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Watch Jellyfish Go Through Their “Stack of Pancakes” Phase | Deep Look 

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When grown-up jellyfish love each other very much, they make huge numbers of teeny-tiny potato-shaped larvae. Those larvae grow into little polyps that cling to rocks and catch prey with their stinging tentacles. But their best trick is when they clone themselves by morphing into a stack of squirming jellyfish pancakes.
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---
There’s a reason the ocean is full of moon jellyfish: They’re masters at multiplying themselves over and over.
The bell-shaped creature that most people think of as jellyfish is really just the animal’s adult form.
It’s hard to tell by looking at them, but there are male and female moon jellies. The males release sperm into the water and the females collect it to fertilize their eggs. Those eggs turn into larvae called planulae that mom sends out into the world.
Each planula larva does its best to settle on something solid -- like rock - and develops into a polyp that looks like a tiny sea anemone.
The polyps clone themselves through budding, in which a new polyp grows out of an existing polyp’s side.
When the conditions are right, the polyps go through another round of cloning called strobilation. They develop ridges along their sides that get more and more pronounced over time.
“The polyp will start to look like a stack of pancakes,” says Michael McGill, senior biologist at Aquarium of the Bay in San Francisco.
Each individual pancake, called an ephyra, is a clone that eventually works itself free from the stack and swims off to grow into an adult.
“The feeling of watching them break free and swim off -- it's really inspiring,” says McGill.
--- Do jellyfish have brains?
Jellyfish don’t have a single centralized brain. But that hasn’t stopped them from being successful. They do have a nervous system called a nerve net or nerve ring that is radially distributed throughout their bodies.
--- What do Jellyfish eat?
Most jellyfish are carnivores that eat plankton, small fish, fish eggs and whatever other small prey they can catch with their stinging tentacles.
-- How do jellyfish sting?
Jellyfish have special stinging cells called nematocysts that line their tentacles. If something touches a nematocyst, it will pop, releasing a microscopic harpoon filled with venom. Jellyfish use their nematocyst-laced tentacles to catch prey and deter predators.
---+ Find additional resources and a transcript on KQED Science:
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---+ More great Deep Look episodes:
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18 дек 2023

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Комментарии : 767   
@TheBestInsects
@TheBestInsects 5 месяцев назад
Ok, I had NO idea that jellyfish reproduced like that. I've never heard of animals making babies that multiplied themselves. That is so cool and almost unbelievable! The photography in this video is beautiful! I love you deep look ❤
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Thank you!
@drachior
@drachior 5 месяцев назад
kind of happens to humans too, doesn't it? Albeit rarely. but some families have a disposition for getting identical twins
@Tinyvalkyrie410
@Tinyvalkyrie410 5 месяцев назад
No this is different. They alternate reproduce via fertilization and cloning. Twins in humans are always created by fertilization, they still have two parents. There are lots of other animals and other organisms that do this though.
@waterunderthebridge7950
@waterunderthebridge7950 5 месяцев назад
It’s kinda like an amalgamation of different beings: Ancient plants (think prehistoric ferns) also had two stages of development that are condensed into the same plant nowadays while there are e.g. salamanders and insects that can multiply asexually to increase population but also sexually to maintain genetic variety
@alestine
@alestine 5 месяцев назад
How about Aphids?
@celarts5752
@celarts5752 5 месяцев назад
Jellies seem so alien, especially with their reproductive tendencies (and even the ones that return to polyp after some time spent in adulthood), they're one of the coolest and most interesting sea creatures imo
@TragoudistrosMPH
@TragoudistrosMPH 5 месяцев назад
A fun thought is they've been around for hundreds of millions of years, but we're pretty new... Technically, we're alien and they're standard (from their POV) 😁
@I_Never_Lie
@I_Never_Lie 5 месяцев назад
You mean everything under the sea? 😂
@Xenochetemist
@Xenochetemist 5 месяцев назад
​@@TragoudistrosMPH We have been here from the beginning with them, and they don't have our POV thing. We gained consciousness, not suddenly spawn on Earth.
