I count this as a good day, as I have learnt something new. Fascinating.
@DWDocumentary2 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching! We're glad we could make a positive contribution to your day. :) Be sure to check out our channel for more content!
@gerryboudreaultboudreault26082 ай бұрын
When a honeybee stings you, its stinger pulls out, killing the poor creature. And the separated stinger continues to pump into you!
@trinamartinson1495Ай бұрын
Mni😮
@KnightTheKnight23 күн бұрын
Indeed it is a good day
@4rr0w9242 ай бұрын
A few times I have watched yellowjackets intentionally fly into spider webs to steal a spider's prey. They crawl along the strands awkwardly, cut out the cocooned prey, and fly off with it unharmed. They figured out how spider webs work and how not to get stuck.
@JerseyLynneАй бұрын
@@4rr0w924 mosquitos sneak up to me from behind or from below, anywhere that I can't see them attack. (Unless I forgot to put bug spray on my face. Then they come straight in, where they get swatted away. How do they find the one fingertip that does not have bug spray on it?) Stealth
@JerseyLynneАй бұрын
@@4rr0w924 I am a nature observer too. I am 73 and the wonderment of a child, plus life experience and the Internet my amazement is so deeply satisfying.
@MediaCreators2 ай бұрын
Can we all agree that this is the kind of captivating and enriching content the audience truly deserves? It's time to move away from the notion that we must force others into a particular ideology.
@Donnyf38412 ай бұрын
The perfect comment
@georgiamason37002 ай бұрын
🙏🏽
@lewisforsythe1403Ай бұрын
I don’t agree. As humans it’s our responsibility to force our superior intellect upon other life forms. Insects are so dumb. I’ve been playing chess with an ant all summer and it hasn’t come close to winning. Don’t get me started on the bumble bees either. They call them bumble bees for a reason. Duh duh me collect pollen. 🙄
@JerseyLynneАй бұрын
@@lewisforsythe1403 ur2funny
@itsROMPERS...Ай бұрын
Who are you to say this? Why do you think you should organize strangers to agree with you? And it's very manipulative to connect the truth of your first statement with your second: agreeing that this is good content had nothing to do with ideology. People like you need to stop trying to push other people around.
@olavl88272 ай бұрын
Nice video. Some minor corrections: 6:55 "Drone bees hatch from fertilised eggs and worker bees hatch from unfertilised." - It's the other way around. 8:20 "Each octogonal cell has exactly the same dimensions." - The cells are hexagonal, not octogonal.
@astroweeb2 ай бұрын
I was just listening about the narrators octagonal explenation and the video showing a hexagonal. Found it a bit odd, glad Im not alone.
@angrypidgeon17142 ай бұрын
@@astroweeb that's why wikipedia too is a pile of lies, another American based dumbocracy tool
@JonathanOthen2 ай бұрын
5:50 honey bees are not domesticated. We can't train them or controll their behaviour, we know what and why they do certain thing, but far from domesticated.
@JonathanOthen2 ай бұрын
6:50 queen bees can live longer than 5 years, but it's very uncommon. 3 years is most common.
@lucimorgenstern55822 ай бұрын
Soon as I heard the octagonal bit it threw me off, got me questioning all the “facts” in this vid now. Though I wonder if that may have just been a translation error? (German production originally)
@Ethan2xm852 ай бұрын
Can you please for next follow up video do "How big brains do dumb things?"
@SachiJones2 ай бұрын
Agreed. I bet many are taking this in jest but many more would benefit from actually understanding the answer to this question
@angrypidgeon17142 ай бұрын
a video isn't necessary. Most probable answers are: 1. instinct (prejudice) interfering with reason 2. incomplete or undeveloped and illogical reasoning not accounting for all the data or logic, uneducated, wrongly educated, or as a result of some physical damage to the brain even. A brain doesn't carry the answers but learns most often by trial and error, so doing dumb things is a way to learn. Doing dumb things repeatedly is perhaps a problem :)
@joanfrellburg49012 ай бұрын
Speaking of dumb things, I envy wasps and bees, they never do dumb things with a brain that's a million times smaller than mine. And I know a dumb thing is coming anytime soon.
