Why Sperm Whales Are, Unquestionably, The COOLEST Marine Mammal | Alien Ocean

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  • čas přidán 18. 02. 2023
  • Check out my Patreon: / theoctopuslady
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    ✩The Mystery of the Bloop Has Been SOLVED: • The Mystery of the Blo...
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    ✩Just How Scary is the Deep-Sea Magnapinna Squid? • Just How Scary is the ...
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    Photo Credits: docs.google.com/document/d/1a...
    Sources:
    Halsey, L. (2002). Ultimate divers. Biologist, 49(4), 161.
    Deep-diving Adaptations in the Sperm Whale. (n.d.). www.orcaireland.org/deep-divi...
    Clarke, M. R. (1978). Buoyancy control as a function of the spermaceti organ in the sperm whale. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 58(1), 27-71.
    Werth, A. J. (2004). Functional morphology of the sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) tongue, with reference to suction feeding. Aquatic Mammals, 30(3), 405-418.
    McHedlize, G. A. (2002) Sperm Whales, Evolution. In W. F. Perrin, et al (Ed.) Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals. Academic Press. archive.org/details/encyclope...
    McClain, C. R., Balk, M. A., Benfield, M. C., Branch, T. A., Chen, C., Cosgrove, J., ... & Thaler, A. D. (2015). Sizing ocean giants: patterns of intraspecific size variation in marine megafauna. PeerJ, 3, e715.
    Cantor, M., Gero, S., Whitehead, H., & Rendell, L. (2019). Sperm whale: the largest toothed creature on Earth. Ethology and behavioral ecology of odontocetes, 261-280.
    Hopkin, M. (2004). Sperm whales suffer the bends. Nature. doi.org/10.1038/news041220-13
    Whitehead, H. (2018). Sperm whale: Physeter macrocephalus. In Encyclopedia of marine mammals (pp. 919-925). Academic Press.
    Roeleveld, M. A. (2000). Giant squid beaks: implications for systematics. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 80(1), 185-187.
    Bennett, M. (2022, February 22). Ode to the Sperm Whale. In Our Nature. www.inournaturemag.com/all/fe...

Komentáře • 1K

  • @OctopusLady
    @OctopusLady  Před rokem +548

    EDIT: HEY. ARE YOU ABOUT TO LEAVE A COMMENT TELLING ME THAT BLUE WHALES ARE, IN FACT, PREDATORS?
    Well. Stop. Don't do that. I am now fully aware of this fact, as addressed here: czcams.com/video/M03_mvOo79g/video.html
    Ughh! Y'all! Some...DOLPHINS have started hanging out around my Patreon, and they're trying to hock some fad diet scam -- can someone help me chase them off? www.patreon.com/theoctopuslady
    Oooh nooo, and now I said something negative about NFTs on Twitter, and now all Crypto Orcas are running amok in my comments and retweets! twitter.com/theoctopuslady

    • @MeshuggahDave.
      @MeshuggahDave. Před rokem +17

      I think you are my soul mate. I could listen to your voice forever. Thank you for the awesome content. Cheers!

    • @BigAutisticDaddy
      @BigAutisticDaddy Před rokem +10

      so why isn't the blue whale, who hunts for plankton, doesn't get counted as a predator?

    • @davewolf6256
      @davewolf6256 Před rokem +4

      Regarding the existence of non-toothed predators larger than sperm whales, there is a good argument to be made that some species of baleen whales are predators. You might say they are filter feeders, but predation is a behavior whereas filter feeding is a feeding mechanism. And in fact, the feeding behavior of Humpback Whales and some Rorquals (tracking and ambushing clusters of a particular prey) resembles predation more than do Right Whales, whose skim feeding is more similar to filter feeders like Feather Duster Worms or the extinct Aegirocassis in that what they take in is presumably less particularized.

    • @valivali8104
      @valivali8104 Před rokem +7

      Hey! Orcas are empathetic towards other orcas, even helping orcas who were hurt so badly that they weren't able to hunt themselves, are intelligent, have their own language and even cultures (for example, only some populations hunt marine mammals while others hunt only fish, and "fish-eaters" don’t mate with "mammal-eaters") nothing like grypto- or nft-bros...

    • @ProfessorGood-qi7zp
      @ProfessorGood-qi7zp Před rokem

      But aren't roos land animals?

  • @Ett.Gammalt.Bergtroll
    @Ett.Gammalt.Bergtroll Před rokem +1081

    I think the blue whale is technically a predator, without teeth, that’s larger than the sperm whale. Hence the distinction of it as the largest toothed predator. 🤔

    • @sleepyburr
      @sleepyburr Před rokem +183

      I was about to say the same. Because their typical prey are so small (if eaten in vast quantities), I think a lot of people don't usually consider blue whales to be predatory, but since they *are* hunting other animals as a food source, they do still meet the definition of a predator.

    • @meganwynn372
      @meganwynn372 Před rokem +33

      well those filtering growths may as well be teeth, thats fair. you KNOW that once, they were, teeth.

