The Insane Biology of: The Sunfish

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2023-07-08に共有
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Patreon: www.patreon.com/realscience

Instagram: www.instagram.com/stephaniesammann

Credits:
Narrator/Writer: Stephanie Sammann
Editor: Dylan Hennessy (www.behance.net/dylanhennessy1)
Illustrator: Jacek Ambrożewski
Illustrator/Animator: Kirtan Patel (kpatart.com/illustrations)
Animator: Mike Ridolfi (www.moboxgraphics.com/)
Sound: Graham Haerther (haerther.net/)
Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster (twitter.com/forgottentowel)
Producer: Brian McManus (youtube.com/c/realengineering)

References:
[1]www.oceansunfish.org/evolution.php
[2]onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/joa.12842
[3] www.necropsymanual.net/en/teleosts-anatomy/skeleto…
[4] www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6081505/#joa1…
[5] www.researchgate.net/publication/316721554_Satelli…
[6] besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.11…
[7] oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/facts/vertical-migration.ht…
[8] www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S002…
[9] www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.1201/978042…
[10] www.oceansunfish.org/Rev%20Fish%20Biol%202010.pdf

コメント (21)
  • @sojiro288
    Lol she spent the first 2 min absolutely destroying this fish before explaining the insanity behind its biology
  • You lured me in by roasting the ever loving shit out of the sunfish at the beginning, but by the end of the video they became one of my favorite fish. I'm absolutely fascinated by developmental biology, and the idea that the largest extant bony fish starts its life as a tiny spiky ball smaller than a fingernail is so incredible.
  • @aryah66
    "It's a BABY WHALE!" took me all the way out 😂😂😂
  • @tsundear1731
    “How does such an awkward, slow moving thing become so massive?” I ask myself the same question ever day
  • I like how the Mola Mola looks like the most "No thoughts, head empty" creature. But everything it does in life is in fact weird but very big brain.
  • @ArcadeRacer
    The first two minutes of this documentary are single-handedly the most brutal and crispy roast I have ever witnessed.
  • @b1gturtle
    Bro he’s just a fish stop bullying him 😂
  • I hope she never stops narrating this channel hahaha she completely bodied this fish in the most professional way 😂
  • @sunnyg1384
    A good example of how "survival of the fittest" means fittest for their environment, not necessarily just the most strong/fast/smart etc
  • So in a way, they DO get energy from the sun by using it to heat themselves. I love this fish
  • Fun fact: mola fishes are known in Spanish as 'peces luna', so 'moonfishes' while in English are 'sunfishes'. I guess the Spanish name is related to the shape and color while the English name has more to do with their 'sunbathing' habit.
  • @user-ip2zh8gz7d
    "Being weird is the best way to exist on this earth" I like that quote.
  • @RS14988
    There is another reason sunfish bask near the surface and that's the parasites they accumulate. Because they' have no scales, only a mucus covered skin, it's much easier for parasites to latch on and some may even affect drag. So they float sideways at the surface and allow seabirds to pick at the parasites. The sunfish gets a bit of a cleanse and the birds get a free meal. Some fish hang around molas for the same reason, with the mola's size potentially protecting the smaller fish from their own predators. What I don't get though is how they are able to survive having huge chunks bitten out of them and they carry on as if it were a minor inconvenience at best. These things might seem like evolutionary accidents, but the fact that they have survived for as long as they have means that they've clearly done something right down the line.
  • @Thurston86
    “Aggressively farting out the gas”. Too bad we don’t have any video footage of this heroic feat. 😂
  • @goatsplitter
    I saw one of these bad boys years ago on a fishing trip in the pacific. I had no idea what I was seeing. it looked like a giant rubber mattress with fins. The captain pointed out that it was a sunfish. It was amazing, the thing was an absolute unit of a fish!
  • @kitkat5765
    I love this dude, just a weird and fascinating species. Looks completely stupid yet clearly is doing something right. (And so many eggs, my god. Insane!) Love to see these oddballs doing something well.
  • 0:32: 🐟 The ocean sunfish, also known as the mola, is a strange-looking fish that is the heaviest bony fish in the world and has unique behaviors. 3:58: 🐠 The ocean sunfish, or mola, is a unique fish with large fins and a rigid body that moves slowly. 7:15: 🐟 Sunfish go deep into cold water to forage for gelatinous plankton, even though it poses a risk to their body temperature. 11:39: 🐟 Sunfish, also known as Mola mola, can achieve neutral buoyancy without a swim bladder due to their dense and buoyant hypodermis tissue. 13:53: 🐟 The Mola Mola fish is a strange and fascinating creature with unique adaptations for survival. 17:02: 📰 The article discusses media bias and how readers can identify it using tools like a web browser extension, and emphasizes the importance of being aware of bias trends in news reporting. Recap by Ta
  • I hope the rest of the video explains how awesome and complex these guys actually are, because the first two minutes so far are such a no holds barred roast that I'm starting to feel bad for them 😭 "Its stupid-looking deformed body and all of its weird flopping around on the surface" like, dang lmao. Edit: "In normal fish..." at 4:00 is probably the most discreetly savage line of them al