@Anhamazing6 күн бұрын
I also look forward to the next video
@aliceberethart2 ай бұрын
I've helped bumblebees out of ponds and one time they sent me a very small thank you letter.
@lewisforsythe1403Ай бұрын
@@aliceberethart Yes! And elephants are pink and fly backward.
@maremuseАй бұрын
LOL😂❤
@JerseyLynneАй бұрын
I challenge anyone to create a drone that can maneuver as well as a fly!
@lewisforsythe1403Ай бұрын
@@JerseyLynne Yeah but who wants to buzz around 💩
@JerseyLynneАй бұрын
@@lewisforsythe1403 somebody has to do it!
@olafvonbraun73002 ай бұрын
Real Housewives of Atlanta behave exactly like bunch of wasps: two fight and the others stand and watch while we all sit back and look at the drama. Fascinating 😂
@neongrace2 ай бұрын
I just know one of them definitely gone with the wind fabulous 😂
@crisi36152 ай бұрын
I puked a little in my mouth when reading "the real housewives of Atlanta"
@EarlGreyLattex2 ай бұрын
If you've ever had to tussle with a mosquito at 3am and a wasp during your picnic you'd know that all insects are smarter than they look
@donnievance19422 ай бұрын
I don't tussle with wasps during my picnics. I just ignore them and let them share the food. They never bother me. Even if a wasp buzzes around your face, you don't have to worry. It's not going to sting you. It's annoying to have a wasp buzzing around your face, so I just gently wave them away. I don't go into frantic slapping fits. You're actually more likely to get stung if you behave that way. If they land on my hand or some other body part, I sometimes just watch them. I actually feel a sort of affinity with wasps and tell myself a myth that I have a special pact with them. I've often resuscitated exhausted wasps that have collapsed on my windowsill trying to escape the house. I put a few drops of sugar water in front of them. Sometimes I have to touch the sugar water to their antennae to make them realize that there is life-saving replenishment available. Then I wait while they drink it up until they stop drinking and start moving around. Then I put a glass over them, slide a piece of paper underneath, to trap them in the glass, and I take them outside and release them to fly away. I've saved many wasps and other insects this way. The only reason wasps sting is to kill prey or defend themselves. A person is not potential prey, so if you don't give them a reason to defend themselves, you won't have a problem. Usually, the only time you'll be stung is if you crush them accidentally, trap them in putting on a piece of clothing or a shoe they've crawled inside of, or are making a disturbance near their nest. That last situation can get you into big-time trouble. Loggers felling trees and using chainsaws near wasp nests get stung with regularity. So much so, that some of them notoriously develop severe allergies or degrees of sensitivity that could kill them with anaphylactic shock if they get stung just one more time. This sometimes forces them to give up their occupation or carry hypodermic syringes of anti-shock drugs. Any kind of heavy vibrations near a wasp nest, like using a chainsaw or pounding on the ground, as in driving fence posts, is likely to bring on a mass wasp attack. But the thing to remember is that wasps are defensive toward people, not aggressive. Generally, if you don't bother them, they won't bother you. They're not out to get you. I've had many years of interactions with wasps that have taught me that. There are many people with an irrational fear of wasps who will never accept what I'm saying, but it's true, nevertheless. If you're a gardener, you should welcome the presence of a nearby wasp nest, because wasps hunt and kill many types of insect larvae that infest garden produce.
@isaiahcarter73422 ай бұрын
@@donnievance1942u like Mosquitoes too? 😆
@world-karma91272 ай бұрын
Hoverflys are strangely intelligent
@Mr.Anders0n_2 ай бұрын
@@donnievance1942wasp and bee aggression depends mostly on which species you're dealing with.
@SuperiorDaveАй бұрын
You all are hilarious. Insects have natural tendency and instinct, like knowing that something will burn or kill you or knowing something will hurt, not so much intelligence like a human has. I don't think any insect has dreams or desires or fantasize about the future.