    • @sarahlynn4798
      @sarahlynn4798 Před rokem +25

      Thank you for saying this & I'm glad it's such a high up comment cuz it's such an important point! I literally checked the comments right after the.. statement.. was made. But what do you expect from a marine mammal hater? 😋Jk

    • @sullentamp9140
      @sullentamp9140 Před rokem +15

      Well we could go further and say hyper carnivore, or active predator, blue whales eating krill isn’t the same category I’d suspect

    • @mistorWhiskers
      @mistorWhiskers Před rokem +46

      @@meganwynn372 actually baleen is made of keratin, so basically a moustache on your gum rather than your lip. It's not fully understood when and how the teeth were lost and the baleen came formed, but it would appear teeth where lost, then baleen formed later

  • @_mikolaj_
    @_mikolaj_ Před rokem +266

    I like how sperm whale is pretty much a squid geiger counter that clicks more intensively the closer it is to a squid

  • @wetsockfullofhotmeat
    @wetsockfullofhotmeat Před rokem +728

    It's funny that you mention disliking marine mammals because I primarily enjoyed learning about marine mammals until I found your channel. Now I have a vast enjoyment of the ocean's various non-mammalian silly guys!

    • @datkhornedog899
      @datkhornedog899 Před rokem +23

      ​@@ScaredShitless0 Devious eel players, they are. Do not let them near anything resembling a hole or a fish head.

    • @Link-1004
      @Link-1004 Před rokem

      ​@ScaredShitless0 Killer Wales.. are ohh boy.. deadly? (There is no accounts of Killer Whales killing a human in the wild. Captivity on the other hand...)

    • @VeryEpicGutrot
      @VeryEpicGutrot Před rokem +6

      I can't see dolphins same

    • @bussydandruff1580
      @bussydandruff1580 Před rokem

      im the same way hahaha

    • @augustdice3914
      @augustdice3914 Před 10 měsíci

      Yeah…. And she is right that ocean mammals are massive shitheads…. But she says it like 95% of the entire ocean isn’t either a literal or metaphorical asshole. Like, an octopus will sometimes just punch fish by draining all the blood from its arm and then quickly refilling it to strike the fish.
      The ocean is the OG home of
      Evolution, and it’s silly little denizens are always looking to be assholes….. though the mammals are certainly more conscious of the fact that they are assholes… they like it that way!

  • @Arcad3n
    @Arcad3n Před rokem +508

    My favorite thing about whales (can’t remember which ones but I think they were sperm whales) is that when humans began hunting them, some of the whales developed new strategies to avoid being hunted, and these strategies were TAUGHT TO OTHER WHALES via COMMUNICATION and spread across the whole ocean! I also remember reading that whales from different parts of the ocean have different “dialects” to their communication patterns, meaning it’s possible to tell which part of the ocean they’re from? So cool!

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Před rokem +46

      iirc, that's part of the inspiration for moby dick, and yes moby dick was a sperm whale too. as for the whale dialect thing, i remember that being the case for many whales that have been studied, altho it might be less of a dialect and just "slang", like cool kid whales using fun words and stuff?

    • @carl11547
      @carl11547 Před rokem +9

      That was orcas. I mean, you could have heard it about another whale, but I heard it about Atlantic orcas.

    • @kenabbott8585
      @kenabbott8585 Před rokem +35

      Even that stunt with orcas beaching themselves....
      That's not just a desperate lunge--they actually practice the technique of beaching themselves and getting back in for YEARS before they actually take their first seal with it. An older orca--always a cow, apparently the bulls just don't teach--shows them how, guides them, and on the first attempts nudges them back in, and about half of them try it once and say "Nope, no friggin' way, I don't like sea lion enough to deal with that shit" and never try it again.

    • @unknowable4147
      @unknowable4147 Před rokem +22

      Orcas have regional dialects! It's one of the reasons why scientist have such a hard time finding out what certain clicks mean because there _is_ a pattern but it varies from pod to pod!

    • @joejoemyo
      @joejoemyo Před rokem +7

      I know a species of whales developed essentially fleet strategies around this point, with picket line defense, a battle line, and flanking maneuvers
      Edit: We aren't special. Be scared

  • @ryanhampson673
    @ryanhampson673 Před rokem +245

    I saw a documentary on sperm whales a while back and they had divers in the water with them. It seemed the whales limited their clicks with humans in the water, almost like they knew it could be damaging to them.

    • @DollysplitBand
      @DollysplitBand Před rokem +52

      Did they think they were whispeeing? Don't let the humans hear... Haha

    • @logandelacruz2152
      @logandelacruz2152 Před rokem +60

      The calves actually didn’t lower their volume from what I heard, because they hadn’t learned to yet.

    • @mrnice4434
      @mrnice4434 Před rokem +48

      @@DollysplitBand "psst don't tell the human where all the good squids are"

    • @snoozlewoozle
      @snoozlewoozle Před rokem +13

      Don't want to give away the secret spot 😂

    • @MuertaRara
      @MuertaRara Před rokem +3

      this is amazing

  • @Linuxpunk81
    @Linuxpunk81 Před rokem +146

    I am a retired submarine sonar tech and I've heard all these sounds out in the wild over the years. Really brought back some memories 😊

    • @morgan4574
      @morgan4574 Před 20 dny +1

      It must have been cool to know that they were down in the darkness with you guys!