@nagari9093
@nagari9093 5 месяцев назад
Respect our older cousin
@TragoudistrosMPH
@TragoudistrosMPH 5 месяцев назад
@@Xenochetemist nothing in my comment suggests random spawning or a literal conscious point of view. That's an annoying number of strawman arguments to misattribute and shoot down... 😒
@mypal1990
@mypal1990 5 месяцев назад
This jellyfish life cycle makes the story of the stork carrying a baby more wholesome.
@3takoyakis
@3takoyakis 4 месяца назад
This is a stork cloning itself so it could send another copy of itself into the sky while the 'real' stork stay on the nest
@zenith9825
@zenith9825 5 месяцев назад
Imagine all the weird alien creatures that sci-fi authors have given us, and all the while, Earth goes: "Oh yeah? Those squishy things with stinging tentacles with no brain? Imagine an entire stack of clones that wiggle free one-by-one. Oh, and those came from clones too. :)"
@theexchipmunk
@theexchipmunk 3 месяца назад
I mean, we are not that much less weird. We are a pile of clones changin themselves to do difernt things that all work together to make a bigger mobile colony. If you look at our cell types it gets wild. Like with Macrophages that are pretty amoeba like and move indipendently around hunting for things not suposed to be there. Or our bones, that are in a way seperate from us, being a latice struture build inside our bodys by specialised cells and colonised by others that reinfoce this latice. Neuronal cells too, did you know that they too can freely move around, again quite amobea like, before they settle down and start to branch out?
@zenith9825
@zenith9825 3 месяца назад
@@theexchipmunkThe very fact that we are "mostly" (I believe) not-human is very mind-blowing. By percentage, I've heard that a minority of our cells/biomass is actually our own; the rest is actually just other species inside us. Like, "all your gut bacteria" and all that.
@JetFalcon710
@JetFalcon710 29 дней назад
​@@zenith9825 Yeah, and if I remember right, around 8% of our genome is made up of various species of bacteria that decided to have a symbiotic relationship with us _(e.g. gut bacteria)_
@KaiserMattTygore927
@KaiserMattTygore927 7 дней назад
And we're closer in relation to those squishy tentacle things than any humanoid looking alien creature we conjure up.
@meajur
@meajur 5 месяцев назад
I've seen illustrations of this for years, but never saw a video of it until now. I am so very happy to have finally seen it.
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@sailor5853
@sailor5853 5 месяцев назад
Same. Saw it in biology books all the time.
@ThiagoHenrique-wh7qr
@ThiagoHenrique-wh7qr Месяц назад
Same, I feel so happy after seeing it unfold before my eyes.
@PridefulShadow
@PridefulShadow Месяц назад
Same here! I have no idea why documentaries like Blue Planet never showed this process before, nor could I find photos of the polyp stage, so thank you for making this video!
@bob7975
@bob7975 2 месяца назад
Sea anemones are perfectly able to move about and even swim, after a fashion. Not well or quickly, but they can do it. They are like jellyfish who decided not to float free through the ocean.
@JvierLee
@JvierLee 5 месяцев назад
When I was young, whenever I read about Jellyfish reproduction in my Encyclopedia, I was always perplexed on how does it work, it's so strange and fascinating. Thank you for the video on showing how it all works!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
You are most welcome!
@speziell1575
@speziell1575 5 месяцев назад
It is really weird, a totally sessile animal just starts popping off other, completely different, free swimming animals. Its so weird how a body part just turns into its own organism.
@tsartomato
@tsartomato 5 месяцев назад
@@speziell1575 you are filled with milliards of freely moving blood cells and immune cells some of which go rogue all the time
@Cpt_John_Price
@Cpt_John_Price 3 месяца назад
@@speziell1575 I actually assume that they are like babies spawning out of "plants". And their parents are actually making "plants" for the sole purpose of making babies.
