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How These Animals Lost Their Heads (And Bodies, and Butts)
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238,411 Views • May 3, 2024 • Click to toggle off description
You'd think that there are some features that, once an animal group evolved to have them, could never really go away, right? Well, Stefan is joined today by hosts from PBS Eons, Journey To The Microcosmos, and Bizarre Beasts to break down just how wrong that is! And yes, we will be talking about tardigrades.

Eons:    / @eons  
Journey to the Microcosmos:    / @journeytomicro  
Bizarre Beasts:    / @bizarrebeasts  

Hosted by: Stefan Chin (he/him)
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#SciShow #science #education #learning #complexly
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Sources & Image Sources: drive.google.com/file/d/1k1OP1LVLbCVJ2Qw-Y2ABLJTte…
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Views : 238,411
Genre: Education
Date of upload: May 3, 2024 ^^


Rating : 4.88 (359/11,634 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-18T08:12:30.616069Z
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YouTube Comments - 451 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@batuhanguner8103

2 weeks ago

...so no head?

430 |

@adamphilip1623

2 weeks ago

I gotta say I'm absolutely loving the refreshed style on scishow, it's great and the slightly longer videos and new hosts are great too!

747 |

@brieoconnor9824

2 weeks ago

As a geology student, putting the line of symmetry down the middle of the bivalve instead of inbetween the shells hurts me a little bit, because its the main way we distinguish between bivalves and brachiopods

202 |

@chancemeyers8502

2 weeks ago

Im liking the new style guys. The small mix of comedy into the knowledge is not only refreshing, as a science nerd I feel like it helps people who are here learning for the first time feel more comfortable and open to learning. So keep it up guys! Y'all are a great channel.

72 |

@falcoskywolf

2 weeks ago

What a fun crossover! Seems like Complexly is digging into more complexity with production!

160 |

@akumaking1

2 weeks ago

A lot of people I’ve encountered never really progressed past the early stages of being a deuterostome.

349 |

@DarwinsTable

2 weeks ago

Dude, that starfish thumbnail was already great. This headless rhino is just macabre.

181 |

@halloweendad

2 weeks ago

I remember hearing or reading about certain tube worms that have no digestive system. Not even a mouth or anus. They live near volcanic thermal vents and absorb nutrients straight through their skin.

48 |

@oliviervancantfort5327

2 weeks ago

"Multi-armed head" brought back memories of John Carpenter's The Thing. Evolution was a bit faster in this case though.

197 |

@feynthefallen

1 week ago

I always assumed that molluscs with heads and molluscs without heads evolved from a common, headless ancestor. Learn something new every day.

3 |

@chumbucketjones9761

2 weeks ago

'Attack of The Ambulatory Head' - In theaters this Summer.

41 |

@TJtheBee

2 weeks ago

I think the number one thing I’ve learned from this episode is that I never want to step into the ocean ever again.

19 |

@caniwishformorewishes8654

2 weeks ago

I was expecting to see tunicates on the list. They are some of the first chordates diverge from the rest of us. Their larval form is basically a free swimming fish, but when they mature they metamorphosize into basically a sea sponge and lose the ability to move, their heads and limbs, and most of their nervous system.

8 |

@artiumromanov9798

2 weeks ago

The new format is wayyy more entertaining, may the algorithm gods bless Scishow!

30 |

@Cinderpelt1002

2 weeks ago

I already knew that echinoderms are deuterostomes, but it's still wild to me that we have more in common with them (evolutionarily) than we do with insects.

19 |

@JenivieveSteve

2 weeks ago

Loving the recent crossovers on the SciShow main channel. I was unaware there were more than just the SciShow spinoffs under the same company and am glad to know more now :)

13 |

@crisdekker8223

2 weeks ago

A curse upon your thumbnail!

19 |

@peterdore2572

2 weeks ago

Im glad Scishow can still conjure up Great and Original Videos after so many years! I love to see the hosts interact like that. Very funny 😊

8 |

@diproton

2 weeks ago

in re. tardigrades and minified body plans, parasitic wasps (megaphragma mymaripenne, for instance) have impressively /scrunched themselves down/

7 |

@theEevee098

2 weeks ago

I'm going to accept this as my most-wanted Bizarre Beasts episode for tardigrades

3 |

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