  • @leXie1337_chan
    @leXie1337_chan Před rokem +127

    6:20 - The largest 'toothless' predators on Earth are, presumably, blue whales.
    13:28 - From what I understand, "suction feeding" describes a strategy for catching marine prey that is popular among fish, where they open their mouths widely and suddenly and just vacuum in their meal and the water around them, swallowing the prey whole. Considering the tiny size of sperm whales' most-dined-upon squids, this makes sense.

    • @Refog1
      @Refog1 Před 2 měsíci

      I think the confusion about the whales’ suction feeding is the lack of gills and expanding jaws (since fish eat by enlarging their mouth volume quickly or sucking water through their gills) so at least I don’t fully understand how they manage to create the suction force to catch food
      Though that’s just my random read on the situation

    • @Refog1
      @Refog1 Před 2 měsíci

      Fish that feed through suction*
      I might also be thinking about ram-feeding in regards to gills’ role in feeding, i’m not sure

  • @captainstroon1555
    @captainstroon1555 Před rokem +101

    If I had a nickel for every time Octopus Lady forgot (or chose to forget) that blue whales exist, I'd have two nickels. Which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice in the same video. Still, it is a great video and sperm whales are fascinating.

  • @Grooon
    @Grooon Před rokem +60

    I love how she listed every single reason I love marine mammals, I can't help but stan a complete and utter menace

    • @crackedemerald4930
      @crackedemerald4930 Před rokem +10

      They're like wet monkeys

    • @starmaker75
      @starmaker75 Před 9 hodinami

      Sea mammals are basically mammals that woke up and decided to cause chaos underwater

  • @Brendito1
    @Brendito1 Před rokem +16

    “Personally i have no beef with Dolphins”- person entirely unaware of dolphins

  • @PeeperSnail
    @PeeperSnail Před 10 měsíci +49

    The fact they fight giant and colossal squid is cool because they're absolutely fighting someone their own size. They're not just midly inconveniencing themselves to murder a small defenseless animal or to torture a land dweller, they're risking decompression sickness and travelling to the squids' turf to have a mighty battle.

    • @midnightsan9917
      @midnightsan9917 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Sperm whales, beluga, narwhal, and some porpoises are some of the only toothed whales I stan. None of them play with their food or kill things for the fun of it. And they can have fun without doing terrible things. Looking at you dolphins.

    • @timothytumusiime2903
      @timothytumusiime2903 Před měsícem

      Tehehe
      😅😅

  • @charcoalangel7536
    @charcoalangel7536 Před rokem +24

    YOU GOT SPONSORED BY THE FREAKING VLOG BROTHERS?!?!? WHAT?!?!?!

  • @kaelhooten8468
    @kaelhooten8468 Před rokem +54

    Fun fact- the rete mirabile vascular structure is also what allows birds not to lose too much heat from their feet. The structures allow for countercurrent temperature regulation of blood as it enters then leaves the lower leg and foot.
    It’s why sparrow legs don’t freeze in the Winter and keeps ducks and geese happily swimming in frozen water despite a complete lack of fat insulation in the lower extremities.

    • @carl11547
      @carl11547 Před rokem +3

      Fun fact, part two: lots of other sea animals have a rete mirabile ("miraculous net"), including tuna and penguins.

    • @kaelhooten8468
      @kaelhooten8468 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@carl11547penguins… water birds, yes.

    • @karen23826
      @karen23826 Před 11 měsíci

      Cool! Always wondered this, now I’ll just wonder about how they’re able to orient themselves in the air given how bad human pilots are at it and how easy our vestibular system is fooled.

    • @midnightsan9917
      @midnightsan9917 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@karen23826inner ears maybe? Human inner ears are incredibly adapted at being upright so that might be why we're so bad at righting ourselves in the air like cats and birds. We spent a whole lot of evolution points making sure we could balance properly on the ground. So it doesn't leave much room for change.

    • @gingermcgingin4106
      @gingermcgingin4106 Před 2 měsíci

      Ducks & geese do not swim at all through frozen water, since doing so is impossible as frozen water is ice i.e. a solid

  • @rasmachris94
    @rasmachris94 Před rokem +4

    Some speculation on why you get the bends and why it might not affect sperm whales for anyone curious.
    The reason you get injured from coming up too quickly from lower depths;
    You inhale gases as you dive which go into your body and saturate your blood/tissues, as you go deeper the gas is compressed by the pressure [measured in bars 1 bar = 10m/30feet iirc].
    Compressing the air is fine, think of a stress ball, it just gets smaller.
    The problem is when you come back up per bar of pressure the gases are no longer under pressure and expand.
    Which is why if diving you breath out as you do an emergency ascent, so that the gas doesnt expand in your lungs and cause damage.
    The more compressed the gas in your body, the more space for more gas [this is a presumption on my part]. So you can become more saturated than if you were saturated at sea level.
    Humans dive with oxygen, nitrogen and at deeper depths to avoid nitrogen narcosis trimix [oxygen, helium and nitrogen], the gas mixture that you breathe is under pressure in a tank.
    So why might the wales not suffer the affects of the bends?
    There are a couple reasons but the immediate ones that spring to mind are;
    - Whales may have so much tissue and mass that to reach the point of unsafe saturation they would need to dive for an excessively long time, longer than their average dive times.
    - They are diving on a single breath.
    Think of free divers. Why do free divers not do safety stops when the average depth of an intermediate diver is 12m/40feet, this is an addition bar of pressure, the gas should in theory inflate to a proportional amount and be dangerous if they ascend too quickly.
    The reason they dont have to do safety stops is because the gas that they are diving with is the air their lungs can hold at sea level.
    Only the gas of the initial breath is being compressed.
    Therefore, when they ascend they are only expanding the gas from a compressed state back to it's original volume.
    This is fundamentally different to human divers who are adding additional gas to their lungs over the course dive.
    Which under pressure fill the space of the lungs, but once pressure is relieved will expand to take up more space than the lungs would accommodate.
    - Whales are also not inhaling gases that are released under pressure from equipment as you would with a rebreather/tanks [i forgot the word].
    So like free divers, whales are likely only expanding the air that they took with them at the surface from the initial dive, it is not compressed before or added to during the dive, and they are not receiving supplemental gas whilst under water that can further saturate their body to unsafe levels.
    I hope I was clear, to anyone with questions just ask and I'll try to explain. I'm not a diver myself, actually terrified of the ocean, but have become fascinated with it more specifically cave diving [which is incredibly dangerous and should only be done by those who are certified] from the channel Dive Talk where they go over some of these things in dangerous diving incidents etc.