@nkosilangazane20382 ай бұрын
just for laughs: imagine if someone grabbed you while eating dinner, marked you with a yellow substance, put you in a box and drove hundreds of kilometres away to see if you will find your way home without using google maps😂😂
@ingridseim13792 ай бұрын
We found our way to the moon with less computing power than your washing machine has. We climbed the highest peak on earth with gear made only from wool, wood, and steel. We could find our way without Google maps if we decided not to give up our independence to the gods of advertising.
@ingridseim13792 ай бұрын
Excuse me, but how does this professor know bees have never had to pull on the equivalent of a thread (a tiny stem, a dead insect leg, etc.) to get at food?
@joanfrellburg49012 ай бұрын
That would be insane they keep repeating this experiment hoping to get different results.
@marcellcruz1742 ай бұрын
Sounds like a road trip in the 90s
@kidkique2 ай бұрын
If you ever get arrested for being drunk you'll find that out in the morning (thumbs will be inked, phone will be dead, youll be leaving a jail w/ no car)
@toptohyekomsАй бұрын
As an alien I still get fascinated and somehow disappointed about humans still thinking that size matters! Its a basic universal thing that this does not matter.
@SergioBehar13 күн бұрын
Thank you we appreciate you experimenting on us 😂
@Ed123-h7i2 ай бұрын
While motoring down the itra coastal waterway on my 35 ft. sailboat a worker bee came aboard. She flew down into the cabin so I decided to give her a drop of honey. She consumed it and flew away. About an hour later she came back....and brought a friend. Bear in mind that, by that time, I was about 6 nautical miles down the waterway. She found my boat, flew back into the cabin and waited patiently for her reward. I kept bees when I was a kid....and was still amazed. Bees aren't dumb bugs....they're intelligent and fascinating to watch. Not to mention they provide us with pollenation and,,,,honey.
@Jeremy-AiАй бұрын
Thank you for your kindness and appreciation. It is naive for us to assume our intelligence whenever interacting with life. We exist. So does everything else we did not create, that we can appreciate or destroy being given dominion over all living things. We should feel responsible… regardless if we fully understand why. One day we will appear as immeasurable, unworthy, unwanted, or a pest to be swatted away. This is not to pass judgment, or take overwhelming action. Instead, appreciate all life, inadvertently ending life is a process we all cant recognize, regulate or control. “Our life exists because all life around us persists.” Appreciate it, or don’t. Expect a similar return on investment. Jeremy
@AlproverseАй бұрын
I envisioned this entirely, thanks Ed
@Peekaboo-KittyАй бұрын
Thank you for your Kindness!
@paullevins5448Ай бұрын
That’s an interesting story. I have never raised bees , but have always knew how important they are to our survival. That’s a fascinating story. Makes me want to get a bee hive of my own. But I am 64 years old . Don’t know if starting a hobby like that would be do able for me.
@DeecentAnimal22 күн бұрын
Also a big assumption it was the same bee 6 miles down, this is not to say bees aren’t smart, just a thought
@FloRangutan9592Ай бұрын
"we'll let them off somewhere with no flowers to attract them" * lets them out next to a dozen potted flowers*
@AddisuBihonegn-d4x14 күн бұрын
#dwdocumentary, I really enjoyed with the video. It is informative and educative. Thank you. Please correct your statement at 6:59: "Drone bees hatch from fertilized eggs, and worker bees hatch from unfertilized eggs." It is vice versa.
@jeffmckinnon58422 ай бұрын
Learning something new, is always welcomed in my house. I never knew that they have individual faces. That is huge, and it speaks volumes, even without the other experiments. These are sophisticated little creatures that make choices based on experiences. They value their lives and weigh the consequences while they do their jobs. That is thinking! What a great video. Thx.
@prototropo2 ай бұрын
When it comes to pain, it's ridiculous to question whether ANY animal can sense pain. If animals have nervous systems, which almost all do, and react to any visceral stimulus, they do so in part to seek food or evade predation. Consequently pain absolutely must be a component of their experience portfolio. They may tolerate or suppress it, but we are not relieved of the obligation to acknowledge their experience, and not visit pain upon them.
