Second Nature is back! In this week’s episode we answer the question, why did migration evolve so many times?
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CREDITS
Created by Dylan Dubeau
Executive Producer, Director, and Director of Photography: Dylan Dubeau
Host: Aranya Iyer
Editors: Cat Senior and Jim Pitts
Writer: Lauren Greenwood
Producer, Camera Operator: Andres Salazar
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Untangling convergent evolution.
source
how about albino animals
Are all these small black and white clips from old videos or is a production made for this animalogic series ?
Missed opportunity to include Crab Rave as background music when talking about red crabs
Muy buen programa.
I navigate by viking sunstone (i actually have before its Icelandic calcite and yoy can use it to find the sun on overcast days and days where the sun doesnt crest the horizon
It is monarch season in papillion (butterfly) nebraska and my yard is full of milkweed qe are getting fined for it (HOA) but we dont care
Nobody ever thought the Earth was flat.
Why don’t you get to make a suggestion creating YouTube Videos Shows all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Animalogic’s Paleologic on the next Friday, coming up next?!⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍👍👍👍👍
And their call is magnificent! "BACKSTREET BOYS!"
Why did you change the title and thumbnail? Is it to trick us into thinking that you dropped two videos on the same day? Because that is some real pond scum behavior.
I'm sorry, but the greatest motivation in the animal kingdom isn't food. It's procreation. Many species even forgo food during mating season and some even die after mating.
I love this presenter 🎉
14:07 chef's kiss lol!
Using the old footage as B reel was really cool and innovative!
How come the title says crocodiles but not a mention 5 minutes in?
I sympathize with that wolf's need to hunt wild ass.
51st
A little surprised neither the swift parrot or the orange-bellied parrot got a mention, given they're the only two species of truly migratory parrot in the world and cross Bass Strait from Tasmania to Mainland Australia every year, then back again to breed. They're also two of the rarest parrot species.
3:16 the vampire reference.. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAA
That reminds me. Usual my near sea Rhode Island back yard has loads of Monarchs. This year I made sure all my milkweed plants were o.k. I even worked it so there was fresh growth in the spring and again in early to mid summer. Milkweed even popped up in 2 new spots, extra butterfly bush, extra bee balm. No Monarchs. Hummingbirds went nuts over the flowers though.
Why is the monarch butterfly endangered? 😢
It's interesting and I wonder why, there isn't an Antarctic Tern that migrates the opposite direction?
Not to be a pedant, but humans have known the Earth isn't flat for about as long as we've seen ships disappear over the horizon or seen farther from higher elevations.
The old timey narration threw me for a loop. I think it was only in the last 10 years that we discovered how eels migrate and mate. Or was it authentic? Amazing topic and coverage.
I really appreciated and enjoyed the dark colored backdrop behind her. I mostly watch these videos at night and bright backgrounds a bit jarring on the eyes
We never adopted a nomadic lifestyle as humans. A great deal of humans actually decided to do the opposite some 10-13 thousand years ago! The Mongolian nomads didn't adopt nomadism, they simply remained nomadic while the world around them became sedentary.
Would have loved a program like this while in school, I think it would have kept our attention more than just listening to a teacher talk about it.
😄👍
Second Nature is where it's at
I think that you have the jellyfish migration backwards. If they are avoiding shadows, in the morning they should be on the west side of the lake. If they were on the east side, the trees and cliffs above would block the early morning sunlight. Vice versa for the afternoon. Migrate towards the east to stay in the sunlight slanting down from the west above the trees and cliffs.
They also migrate vertically. This lake is stratified into an upper oxygenated layer and a lower anoxic layer. This is because the cliffs around it prevent strong winds and mixing of the water. They mostly stay in the upper layer where the oxygen is but will also go down to the edge of the anoxic layer to pick up some dissolved minerals that their photosynthetic zooxanthellae need.
Super Nice
🗣️I would love for Danielle to "talk about" the Fisher Cat next 🥰
My Father actually saw one IN HIS TRAILER PARK in the Mid Hudson Valley, NY.
Absolutely LOVE watching Danielle!!!!
time for me to travel to Brazil for that as. 😂 LOL 👏👏💯😂
It is flat, what do you mean?
Second Nature is how I first discovered this channel, hope to see more !
Make one for woodcock please!!!!!
We definitely need an episode on the asiatic wild ass now
Hell yeah man🤘 I've been missing the vintage clips👌✌
Lions are the alpha male
Arctic terns have such a beautiful call: "BACKstreetBOYS!!"
Cool
It is weird and hilarious how you mispronounce your own name. Aranya Iyer, why do you pronounce your name like an oblivious person would. 😅
Please do a video on all other species of deer, that have musk glands or organs that have been traditionally harvested for perfume industry, aside from Musk-deer.
About the American Woodcock and it’s swaying walk 😊
lovely editing and journal clips <3
Season 2 lets gooooo