Why These Jellyfish Use Photosynthesis



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.

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45 thoughts on “Why These Jellyfish Use Photosynthesis”

  1. 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?!⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍👍👍👍👍

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  2. 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.

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  3. 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.

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  4. 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.

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  5. 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

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  6. 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.

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  7. 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.

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  8. 🗣️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!!!!

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