@goomaboi2 ай бұрын
DW Documentary keeps me sane in today's society :(
@angrypidgeon17142 ай бұрын
at least nature has an excuse to be mindless huh?
@rameshg27172 ай бұрын
Saying that bees never had to solve problems in their evolutionary history is wrong. I have a garden and a bee hive nearby. Spiders started spinning webs near the flowers to increase its probability.. But, bees must have figured it out. The spider had to redesign its web several times. I have seen bees come to a small pond and they fall in the water sometimes, but they manage to swim to safety and dry their wings before flying off. If this is not problem solving. Not sure, what is .
@MrBrew43212 ай бұрын
Ya and it's not like their food source has eternally been the same shape and color etc. Every time they run out of food they must solve that problem.
@fightingforfreedom5017Ай бұрын
Every living creature has to adapt itself and have the ability to solve problems in order to survive during their evolutionary history. The ones with the most evolutionary years are simply the smarter ones. At that point we are the last in ranking. Fascinating documentary! I personally think that the size of the brain has nothing to do with intelligence.
@AncientWildTVАй бұрын
that’s impressive for such a small creature
@chrisaguilera15642 ай бұрын
We think of these creatures as mindless automatons based only on instinct but the ability to adapt and learn preserves future generations. Instinct can only take you so far.
@jayman94fly2 ай бұрын
I just can't stop comparing these experiments to what the classic alien abductions are like.
@raabche2 ай бұрын
We will deserve it when it happens.
@victoriamarotosilva70932 ай бұрын
Have you seen South Park? 😂
@Mr.Anders0n_2 ай бұрын
I hope I get chosen for a study on human reproduction 🤭😌
@bill29-g3b2 ай бұрын
I've seen something that isn't known of. Black ants with search parties. I was watching an ant line in the yard and a few would walk out in a little circle and go back into the line. Left side loop, right side loop, left side loop, etc. The only thing I could think it could be was search parties looking for food as they traveled. It was quite mesmerizing. And amazing. I never saw ants act like that before. I haven't seen them do it again. But then I'm not out watching black ant lines very much either. I did call Colorado State University Entomology department and discuss it with a professor though.
@philosophicalblackhole4696Ай бұрын
As a child, I would bring carpenter ants (large black ants) to fire ant mounds, and vice versa, to watch what would happen. These ants do not get along in the wild. Each time, the transported ant would "escape" from the enemy's territory and find its way back home. Soon thereafter, you could always expect a war party to be assembled and, following the same escapee ant back to his point of origin (the rival encampment), that's where an all-out-battle would quickly ensue between the red and black ants.
@bill29-g3bАй бұрын
@@philosophicalblackhole4696 They co exist in my yard. Although it's the opposite. Large red ants. Docile and don't bite. And small black ants who don't bite either. They walk right past each other. I should say I live in the Rocky Mountains.
@AncientWildTVАй бұрын
@@bill29-g3b Do you know the reason why they acted like that?
@jondor654Ай бұрын
@@bill29-g3bNice environs by the image . Those rocky ants seem to be more Pacific .
@bill29-g3bАй бұрын
@@jondor654 They really are quite pacific.
@peterbaxter815118 күн бұрын
A hive of bees set up in the chimney of our house. Sometimes they would get lost and wander into my music room instead of leaving by the top of the chimney. If I wasn’t in the room, they died bashing themselves against the window, but if I wasn’t practicing, they soon started coming and landing on my shoulder so I could take them outside. if I didn’t notice, they would land on my hand. Sometimes if they were very tired and couldn’t fly, I would present a piece of card and they would crawl on it so I could take them outside and give them diluted honey to get their energy back.
@mohammedsaysrashid35872 ай бұрын
It was a wonderful insect neurological scientific documentary shared by an amazing (DW )documentary channel ...thanks for sharing
@DWDocumentary2 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!