@rugvedkulkarni1593
@rugvedkulkarni1593 5 месяцев назад
Now I understand why it's called jellyfish bloom. It looks like flowers blooming 🌸
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
So true!
@AstroMarkk
@AstroMarkk 5 месяцев назад
I had no idea that jellyfish once looked like an anemone!
@mariobenedicto3582
@mariobenedicto3582 5 месяцев назад
I too didn't know that they were related!
@Khann_2102
@Khann_2102 5 месяцев назад
​@@mariobenedicto3582they're related?!
@nikyu.106
@nikyu.106 4 месяца назад
​@@Khann_2102 Anemones are cnidarians too
@Khann_2102
@Khann_2102 4 месяца назад
@@nikyu.106 Wow thanks for the info
@nikyu.106
@nikyu.106 4 месяца назад
@@Khann_2102 Both are classified in the same phylum (Cnidarians). Anemones are classified in the class "Anthozoa" and the subclass "Hexacorallaria" (which also includes corals). Jellyfish are classified in the subphylum "Medusozoa" which contaims a few classes, the most common ones are "Hydrozoa" and "Scyzophozoa"
@notyesbetothefallssorcerer3272
@notyesbetothefallssorcerer3272 5 месяцев назад
Even cloning upon cloning, only the smallest percentage will survive to adulthood. So to deal with predators either consistently be in large groups or good at dodging the ambushes. Man I would think with all those tentacles, they'll just bounce on their adversaries and jump like a jumping jellyfish.
@dodiswatchbobobo
@dodiswatchbobobo Месяц назад
Imagine growing up in a stack of undefined flesh that slowly resolves itself into a pile of babies, and each baby just peels off the mass and tumbles down the pile once it’s fully grown.
@danielzvids
@danielzvids 5 месяцев назад
Whenever I see jellyfish I feel like I’m witnessing the first ever footage of extraterrestrial life 😱
@anthonycredo6623
@anthonycredo6623 5 месяцев назад
I never really thought how jellyfish grow in numbers, it all makes sense now
@B_4035mn
@B_4035mn 5 месяцев назад
What I'm interested in, is whether or not the leftover polyp bits return back to the polyp phase after all of the jellyfish are released.
@monsterdream14
@monsterdream14 5 месяцев назад
Me too
@DegenerateDryad
@DegenerateDryad 5 месяцев назад
I was wondering the same thing!
@fenrirgg
@fenrirgg 4 месяца назад
It seems to me like all the polyp ends becoming jellyfish.
@Brydav_Massbear
@Brydav_Massbear 5 месяцев назад
The lifestyle of the sea jelly is so successful that these guys have been around for *millions* of years! Also, you forgot to mention that jellyfish polyps duplicate the same way coral polyps do! This makes sense considering the fact the two are also related.
@zooemperor3954
@zooemperor3954 5 месяцев назад
That factoid about how the adult sea jelly gets its name? I had no idea that’s why they were called that. That is admittedly pretty cool.
@LuisSierra42
@LuisSierra42 5 месяцев назад
That's their only name in spanish. We don't have a translation for Jellyfish other than medusa
@justsomeofmyfavs
@justsomeofmyfavs 5 месяцев назад
@@LuisSierra42 Same in Italian, Hebrew and Russian.
@baptistelalue2865
@baptistelalue2865 5 месяцев назад
Same in French : Méduse is their only name.
@kamewantor4594
@kamewantor4594 5 месяцев назад
​@@justsomeofmyfavsalso Ukrainian and Belarusian
@JDog88
@JDog88 5 месяцев назад
A little trivia: A "factoid" is misinformation that has been spread by word of mouth for so long that it is commonly mistaken as fact. A couple examples being chewing gum staying in your stomach for seven years if swallowed, or that ostriches bury their heads in sand when threatened.
@kylecooper4812
@kylecooper4812 5 месяцев назад
I am so glad you guys finally made a video about this! Ever since I learned about how jellyfish reproduce, I’ve shared it with as many friends as would listen. You guys get the best footage, and you explain things so clearly! I can’t wait to share this!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Thanks so much Kyle!