  • @ela_toile
    @ela_toile Před rokem +250

    Congrats on the sponsorship!!!!!! You really deserve it. I found your videos thru tiktok a little while back. It's so wonderful seeing your channel grow and get the recognition it deserves. ❤️

  • @sydney4525
    @sydney4525 Před rokem +64

    My niece always gets excited whenever a video of yours comes out and she’s always asking when the Octopus Lady is gonna have a new video. Congratulations on the sponsorship! You deserve it 😊!

    • @ShardulIyer
      @ShardulIyer Před rokem +3

      Aww, so sweet. That just sounds very adorable and I just can't imagine her getting all excited for new videos or having these awe struck expressions while watching the videos - kids & their curiosity is simply beautiful 💕

  • @egg7247
    @egg7247 Před rokem +52

    The suction they use to hunt is created by them making a vacuum with their mouths when they open them, it is also achieved by movements of the tongue which acts like a piston. Beaked whales use this strategy too when hunting squid, some other marine vertebrates use this as well (wobbegongs, angel sharks etc.)

  • @pippinbloom
    @pippinbloom Před rokem +26

    I'm so proud of you!!! I just know that the vlog brothers were so psyched when they found you. I can imagine them laughing at your jokes together 🥹

  • @dillanerickson7807
    @dillanerickson7807 Před rokem +140

    To answer the big question of the day I think it comes down to what you define a predator as and teeth as? A blue whale technically hunts krill and it adapted a sort of pseudo teeth. Also how dare you not love seals, they’re sea puppies!!

    • @babiiluv22204
      @babiiluv22204 Před rokem

      A blue whale is not a predator, an animal is not considered a “true” predator if they are an actual part of another animals diet, blue whales are regularly hunted by orca. The only exception to an animal still being a predator is if their only real predator is us.

    • @shereehi5539
      @shereehi5539 Před 10 měsíci

      Seals are scary to other seals.

    • @Ballzy5000
      @Ballzy5000 Před měsícem

      But blue and humpback whales are toothless
      They have baleens

  • @charcoalangel7536
    @charcoalangel7536 Před rokem +109

    Unrelated to this video but my favorite animal(?) of all time is the immortal jellyfish and I kind of hope you get around to making a video on them eventually cause they are just....so weird.

    • @OctopusLady
      @OctopusLady  Před rokem +51

      Oh, but I did already! Kinda. I talked about them at the end of my jellyfish video!

    • @964cuplove
      @964cuplove Před rokem +19

      @@OctopusLady anything immortal deserves it’s own VERY LONG video ! 🎉🎉

  • @zcarp8642
    @zcarp8642 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I must state that the orca/killer whale IS indeed a whale!
    It's actually in the same group as the sperm whale mentioned, the toothed whales.
    Bottlenose dolphins, beaked whales, sperm whales, and others are in the toothed whale group

  • @BonnieBoestar
    @BonnieBoestar Před rokem +16

    I can't believe this insane unwarranted Orca hate, they insanely intelligent and their family pog dynamics are some of the most complex and emotional relationships we find in the animal kingdoms. I really would love a video by you about the staggering extent to which they can communicate with their calls. In fact they can even teach each other learned behaviors, and those quickly spread to other colonies!! Recently aftet an orca was severely injured by a boat rotor blade, orcas have suddenly begun outright attacking boats in the area, and specifically targetting destroying the blades, leaving the boat adrift. Its so fascinating!

    • @midnightsan9917
      @midnightsan9917 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Their smart enough to be intentionally malicious.

    • @margodphd
      @margodphd Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@midnightsan9917And yet somehow don't attack humans....

    • @shellpoptheepicswordmaster755
      @shellpoptheepicswordmaster755 Před 7 měsíci +2

      that's because they're smart enough to not attack humans.

    • @lordfelidae4505
      @lordfelidae4505 Před měsícem

      ​@@margodphdorcas recognize emotional kin.

