are friendly to me because Im unafraid... I found out in adulthood that my great grandfather was a beekeeper/ bee tamer
@D.von.N
@D.von.N Год назад
so hornets or wasps instead of a guarding dog? :D They at least feed and walk themselves :D
@hojoinhisarcher
@hojoinhisarcher Год назад
I discovered that as well.If they get too close to the house though,I hose the nest down at night.I don't mind being neighbours - just not friends.
@shirleyandrews1152
@shirleyandrews1152 Год назад
Very interesting
@ricknaughty1016
@ricknaughty1016 Год назад
Me and my brother found a nest before he thought it would be a good idea to hit it with a stick we both went running lol they never caught us. Feel for anyone else around at the time llooll. Nice story from u btw
@magnificentmuttley154
@magnificentmuttley154 Год назад
*@RICK NAUGHTY* Thank You for contributing, Rick 💜. Yeah, although my big sis was everymuch the critter lover I was, I wouldve been the critter-catching nightmare little brother in the life of any other sister. I was constantly bringing home birds, snakes, lizards, crawfish, turtles, tarantulas- - anything I could get my hands on. Its what we had in common, among several reasons we got along so well, despite the fact that I was a real brat until about 12 or 13. Ann's favorite pets were a cottontail named Little Fella, our grandfathers squirrels, & the teddybear hamster & mice she always had until moving out at 17 Looking back now I dont know how Mom coped with my critter-getter ways. Because even though shes always loved dogs, cats, & farm animals, she couldnt stand mice, rats, or reptiles. And she hated it most of all when I captured a fully grown female brown tarantula & made friends with it. I was 12 by then, so to her credit she trusted me with it. Emphasis on _FEMALE._ The males are nasty. Unless he's known you since hatching, theres no befriending a male brown tarantula
@wilsoncamargo7225
@wilsoncamargo7225 Год назад
Red wasps are so common over here in my countryside (Brazil) and they are so aggressive specialty when they are nursing theirs babys. Theses red wasps have a very very painful sting which will make you cry, its already happened with myself
@Carlos-gh9ef
@Carlos-gh9ef Год назад
The assassin bug that puts it's victims onto itself is disturbing to me. Kind of like a serial killer for the insect world
@sangun123
@sangun123 10 месяцев назад
Lmdao leather face for bugs for sure
@FreeAssange_
@FreeAssange_ Год назад
The assassin bug is dark
@Jeremy-ms3bd
@Jeremy-ms3bd Год назад
It usually is how everything works together due to the order of how things have been created and or integrated and or established into those systems regulatory factors. How things transition to how they can become.
@darthoma8792
@darthoma8792 Год назад
Assassin bug is so dope!
@Cuddlestrike
@Cuddlestrike 7 месяцев назад
it's funny, because New Yorker's also call their cockroaches for litter-bugs :D
@amandajackson668
@amandajackson668 10 месяцев назад
Those cockroaches are expensive and complex to breed as they can squash their babies.
@Silenced23
@Silenced23 Год назад
The assassin bug is like a Klingon ship gluing it's dead to it's hull. That cockroach with the music behind it makes it seem elegant.
@sproutsisters5398
@sproutsisters5398 Год назад
I carry the corpses of my enemies on my back - assassin bug...thats so metal!
@StinkySeaGoat
@StinkySeaGoat Год назад
Damn, no wonder wasps are so angy, their home life is ROUGH…..I once saved a wasp from drowning and picked her up in my hands and she didn’t sting me, I had a feeling she was thankful for my act of kindness in her little and hard life
@sproutsisters5398
@sproutsisters5398 Год назад
Hey Jerry, Joey,Johnny and ahgast! I've been tricked! - ANTS being murdered by assassin bug
@stephansteohanlarsen7457
@stephansteohanlarsen7457 Год назад
I suppose that's why they're not called Resurrection bug
@cerberus.talking
@cerberus.talking Год назад
RIP 😭😭😭❤
@smartinsects7178
@smartinsects7178 Год назад
Hi there, do you ever see insects eating fruits?
@ambarkukreti8448
@ambarkukreti8448 Год назад
After Jurassic park i found you here , thank you sir for the rare knowledge you are presenting to us of the life of our fellow living beings of our planet.
@MsTokyoflower
@MsTokyoflower Год назад
His brother is in Jurassic Park
@ambarkukreti8448
@ambarkukreti8448 Год назад
Thanks for the correction
@automategames
@automategames Год назад
do you think the assassins bug puts out a type of attractive food scent to attract an ant to eat?
@SurprisedDivingBoard-vu9rz
@SurprisedDivingBoard-vu9rz 4 месяца назад
Funny world though. Mites.
@j.vince.can28
@j.vince.can28 Год назад
1:41
@EEUIO5678
@EEUIO5678 Год назад
So the assassin bug is essentially a mimic bug? Wtf
@1MSally1965
@1MSally1965 Год назад
A can of RAID fixes it all.
@hellogoodbyeforever
@hellogoodbyeforever Год назад
this voice is so calming
@bbnnmm9
@bbnnmm9 11 месяцев назад
So it's basically among-us bug edition 4:40
@wadewillson7738
@wadewillson7738 Год назад
While you have to respect their survivability, I put one on a block of ice and covered it with snow and when spring came and it melted it came back to life, having that been said I freaking hate them
@just1it1moko
@just1it1moko Год назад
Ants can smell if one of their own has died and will immediately carry it to the nest's graveyard. I wonder how the assassinbug is not being carried off.
@Novarcharesk
@Novarcharesk Год назад
I imagine it might be a species specific scenario
@user-ol1qm9ey7g
@user-ol1qm9ey7g 7 месяцев назад
เราเหมือนห้องทดลองจริงๆ อีกคนเขาจะทดลองด้านวิวัฒนาการอีกคนนึงเขาจะสนุกกับวิธีการทดลองสังคม
@TheBlueFlame112
@TheBlueFlame112 Год назад
What is the name of this assasin bug? Asssasin bug is a term describing the family, not the species
@saulkumpulaine5387
@saulkumpulaine5387 Год назад
Assassin 🪲!! Freaking warlord!!
@hurricanesteve65
@hurricanesteve65 Год назад
Survival of the fittest
@IllusionEDM
@IllusionEDM Год назад
Crazy that ticks are even a thing, they are stupid and should not exist
@randy4594
@randy4594 Год назад
Assassin bug my bro 👍
@Cosmic-Wanderer
@Cosmic-Wanderer Год назад
I hate wasps
@amandajackson668
@amandajackson668 10 месяцев назад
Wasps queens lay more queens
@courtlaw1
@courtlaw1 Год назад
Funny thought, just think if this assassin bug was human sized with it's super strength eating humans and gluing dead bodies to it's body. Scary and funny.
@Silenced23
@Silenced23 Год назад
It would have to either a giant human or a human with the strength of Superman
@crazkurtz
@crazkurtz Год назад
Aaahhh I hate buzzing noise! Swatting at nothing
@captainSkrimpdick
@captainSkrimpdick 10 месяцев назад
The giant burrowing cockroach is cute ❤️😻
@chylimzbydzi
@chylimzbydzi 10 месяцев назад
Wait, cockroaches don't lay eggs???
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