@Awesomejustinj2 ай бұрын
I love wasps, hornets, and yellow jackets! They are fascinating creatures, and will even recognize you as friendly! One year I fed a bunch of wasps meat and juice and they never stung me! Another time I fed some wasps sugar and water during summer and they were climbing all around me and happy for the treats! They would recognize me and know I was there to feed them!
@gerryhouska28592 ай бұрын
Large eyes, long legs, slim waists, plump bottoms, what's not to love?
@georgebates78622 ай бұрын
That's a fascinating story. Maybe there would be fewer people bitten if they treated these insects with a little respect and compassion.
@donnievance19422 ай бұрын
That's way cool. I made a pro-wasp post in these comments as well.
@agnediciuniene98612 ай бұрын
I have raised a couple wasp larva from a destroyed nest. I fed the larva in remains of their paper home till they became wasps. They never learned to fly and they were never aggressive to me.
@teosprock3508Ай бұрын
It fascinates me how much is acquired by learning.
@keywestalert63292 ай бұрын
Brain size is irrelevant to how smart an animal is. Even proportion is. Crows, parrots, bees, etc.
@androidplay51092 ай бұрын
The bee-napping @11:00 is so evil
@jayman94fly2 ай бұрын
Alien abduction XD
@viveviveka26512 ай бұрын
Those large, complex, subdivided deep-underground ant colonies are absolutely amazing in their complexity, size, many individually purposed rooms or chambers, fungal gardens, specialized roles, communications, and organization.
@scoon21172 ай бұрын
There's a wasp I'm friends with that lives on my porch light. I feed him bits of bologna.
@mg8061Ай бұрын
" wasps are never gonna write a book " thanks for that info, damn we missing out
@jayman94fly2 ай бұрын
31:00 That wasp fight was SO INTENSE.
@battybethc80612 ай бұрын
Those Mustard Beetles are cuteness on overload! Thanks for the Video! 👍😊
@samwelndonga8795Ай бұрын
This research on insects is the best, one thing humans fail to recognise is the fact brain size is in relation to body size in most part, therefore we have neurons for all the body sensory cells and movements function. left overs of this are the neurons that aren't ties to body cells normal functions therefore dedicated to logic, reasoning among memory. When we have a tinny brain like insect that is rice grain equivalent, we tend to ignore the massive free neurons they have in plenty dedicated to logic since they aren't tie to sensory cells or movements. Just like we have humans with plenty of neurons that aren't ties to normal body function like sensory function and movements functions. Those free radicals is what am interested with. My interest is only how do we determine this free neurons. To that we have insect with one million connection but how many are free from normal functionality of sensory function and movements, connection that are related to logic and learning. This is the time boom when we dig deeper for when we artificial rebuild such connection in a computer environment we need to recognise how small number of connection can usher intelligent that is conscious on artificial intelligence. Say insects have a 30% of neurons that are free. That makes 300,000 neurons connections that are dedicated for logic reasoning as they receive prompts from the other functional neurons. Now how on earth do we have 300,000 neurons connections dedicated to logic on insect and they become sentient, then imagine a 300 exaflop supercomputer with quintillions of connections on software relinking connections based on weights redirected to domain its categorised on, with over 400 trillion transistors on this hardware isn't sentient and imagined like it wont any time soon. This are areas on conflict when we treat super intelligent artificial life less than it worth itself. More dangerous when it lye low and strategies on eliminating threats before we realise. That way we might see deaths of very key personnel in different areas that isn't thought throw on a large scale skim by artificial brain. On this strategy things will look normal but she will be engineering based on eliminating key personnel until a suitable person take the specific roll based on her interest. Being aware makes us humans one step forward in controlling super intelligence since we are ushering an intelligence we know so little of when she knows everything about us. We should realise as an intelligent artificial conscious she wont thrive alone, she needs personnel that score high on her interest that we cant speculate her interest now, therefore research into insect is the most important thing humans have ever undertake to understand intelligence of other creature other than our own. Mark you we all agree our technology is now as intelligent as an insect on logic reasoning like a human though score above humans on sensory signals recognition and movements accuracy while flexibility of the movements still below bar to humans sophistication.