  • @Abingusbabe
    @Abingusbabe Před rokem +16

    Personally I’m very fond of the bowhead whales. Predominantly because they have great being old:looking old ratio. Like I hear that some sponges or whatever can live for ages but you wouldn’t know just by looking at it. But someone can show you a bowhead whale and is like “this guy may be 400 years old” and brother I believe it! Look at that lumpy beast! The world weary gaze is very endearing to me

  • @Berfams91
    @Berfams91 Před rokem +21

    I'm surprised you didn't note that sperm whales have been seen harassing hunting orcas and being bros to others. They use that clicking to confuse Orcas and I saw a report that a duo followed one 12mile during a research mission.

  • @CoolMaisa
    @CoolMaisa Před rokem +8

    NOOOOO you forgot to mention how weird their sleeping is!

  • @nuotatorre8741
    @nuotatorre8741 Před rokem +19

    As an Italain I always found the name sperm whale weird, since we just call them "Capodoglio" witch dervies from the word "Capo' witch it's just a fancy word for head. Similary Jellyfish for us it's "Medusa", but we do call the angler fish "Rana Pescatrice" literaly "Fishing Frog" wich all things considered might be worst than sperm whale since it's kinda hard to see a frog in the angler fish.

    • @dominichowell961
      @dominichowell961 Před rokem +4

      Frogfish are in the angler family

    • @joundii3100
      @joundii3100 Před rokem +5

      I only now realise that sperm whales are what is known in French as "Cachalot". And jellyfish is "Méduse" and angler fishes are called "Poisons-pêcheurs" which literally mean fisher fish.

    • @birbcall5778
      @birbcall5778 Před rokem +3

      It might be a strecht, but back in the day, people would catch frogs by ''fishing'' for them with a little red flag, bound to a rod. This rod was held abve a choir of calling males, and these males actually react quite assertive of this. Maybe that could be why angler fish are called that way in Italian?

    • @nuotatorre8741
      @nuotatorre8741 Před rokem +1

      @@birbcall5778 I don't know it is quite a strech but that is quite an interesting fact. If i realy had to guess, I'd say than when Angle Fish dies they tend to flaten out a lot and since they don't have scales like other fish a that point they do start to look like a frog if you squint a bit. Since most peopole back then would have only seen them dead that is why the name stuck maby. Kinda like with the blob fish, most peopole only saw the decomposing bodies so they just kinda assumed it looked like that and gave them their name.

  • @thunderkrux7745
    @thunderkrux7745 Před rokem +7

    John and Hank Green are the best thing to come out the educational side of you to, particularly Hank. I love all of his PBS videos and it’s great to see them sponsoring other CZcamsrs. Especially people like you

  • @TheDillyum
    @TheDillyum Před rokem +5

    I love this video... I was so mad about you hating marine mammals but then you go right ahead and acknowledge the bigotry of it at 10:30 .... oooh my gosh that made me laugh. Subscribed x)

  • @CurtisShimamoto
    @CurtisShimamoto Před rokem +11

    I particularly enjoyed the picture of spaghetti

  • @SirHugsalot13th
    @SirHugsalot13th Před rokem +9

    I'm a little insulted you implied Humpback Whales are boring. I don't know if you watch Casual Geographic (I kinda FEEL like you do, at least occasionally), but a couple months back in his video 5 Animals We All Should Be Thankful For, he explained how Humpbacks rescue other animals from Orcas, which should already have your respect (even if they also rescue seals, but I digress). He also touches on Belugas as well, it's a really good video overall.
    All that being said, Sperm Whales are still utterly cool, I hecking NEED to see a tussle between one and a giant squid before I die!

  • @_j4y4
    @_j4y4 Před rokem +11

    oh my god, congrats on the sponsorship! you deserve it and the whole ocean! (maybe minus the mammals) keep it up

  • @lena-hu4jf
    @lena-hu4jf Před rokem +19

    I'm so happy for you, you really deserve that sponsorship! I just love your Videos and the effort your putting into them

  • @IDWpresents
    @IDWpresents Před rokem +3

    2:44 "Human_Torso_Frisbee.mp4 has been removed due to violent imagery."
    Well, that certainly won the Acadamy award for still frame of the decade

  • @cobydegroot5129
    @cobydegroot5129 Před rokem +9

    Don't stop what you're doing! Your videos are bound to blow up, they're just way too good!

  • @Crystalised24
    @Crystalised24 Před rokem +16

    Congrats on the sponsor, you so deserve it!!! Your channel fits right in with the kind of content they support, I go back and forth between binging your videos and PBS eons all the time😅
    Also, for some reason the hunting noises are so funny to me, the way they gradually speed up makes it seem like the whales are doing their own Jaws theme music as they sneak up on prey lmao (and I’m glad you don’t have beef with manatees cause they’re one of my fav animals and, much like capybaras, it’s basically impossible to have beef with them)

  • @fuckinantipope5511
    @fuckinantipope5511 Před rokem +10

    Loved this video, especially because you talked about Giant Squids!
    I am a giant squid fan (pun intended) and always get excited for squid related things.
    But to be a bit of a buzz kill, giant and colossal squid and sperm whales most likely don't battle as sperm whales are so much bigger than the squids that they easily overpower them. The squids may try to fight back, leaving the scars, but over all it's not a threat to the whale.
    I also loved how you said that we know how big giant squid can get because of beaks we found in sperm whale stomachs. The biggest giant squid we saw was 13m in length, if I remember correctly, but through these finds we know thes can get up to at least 20m in length, which is insane!