@b0gdyb0ta
@b0gdyb0ta 5 месяцев назад
For the last time Jimmy, give me the remote! No? Okay, I didn't wanna say this but... you're a clone! Yes, you! And ever since you were a kid you've been... pancaked! That's right, you better leave. Here, let me help push you away!
@ivy_47
@ivy_47 5 месяцев назад
Zefrank missed a good opportunity with this one!
@fien2706
@fien2706 5 месяцев назад
And on top of it, there is a jellyfish species that's immortal, going through their life cycle over and over again
@shockal7269
@shockal7269 5 месяцев назад
until eaten
@melvacaoyona-ollosa278
@melvacaoyona-ollosa278 5 месяцев назад
​@@shockal7269not if left alone.
@shockal7269
@shockal7269 5 месяцев назад
@@melvacaoyona-ollosa278 left alone until eaten
@quitlife9279
@quitlife9279 5 месяцев назад
@@shockal7269 ha but that was only the clone.
@josequiles7430
@josequiles7430 4 месяца назад
It's not really inmortal. It goes back to being a polyp and then *reproduces* to make medusas. It doesn't ever *turn* into a medusa again
@PondScummer
@PondScummer 5 месяцев назад
Their reproductive cycle reminds me of plants, who have alternating generations of sporophytes and gametophytes.
@bizwiz2852
@bizwiz2852 5 месяцев назад
Always love a new deep look video! Keep up the amazing content! And I love how a jellyfish was named Medusa. That’s awesome
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Thank you! Will do!
@enricobianchi4499
@enricobianchi4499 5 месяцев назад
That's actually the normal name of the jellyfish in Italian :)
@BrunoMattei97
@BrunoMattei97 5 месяцев назад
I'm always stunned by the footage on your videos, props to the video and editing team for the amazing job!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Much appreciated!
@srutideka2894
@srutideka2894 4 месяца назад
Really the work is amazing
@polinatalmeltzer450
@polinatalmeltzer450 Месяц назад
When it broke free and swam away, I screamed! It’s so fascinating to see this moment!!
@mythplatypuspwned
@mythplatypuspwned 5 месяцев назад
Nice! I've seen this plenty of times in images, but this is the first time I've seen a RU-vid documentary video actually showing it.
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Wow, thanks!
@AquariumOfTheBay
@AquariumOfTheBay 5 месяцев назад
Incredible video! Great to have you film at our Aquarium!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Thanks again @AquariumOfTheBay !
@shannonlewis2022
@shannonlewis2022 5 месяцев назад
I will call these baby jellies “Squishies” and they shall be mine and they shall be my Squishies.
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
Nemo Nemo Nemo
@blakedao4777
@blakedao4777 5 месяцев назад
Then what will happen to the part that still clings to the rock? Does it break free too or just lay there and die?
@blueberry_borb
@blueberry_borb 5 месяцев назад
Wow, jellyfish are so fascinating!!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
We agree!
@blessedbeauty2293
@blessedbeauty2293 3 месяца назад
- 4:17 What !?! The story ends here!?! We *need* more. MUCH LONGER VIDEOS PLEASE 🙏🏽 🙂 ❤
@MAR_abisal
@MAR_abisal 8 дней назад
It's incredible how complex these organisms are really
@moumous87
@moumous87 5 месяцев назад
Almost 40 and it’s only now that I see a good video showing well the reproduction cycle of jellyfish. What a great channel!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
Wow, thank you!
@bugandclaw
@bugandclaw 3 месяца назад
I go through a stack of pancakes phase every weekend
@oyun_doktoru1236
@oyun_doktoru1236 13 дней назад
The only thing the title made me think about was the pancakes video with wreck-it-ralph exploding someone via overfeeding
@KumiYeou
@KumiYeou 5 месяцев назад
in a lot of ways, true jellyfish are like ferns where they have two adult stages, just that jelly polyps aren't haploid like fern gametophytes
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
Our next video on 4/16 will be about the fern lifecycle! And there will be gametophytes a-plenty.