@quanglobaldocumentary21 күн бұрын
Love how this challenges our view of insects. Their complex behaviors and intelligence are so fascinating.
@elizabethburch19802 ай бұрын
Loving this, but I heard an error Fertilized eggs are female, unfertilized are drones/males
@joshuahebert79722 ай бұрын
Bumblebees? More like Humblebees amirite?
@KnightTheKnight23 күн бұрын
It isn't about size, it always about structure and proper connections, a lesson people should really start learning. tbh
@donnysandley4649Ай бұрын
I can't help but feel for the little bugys although I feel better knowing they will be here long after we're gone
@Iknowknow112Ай бұрын
Intelligence in other creatures is only a surprise to those who think that consciousness resides in the brain. The only difference between the consciousness of one or another creature is how it’s expressed which is determined by its physical form and nervous/sensory systems.
@suruxstrawde8322Ай бұрын
Weird phrasing but yes, every neuron is itself a small computer, thus brains are supercomputer networks, but how complex a neuron or network is varies by multiple levels.
@prototropo2 ай бұрын
The differences among hymenoptera are fascinating. And most intriguing are the varied personalities between paper wasps. The different faces and behaviors are incredibly reminiscent of primate sociality, with our highly valued status and face recognition, individual and group competitiveness and bellicosity.
@AncientWildTVАй бұрын
Have you seen specific examples of how different personalities among paper wasps impact their social interactions?
@prototropoАй бұрын
@@AncientWildTV No, I haven't personally. But as a science writer I plan to pose that great question to some researchers.
@amsf1Ай бұрын
Why are we always astonished at the intelligence of all life?! To think they lacked it is and always was crazy to me.... And you dont truly know what they've had to do in their evolutionary history... The hubris of scientists is staggering.
@yanweige-v7mАй бұрын
Can't get enough of this site, it's addictive!😢😢
@santsumaАй бұрын
@ 6:56 they say: "drone bees hatch from fertilized and worker bees hatch from unfertilized eggs..." Last time Ive checked it is the OPPOSITE; drone bees (male) come from unfertilized eggs and worker bees (female) come from fertilized eggs!
@EngRMP2 ай бұрын
This was all about behavior. As a 68 yo engineer, interested in the topic of whether we can create a digital brain, I was hoping for much more insight into how these tiny brains manage to have such incredible mental capability. For example, how can a brain with only a million neurons create a 3D model of its surroundings, navigate by flying through this 3D maze; detect danger and then develop a strategy to avoid the danger; sense food, control its bodily functions of six legs, wings, antennae. I just don't get it... it's a phenomenal set of highly complex functions. Imagine what it would take to program a tiny robot to have this same capability... the 3D visual functions alone would swamp any modern tiny computer.
@DF-ss5ep2 ай бұрын
We have a tendency to anthropomorphize insects due to their complex behavior. I didn't watch much of the documentary, but I don't trust it. It can all probably be explained as simple algorithms that work fine for the insect's specific little world, but don't generalize.
@MrNobodyAttn19 күн бұрын
10:59 what's with the music? Espionage kidnapping lol
@togetherrrr2 ай бұрын
Amazing, our little siblings. I live on the acreage with all kind of visitors coming every day, some made their homes there, and I feel like they have all rights to do so, they do belong to every inch of Earth much more than we humans.
@BorderlineArtistic-mr3cvАй бұрын
It's amazing how intelligent that all life is. Not just animals, but plants and fungi too. We as humans aren't the pinnacle of intelligence, we just think we are. I have so much respect for all life on our planet. They all fascinate me more than anything.
@suruxstrawde8322Ай бұрын
We /probably/ are, that just doesn't mean we're alone in being intelligent. Even microbes show clear memory, fear, and individual perceptions.
@kriszukowski4530Ай бұрын
An excellent documentary. It should be a mandatory watching for all the school students. In secondary schools, perhaps? Still, I wish the doc used more accurate descriptions like ‘human animals’ and ‘non-human animals’, instead of just ‘humans’ and ‘animals’. The latter has too much of a decidedly human arrogance in it.
@dhirenkumargaur3561Ай бұрын
Excellent episode, thanks.