  • @Galatz_Tirah
    @Galatz_Tirah Před rokem +10

    I'm a little (though not entirely, older texts can often be a mess, so I'm not blaming you) surprised you didn't mention that sperm whales were also referred to as cachalots in slightly older form of English language (USS Catchalot, SS-170 of 1930s comes to mind). Although a lot of Slavic and protoslavic languages still call it that. Кашалот (Kashalot) in Russian and Ukrainian means sperm whale and honestly seems like the common English vernacular discarded the better name in favor of one that nobody can take seriously.

    • @CaptHollister
      @CaptHollister Před rokem +1

      Cachalot (cash-a-loh) in French.

    • @Galatz_Tirah
      @Galatz_Tirah Před rokem +1

      So, basically s8m. I did make a typo in my original post tho. Supposed to be Cachalot (just like the French spelling)

    • @lunicoletto125
      @lunicoletto125 Před rokem +1

      They're called cachalotes in portuguese, at least here in Brasil

  • @TrtleK1ng
    @TrtleK1ng Před 11 měsíci +2

    The fact that an otter used a octopus as a melee weapon is kinda funny. In the aspect that It could throw a rock instead

  • @KaitTheUnfunny
    @KaitTheUnfunny Před rokem +6

    Congrats on the sponsorship! SO well deserved. I'm already eagerly waiting for next video!

  • @knightofcydonia1192
    @knightofcydonia1192 Před rokem +9

    10:15 God I love this channel.

  • @Birdofthetacklebox
    @Birdofthetacklebox Před rokem +21

    I’m super excited for when this premieres! Edit: do you think we could use sperm whales to find out the size of big fin squids because sperm whale can totally eat a big fin squid.

    • @douggaudiosi14
      @douggaudiosi14 Před rokem +2

      How would sperm whales help us fine the size of big fin squids? And they don't swim to same depths big fins are found at

  • @AntheanCeilliers
    @AntheanCeilliers Před rokem +2

    As a shark lover I am GLAD that someone is finally talking about how badass non-mammalian sealife is and how shitty mammalian sealife is. Everyone thinks sharks are evil when they're just eating! And dolphins have abuse dens but people think they're so cute!

  • @Dingus_Khaan
    @Dingus_Khaan Před 9 měsíci +2

    Loud sounds underwater can indeed rupture organs, especially the brain.
    Being near active boat sonar can kill you in nearly an instant as it shakes your brain apart. Gnarly stuff.

  • @thrashandburn10221
    @thrashandburn10221 Před rokem +3

    Apparently the orcas heard your sass and have begun deliberately attacking boats

  • @Jim-Stick
    @Jim-Stick Před rokem +4

    Your editing and jokes are outstanding. Should point out there is a difference between resident and transient orcas. They look similar but behave completely differently. Transient whales eat seals and other mammals. Resident whales eat fish and crusteaceans.
    My brother had a salmon stolen right off his fishing line by a seal. It had the gull to poke its head up with salmon in its mouth.
    Seals in my eyes are dogs of the ocean.

  • @SnarkNSass
    @SnarkNSass Před rokem +2

    Hank & John are possibly the Best Humans Ever 💕

  • @xuanha9038
    @xuanha9038 Před rokem +1

    YOOO CONGRATULATIONS ON THE PROMO !!!! I CANT WAIT FOR THE NEXT VIDEO, I LOVE THESE SO MUCH !!

  • @senor_frosty
    @senor_frosty Před rokem +3

    Firstly, congrats on the sponsorship! Vlogbros are some amazing folks, seeing your true potential is right up their alley! But yo, the roast of the dolphins and orcas was grade A 🤣 dying of laughter while nervously watching my back for any tentacles waiting to send me to the shadow realm.

  • @IDWpresents
    @IDWpresents Před 10 měsíci +5

    8:55 "Y'all wanna get some Boba?" 😆

  • @violetisaghost
    @violetisaghost Před rokem +1

    u r quite literally one of those most entertaining educational channels ive ever encountered and i started watching u 20 minutes ago

  • @Aiolet
    @Aiolet Před rokem +2

    I hated orca’s because when I told a teacher they weren’t whales, we straight up argued on what an orca was and it was painful

  • @liesdamnlies3372
    @liesdamnlies3372 Před rokem +4

    I look forward to having my limbs torn-off and being thrown-around like a frisbee.

  • @akin0m
    @akin0m Před rokem +10

    Okay, but what are your thoughts on belugas? :)

  • @leoparkhouse2643
    @leoparkhouse2643 Před rokem +1

    This is my new favourite animal channel on CZcams by far, I’ve been watching your videos for hours today, and I love them so much, thank you for your knowledge, determination to the research put into these videos, and how entertaining you make them. :))))

  • @djannias
    @djannias Před rokem +2

    I just want to let you know you have one of the coolest channels on youtube. I love your intelligence and your cool sense of humor. Please continue being awesome, that's all

  • @vampiresquid985
    @vampiresquid985 Před rokem +6

    watching this video as someone who loves sperms whales, giant squids, AND orcas (,,:

    • @dominichowell961
      @dominichowell961 Před rokem

      +1 but also as someone who works with sea lions and cetaceans. I think they're such sweet and charming animals, it's like listening to someone roast my best friend 🥺 Everything in the ocean is great!! Except for bobbit worms!