@Taylor-ig6uu
@Taylor-ig6uu Месяц назад
Because of this video I finally understand the life cycle of jellyfish even though I had to learn about it 3 years ago and it only now clicked in my brain. This young biologist can finally let this subject rest, so THANK YOU. Now it’s just the life cycle of coral that has to click in my brain
@give_anna_an_alt1744
@give_anna_an_alt1744 5 месяцев назад
I was in St. John snorkeling a couple years ago and I didn't realize it was a Jellyfish bloom. (The adults were mostly at or near the surface) and when I noticed finally, I freaked out and noped my way out of the water and back onto the boat.
@Guydude777
@Guydude777 5 месяцев назад
Wow, didn't think the cloning went that far. That's really fascinating!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Thank you!
@thatdumbteen6812
@thatdumbteen6812 4 месяца назад
I like how science names things in the most complex ways and then there's "Strobilation"
@mackskuldinow238
@mackskuldinow238 5 месяцев назад
Wow. That’s really awesome. This was a great video! It was amazing to see how Jellyfish develop in such massive numbers!!
@HappyGick
@HappyGick 21 день назад
Here in Venezuela there was recently a jellyfish bloom near the sea shores. Normally they don't come to the shores. It's believed to be caused by more contamination in the waters (because this species, the "cannonball" jellyfish, is mainly a filter feeder targeting algae), and a decrease in sea turtle population.
@salvadorestrada1013
@salvadorestrada1013 5 месяцев назад
Love watching deep look baked 😂
@darulkhair701
@darulkhair701 5 месяцев назад
shoutout for cameraman staying that long under the sea to capture the life cycle
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
You would be amazed at how long Josh can hold his breath.
@thetherrannative
@thetherrannative 20 дней назад
This really makes me want to replay the marine expansion of Zoo Tycoon 2. Such a lovely game, and so cool for learning the animals and their biomes.
@krohme8005
@krohme8005 5 месяцев назад
Ooh, I love jellyfish! Especially moon jellies. Ive never theough about how they reproduce, but this makes sense. This is a very unique and interesting way to reproduce. 10/10 episode, probably my favorite thus far!!
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
That's high praise! #inspo
@cleanerben9636
@cleanerben9636 5 месяцев назад
Finally, some explanation of what polyps are.
@IWASNEVERHEREIDIDNOTEXIST
@IWASNEVERHEREIDIDNOTEXIST 2 месяца назад
Jellyfishes look like giant microorganisms.
@jackhazardous4008
@jackhazardous4008 2 месяца назад
They look like-like something, but I can't put my finger on what.
@peris_arts_film9699
@peris_arts_film9699 Месяц назад
200,000 units ready, with a million more well on the way
@Phoenix.Sparkles
@Phoenix.Sparkles Месяц назад
This is like real life shape shifting with a twist
@magikarpharbison6817
@magikarpharbison6817 5 месяцев назад
I have always heard about how jellyfish reproduce but this is the first time I have seen it on a video so thanks
@TheNukebooster
@TheNukebooster 2 месяца назад
The most cursed ability of some jellyfish is they can revert into polyp state and reclone themselves again.
@killermakd2015
@killermakd2015 5 месяцев назад
More on sea creatures please. The narrator is amazing. So is the choice of music.
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
Thanks! Here's a playlist with many of our ocean episodes: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-0wtLrlIKvJE.html
@wisnuwardhana6423
@wisnuwardhana6423 5 месяцев назад
Thanks Deeplook for introducing us how to clone pancakes. Now we don't have to make a new one for everyday breakfast.
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Any time! Now if we could just clone maple syrup....
@DavidCruickshank
@DavidCruickshank 5 месяцев назад
So how many babies do you want? Jellyfish: yes
@strangefishman7635
@strangefishman7635 5 месяцев назад
"they look like fuzzy little potatoes!" so does my cat... is he secretly a moon jelly planulae?