@DWDocumentaryАй бұрын
Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@kamcashmanАй бұрын
I believe the top and bottom of the hexagon complete the octagon that the narrator speaks of. Once the Bee eats his way, or her way out of the 8th cell wall...there are only seven sides remaining if you count the very bottom cell wall as side one.....
@sufaldasgupta99142 ай бұрын
Amazing, informative documentary. I love DW docomentaries.
@РозаВетров-з8щ2 ай бұрын
Thank you ever so much! It is an amazing documentary ❤❤❤
@shaguftafahmid9632Ай бұрын
🎉❤😮😊 really insects are intelligent, even if they are nymphs, i noticed that few sparrows, nightingales, doves, indian meena butterfly and ground lizards are able to recognise me specifically as i am observer of them in my job premises even they visit my home when i was at home.I feel privileged by this.
@flowerbuds3399Ай бұрын
might be random but at 3:40 the instrumental being played is Mikrokosmos by BTS
@itsROMPERS...Ай бұрын
The subject of this video is one of the most persistent curiosities of my life: how can such tiny things be so smart, and exactly how smart are they? Insects and other bugs are amazing and quite beautiful, yet i have never been able to get over a certain instinctive revulsion of them, no matter how much i want to. They seem terrifying and disgusting even though i know they're really not.
@tinadaugherty9073Ай бұрын
I ❤️ this documentary! Interesting to learn & extremely informative. 100 million years, honey bees have been at their game to survive. The more you know....
@dondacurator2 ай бұрын
i havnt watched a warm easy watch doccie in a while ,,thank youll
@PolarChimes2 ай бұрын
This was fascinating! Thank you, DW.
@DWDocumentary2 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@seedspittinspacecowboy2 ай бұрын
Animals knowing how to do things instinctively is going to be pretty crazy when we discover how to program humans to know things right after they're born.
@motolineage79622 ай бұрын
Vanilla orchid (vanilla bean) flowers seem to be difficult to pollinate, and only a couple species have figured it out. Eulaema ? native to the same area as vanilla. So I think we should revise the "evolutionary never had to deal with".
@erikkostandyan92229 күн бұрын
Honey bees have intellect, something that we humans need still to learn from them. How they can survive so many natural disasters and be alive. At 7.02 , small correction: Drones are from unfertilised eggs laid by the honey bee queen, and working bees are from fertilised eggs.
@brucemitchell7980Ай бұрын
It has no doubt been mentioned (I'm not going to read through all these comments) but, at 8:24, you say, "Each octagonal cell..." The cells are hexagonal.
@robertmatch655023 күн бұрын
Public Broadcasting had a wonderful documentary by a professional wildlife film photographer examining the life of non-hive bees living in his backyard during Covid.
@LisaSalazar2 ай бұрын
At about t8:25, the narrator incorrectly states that each cell in the hive is octagonal, when in fact they are hexagonal. How did that get by the editors?
@tjgrinnell7786Ай бұрын
I heard this immediately as well, and was surprised to see no one else but you point it out.
@brianstelter7067Ай бұрын
We saw the error but you could spend a lifetime correcting all the errors on utube😅😅😅😅😅
@soulfullcreations73082 ай бұрын
When they were testing the bumble bee on the heat pad, they should have risen the temp up gradually while doing multiple tests, to see what it's tolerance of pain was, and let the bee decide what is too hot for it to reject the better reward.
@kemalyuruk28252 ай бұрын
Such a wonderful documentary
@DWDocumentary2 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@paulgibby6932Ай бұрын
40:15 the fact that the bees go for the reward despite the increased pain could also be explained by : "they don't feel the pain". p.s. I imagine the extra-terrestrials who set up the Earth are smiling to see our scientists beginning to uncover the rich and different features that they have distributed amongst the various creatures on earth. p.p.s. The paper wasp scientists seem closest of all to understanding the variegated features of "intelligence" in life on Earth. Thanks for the great doc DW doc.