  • @volpxs
    @volpxs Před rokem +7

    i think the thing about marine mammals is that the whole of the affection they receive is as unbalanced as the hostility sharks and squids receive. theyre all animals and should all be seen as such. animals are capable of cruelty (sometimes not understanding it as such) and they wont always be adorable little puppies, yknow? anyway thats my take on marine mammals (and sharks too bc ill always try to include sharks on the conversation, my bad)

    • @florofern6470
      @florofern6470 Před rokem +5

      Yeah! They're wild animals and should be thought of as such
      Personally I love marine mammals, because of their intelligence and similarity to us (be that for good or bad), however I also find things like sharks and octopi (I like octopi for similar reasons that I love cetaceans) really interesting, and I love learning about all marine life

  • @Algrenion
    @Algrenion Před rokem +2

    I have never seen one of your videos before and I gotta say, that whole speech about your dislike of marine mammals and the genuine passionate rage it was delivered with was a HELL of a first impression 😳
    …subscribed!
    (please don’t throw me around like a frisby)

  • @alexisasheep6554
    @alexisasheep6554 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Gotta say it's pretty fun to find someone else who sees the ocean kinda like space, especially the deep seas, and it's really fun to see how much you enjoy it too. I'm really glad I came across this channel 🖤

  • @hogey989
    @hogey989 Před rokem +4

    Hank/John Green sponsorship is the best possible sponsorship, that's awesome ^^

  • @K8-BB8
    @K8-BB8 Před rokem +2

    You have a fantastic sense of humor!! Cracked up so loud that my dog jumped ten feet and started barking. My dog will likely gain an octopus phobia from your hysterical vids!

  • @luvtreats
    @luvtreats Před rokem +1

    I enjoy your videos so much, so happy that you got a sponsorship!! I've heard of the Vlogbrothers but never checked them out, I shall check them out now! I always look forwards to your videos, keep it up!

  • @meganmisaki4429
    @meganmisaki4429 Před rokem +2

    I agree with River otters being a bit problematic, killing fish for fun, like gettem in your pond and they’ll take bites out of the bass

  • @45bang
    @45bang Před rokem +2

    The squid fight is something I’ve wanted to see since I was a kid. I still hold out hope we will see it someday.

  • @ArtyMars
    @ArtyMars Před rokem +1

    I almost CHOKED when you called the orca a MORON 😂 02:20

  • @EleanorDahlia
    @EleanorDahlia Před rokem +1

    we can't forget that marine mammals legit walked onto land and said, "nah i think I'd rather hold my breath for like indefinitely and go back in the water until these legs revert instead"

  • @alyssamaurier8259
    @alyssamaurier8259 Před rokem

    Congrats on the sponsorship, lady! :D Always love your content. Thanks for all your effort.

  • @AnarchoCatBoyEthan
    @AnarchoCatBoyEthan Před rokem

    AHHHHHH NO WAY! Love Hank so freaking much, love scishow, micro cosmos, everything. that’s amazing. I’m really loving your channel too, and i’m happy i found you. Great company you’re in.

  • @mdberg65
    @mdberg65 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for the tweet at the end of the video. I've seen pictures of the "horrors of the deep" before but never a size comparison. It's so TINY!!

  • @lorengarms9836
    @lorengarms9836 Před 17 dny

    Hearing an actual threat sensor-esque, violently and rapidly increasing clicking sound as the largest predator on the planet barrels towards you must be the most terrifying way to die ever

  • @jkattau9
    @jkattau9 Před 23 dny

    I am so stinking vicariously happy for you and like, weirdly parasocially proud of you, maybe? It's gotta be the coolest thing ever to be recognized by your idols as a peer, and one they respect and support at that! Congratulations! You've earned it!

  • @c7r14kz
    @c7r14kz Před rokem

    You’re one of my favourite persons since I just had a breakdown and you made me feel beter😢 ilyssssssm!

  • @davidduffy5433
    @davidduffy5433 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I have to say I love how enthusiastic you are about creatures of the sea. :)

  • @taliasmith5066
    @taliasmith5066 Před rokem +1

    Ayyy a sponsorship!!! Im so happy for you!

  • @powerhouse3129
    @powerhouse3129 Před 6 dny

    The orca disabled itself to fight a seal. That, while not chill, is an impressive determination for murder.

  • @andrew24601
    @andrew24601 Před rokem +2

    I completely understand the INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL SCREAMING upon being recognised by the Green Brothers. My microbe question got answered in a video on one of their channels, and I wouldn’t shut up about it for weeks.
    (edit: typo)

  • @s3dchr
    @s3dchr Před rokem +1

    I immediately LOVE your channel.