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
You will know soon enough - if there is a kitten bloom.
@strangefishman7635
@strangefishman7635 5 месяцев назад
@@KQEDDeepLook :0
@BurntWeeny435
@BurntWeeny435 2 дня назад
Great video. Seeing this 3:55, in your video made me see & understand how a sea turtle could easily mistake a plastic bag, for a jellyfish! No wonder it is such a problem! Those poor little adorable sea turtles!
@DoctorDerpman
@DoctorDerpman 2 месяца назад
"Being a stack of pancakes isn't a phase, mom. It's how I identify."
@MetroidsEATYou
@MetroidsEATYou 5 месяцев назад
The second "O" of Deep Look was perfectly placed at 0:03... I just needed to express that!
@alysonwong818
@alysonwong818 Месяц назад
A+ video!! The descriptions. Visual metaphors. Footage! Amazing. Thank you to your team!
@NataliDali
@NataliDali 5 месяцев назад
One more amazing evidence of the "thin border" between the animal and plant kingdoms. Thank you, Deep Look, for reminding us once again that we are all one interconnected world. 🐚🐙🐋🐟🐠🐡🐬🐾🤍
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
You are welcome, Natali!
@NataliDali
@NataliDali 5 месяцев назад
@@KQEDDeepLook Best regards from Ukraine! ❤🤍💙💛
@hsingh8408
@hsingh8408 4 месяца назад
Of course i love these episodes deep look, Your work is seriously exceptional as i have been watching your videos for almost 4-5 years❤❤
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
Thank you!
@FenNick1994
@FenNick1994 5 месяцев назад
The ocean is fascinating. I'm not setting foot in it ever again.
@A3Kr0n
@A3Kr0n 27 дней назад
This is why jellyfish will rule the Earth someday.
@takenname8053
@takenname8053 6 дней назад
I know this is about jellyfish, but hearing a barnacle described as a predator is so weird!
@RgLeOrtz
@RgLeOrtz 3 месяца назад
Sea anemone: alr now we have to stay here and catch fish Sea anemone: nah imma swim *becomes jelly fish*
@user-bp4wt2zq4p
@user-bp4wt2zq4p 19 дней назад
Just stay in the ocean and I'll stay on the land. Deal?
@chrisb6791
@chrisb6791 Месяц назад
Love this channel! Laura has a soothing voice and she's funny!
@ericandreski3025
@ericandreski3025 4 месяца назад
With how much they clone themselves, I’m surprised that there hasn’t been some kind of idle game made about making as many jellyfish as possible 😂
@Quizack
@Quizack 2 месяца назад
Here in Australia we have many cool species of jellyfish in the ocean. I recently went to the beach and found that hundreds of them had washed up on the shore. Massive jellyfish that were about the size of those mini basketballs that you'd have growing up. They were soft, slimy, and surprisingly dense in comparison to many others. Their surface had an amazing brain-like texture to it. It was cool to see! This video is perfect timing!
@ccblack3983
@ccblack3983 2 месяца назад
It blows my mind that jellyfish grow similar to plants? Like, they multiply closer to a pothos than a human.
@lolbots
@lolbots 21 день назад
*mrs. jellyfish:* hun I'm pregnant *mr. jellyfish:* what!! you know we can't afford another 700 kids!!!
@abbyallen4421
@abbyallen4421 5 месяцев назад
I didn't know that polyps were baby jellies!
@Sacred_Korok69
@Sacred_Korok69 Месяц назад
I find baby jellyfish extremely cute. Just look at em flapping😂 theyre so small
@justinjyeung
@justinjyeung 5 месяцев назад
Amazing video! It really gives us the visuals to really see what's going on in the classic jellyfish life cycle that we've studied in high school or university :D Also how fitting that once the ephyrae break free, they resemble little sea snowflakes :)
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 5 месяцев назад
Thanks so much Justin!!