  • @theperfectbotsteve4916
    @theperfectbotsteve4916 Před 7 měsíci +1

    the fact a sperm whale can scream loud enough to potentially pop someone's ear drums out without even actually pushing out air is insane imagine walking up to someone holding their breath and they start talking at full volume without moving their mouths and it causes you to go deaf
    edit some one needs to put a camera on a sperm whale its not like they can easily take it off

  • @DavidL-du3om
    @DavidL-du3om Před rokem

    Started watching you for a few days now and only realised you have less than 30k, how is this possible, you bring science and sass together

  • @LadyBastt1980
    @LadyBastt1980 Před rokem +2

    You remind me of someone I met when I lived in Florida. She was studying marine biology and I said "you know what my favorite marine animal is?" And she audibly groaned and said "dolphins..." I was all "nope. Bioluminescent plankton." She was quite happy to talk about that lol

  • @leahwilson9152
    @leahwilson9152 Před rokem +1

    When you said they feed by suction, I’m just picturing a sperm whale slurping up a giant squid like a bowl of ramen noodles 🍜

  • @jhnchapa
    @jhnchapa Před rokem

    Straight up belly laughed at the thought of those fuzzy little guys playing frisbee. Deal with it. Lmao!!!!
    Thanks for the great videos!!

  • @Mystic_bubblez
    @Mystic_bubblez Před 10 měsíci +1

    “It’s like uhg, but HM” got me off guard 😭✋

  • @Jay_kay_bee
    @Jay_kay_bee Před 11 dny

    I am new to watching CZcams regularly because I just recently started to pay for no commercials. The Octopus Lady was the first creator I fell in love with and watched all your videos. When I came to this one I thought “I should check out those brothers to see if they have any content I would like.” I checked out all the Green Brothers’ content because of Octopus Lady Videos and became a huge fan of both. I likely would have stumbled upon them eventually but I just wanted them to know it was definitely worth the advertising. Thanks for all the great content!

  • @joejoemyo
    @joejoemyo Před rokem +1

    I love the idea that a group of primarily male scientists saw an organ used for echolocation and said "I know coom when I see it"

  • @mcjester1523
    @mcjester1523 Před rokem

    Been taking a look and enjoying your content for a couple weeks, and honestly i just subscribed. The green bros have ben legends that impart knowledge and also stirred curiosity to learn since i was in my third year of high school. If they give you the stamp of confidence when i already liked your vibe; it's a sealed deal. I'm about to be in my third year of BSc next year.(two year gap between associates and bachelors)

  • @snowcat9308
    @snowcat9308 Před rokem

    Just happened upon your channel and I LOOOOVE your content so far. Keep it up :D

  • @SirFloofy001
    @SirFloofy001 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The junk is called the junk because its completely useless to whalers, and whalers were the first and only people to see these creatures alive for a good while.

  • @leatherbeetle
    @leatherbeetle Před rokem +1

    I know John and Hank had taste 😤😤😤 like recognising like, you deserve this so much!!

  • @ahent5076
    @ahent5076 Před rokem

    Its so great that you do your captions I like have to have them on even though its not hard to hear

  • @tzp.equestrian4346
    @tzp.equestrian4346 Před rokem +1

    I've been watching u since you started making videos. I love all of the content that you make. you deserve every bit of success that comes to you! remember me when ur famous fr. ❤

  • @curiousfirely
    @curiousfirely Před rokem

    This is rad - keep up the amazing work!

  • @KMakoENVtuber
    @KMakoENVtuber Před rokem

    Their video on the Rax fast food chain was so great, congrats on the sponsorship!

  • @ProfessorGood-qi7zp
    @ProfessorGood-qi7zp Před rokem +1

    They use suction by swallowing tons of water. Powerful abdominal forces, plus a strong lower jaw would get in the way. Also probably the super fast clicking is vibrating the water to lubricate it, make it hard to swim and sense through while the prey is being suck in. The vibration would also help dislodge suckers.
    That kind of sonar is a powerful tool in the ocean. The organs involved are of interest

  • @juk-hw5lv
    @juk-hw5lv Před rokem +1

    The sound sequence used by these big bois for echolocation when hunting is oddly similar to radars in military aircraft. First there's a pulse sweep, that will initially locate the target and notify the pilot of its presence, and when you lock this target the radar goes into narrow beam, continuous wave mode (which also will trigger the radar warning receiver in the target aircraft, which will sound an ear-piercing alarm to the pilot meaning "Your seconds are numbered if you don't do an angressive evasive maneuver immediately") and then it's measuring the distance in real time and giving you cues when to fire the weapons and break away.

  • @zachb8012
    @zachb8012 Před rokem +1

    I live in a the same Montana town and the same neighborhood, I think, as Hank Green and I saw him playing with a small child in a yard. I was biking by and shouted, "Microcosmos is the beeeeeees kneeeeees." He just waved.

  • @Whateverhasbeenmynameforyears

    Fun little fact. When a male comes to a pod of females he waits a respectful distance until the pod collectively decides which of them will mate with the male. Then that one goes to meet him.

    • @joeroscoe10117
      @joeroscoe10117 Před rokem +3

      Thats nice.
      Like a junior high dance or something

  • @universaleye1689
    @universaleye1689 Před rokem +1

    Honestly just imagine if you looked into the whale family tree you would actually see them getting bullied by megaoldons and other creatures so really the sea mammels are just getting revenge for trauma

  • @thecovenant3842
    @thecovenant3842 Před měsícem

    At first, Octopus Lady's voice didn't quite do it for me, but then I was won over by her personality and the enthusiasm and emotion in her words. I enjoy science speakers who shows great emotion and go off on a lot of witty tandems, rather than those that mindlessly read off of scripts. Those kinds work only for audiobooks. I love what you do, Octopus Lady!