@hannukahcelt2027
@hannukahcelt2027 3 месяца назад
I'd never seen a video showing the life cycle of a jellyfish before. Now I'd like to see another, only this one explaining the ones that can regress back into the larval stage and become effectively immortal.
@Pkxd2017
@Pkxd2017 12 часов назад
I love moon jellyfish
@minmin-hd9bu
@minmin-hd9bu 5 месяцев назад
today years old i realized i never knew what a baby jellyfish looks like1
@anonymustly7818
@anonymustly7818 5 месяцев назад
Fascinating. As a kid I've been stung a couple of times by some form of jellyfish so I'm terrified of them.
@RRTSMPlayz
@RRTSMPlayz 2 месяца назад
I usually saw on how Jellyfishes reproduce on books back in my elementary school days, but to here, it really does seemingly pretty cool than only the figures and one picture. Jellies were really are almost alien like creatures on earth
@pureblood6310
@pureblood6310 2 месяца назад
You could feed the world with all these jellies!
@The_hot_blue_fire_guy
@The_hot_blue_fire_guy 2 месяца назад
The fact that creatures without a brain or even nerve cells can do this is absolutely insane! I’m surprised nobody has thought of making something like this but the size of a elephant and on land and turn it into a horror movie or something. Would probably work pretty well.
@tamitamini
@tamitamini 27 дней назад
i've seen this in my biology textbook but i've always wandered how it would look like irl
@IloveJellow
@IloveJellow 4 месяца назад
its crazy to think that jellyfish decided the most best way to multiply was by cloning at each stage.
@Death_Gremlin
@Death_Gremlin Месяц назад
Thats crazy but neat, that also explains the moon jellies in Ponyo :3
@TruePartyKing
@TruePartyKing Месяц назад
So cool, Medusa is actually the word for jellyfish in Italian 😂
@BoolianKazooka
@BoolianKazooka 3 месяца назад
Moral of the story is Jellyfish are plants.
@katemariemc
@katemariemc Месяц назад
Sometimes I am SHOCKED at the diversity of living beings. I am speechless fr
@Xinevlin
@Xinevlin 5 месяцев назад
Oh soo that's how jellyfish are born, because i always think that jellyfish are like flatworms, just split and you got another one.
@liuqmno3421
@liuqmno3421 2 месяца назад
I knew they cloned themselves, but didn't know about their second method of doing so! Lovely video
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
Thanks! 😃
@TKBreaksTheRules
@TKBreaksTheRules 2 месяца назад
one of those videos that get increasingly interesting
@natothefla2178
@natothefla2178 5 месяцев назад
This is the vids i need 10 years ago I have to find out myself at local library that jellyfish duplicate themself through polyp
@CheshireMask
@CheshireMask 5 месяцев назад
I swear they are like plants, or just big cells, they truly don't feel like animals
@arthurfrost9004
@arthurfrost9004 4 месяца назад
This was honestly some "The Prestige" level shenanigans
@SkibbyDooBop
@SkibbyDooBop 5 месяцев назад
“Mom I don’t feel so good…” *multiplies*
@SogeMoge
@SogeMoge 5 месяцев назад
Close-ups of a jelly are marvelous!
@dammitthatguy3107
@dammitthatguy3107 5 месяцев назад
Didn't know jellyfish made babies that can clone twice, I always wonder why I'd see certain species that were big in numbers.
@NjAutumn14
@NjAutumn14 Месяц назад
So... it's just a bunch of cloning... I like it
@user-mk8yh1gv5r
@user-mk8yh1gv5r 29 дней назад
Wow! This is amazing! Jellyfish are awesome!
@Ty-bz7zx
@Ty-bz7zx 3 месяца назад
Always wondered... now I know! Very well done and interesting.
@KQEDDeepLook
@KQEDDeepLook 2 месяца назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Laurx1106
@Laurx1106 3 месяца назад
I'm crying while watching this, they're so beautiful 😢
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