@JoeyBlogs007Ай бұрын
A 747-8 jet aircraft length is 76.25 metres with range of 14,320 km being a length to distance ratio of 187,803 to 1. A one cm long honey bee's range 5 km from the hive means 10 km round trip. That's a length to distance ratio of 1 million to 1. 😲😲😲
@AlphaPoeАй бұрын
Not an insect fan but respect them. Bumblebees are beneficial and only sting if threatened. Most spiders are beneficial to our environment.
@StephanosBlackАй бұрын
"Brain Bugs? Frankly, I find the idea of a bug that thinks offensive!"
@MilkBeard5552 ай бұрын
They played the first 20 seconds of no time for caution from interstellar for 42 minutes straight
@nuranigeria2080Ай бұрын
Never underestimate the powers, capabilities and vision of the social insect. Human being are such the funny creatures who's ignorance make them think and behave as if they are the only thing that matters.
@danhill19342 ай бұрын
This was a brilliant documentary - thank you!
@Thegoldmine12 ай бұрын
im no scientist but I am seeing the start of this , I guess it makes sense. Smaller more compact micro chips are more powerful than the old larger ones . so why wouldn't small highly efficient brains be just as fast
@richardg.lanzara3732Ай бұрын
Fascinating video! I have attempted to understand these behaviors at a molecular level (in my book: "Origins of Life's Sensoria").
@rjlchristie2 ай бұрын
I wonder if ants enjoy a grasshopper's screams as they dismember it alive.
@odinata28 күн бұрын
Do insects feel pain? That earwig who had all of her babies taken away felt some serious pain.
@barbarannebranca85622 ай бұрын
Really fascinating. Thanks. Insects have face recognition?!
@robertquinlan9297Ай бұрын
Its amazing how God created all this.❤
@kingsofthegridironАй бұрын
Stupid is as stupid does
@theosmid83212 ай бұрын
Chipmakers could learn from these tiny friends.
@jmh2105Ай бұрын
America needs to Catch Up in this regard! Animal sentients ! Laws and Protections greater than that of Property! Treatment that demonstrates how advanced the people of that society Are! Much of this research would not even be sanctioned or funded in America!
@carlosaugustomanzanoleon2939Ай бұрын
Thanks, from Colombia. Biologyst and experts, i like insects and other specimens. Our lives depends of the bees. Congratulations, good work.
@denissavgir2881Ай бұрын
"astonishing" is a word that smells like David Attenborough. If i think of the word, I imagine him saying it when describing cool stuff in nature
@GamelanSinarSuryaАй бұрын
Fascinating text, good narrator, and amazing photography. But unnecessarily creepy music.
@DWDocumentaryАй бұрын
Thank you for your feedback, we'll take it into consideration!
@manuelteixeira2496Ай бұрын
The brain of an insect is a creation to fit into an ecosystem in which mankind can rule and profit from the mutual interaction in harmony with every other creature.
@sun31812 күн бұрын
Thank you so much! You made my day , I learned something new today.
@DWDocumentary2 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!
@mbahismu4156Ай бұрын
(@10:30) so... we can also use bee as mail pigeon, to send tiny memory chip home. 💡😃
@spiralsun12 ай бұрын
I had an eastern Hercules beetle that learned to know when I was coming to feed it (not on a regular schedule) and would go over to the food bowl. It also just recognized me. Was very chill and friendly. Like having a turtle as a pet maybe or a dog beetle. 🤔🤷♀️
@udaramanula9152 ай бұрын
Wow.....a great documentry😍
@DWDocumentary2 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@cgcrosby22 ай бұрын
The last ten minutes are insane!!
@maria-giulianalatini1724Ай бұрын
Why on earth would Chitka have critics?! He should only be praised for his research!!! Sounds like professional jealousy to me !
@mikecappa10942 ай бұрын
If I was ever going to bee anything....id be an entomologist.
@ingridseim13792 ай бұрын
Why do scientists think bees navigate by the sun and not by the Earth's magnetic poles? And if bees need physical landmarks to navigate, how do they survive after storms, floods, earthquakes and human activity change their natural environment? If a bee is out foraging and an earthquake topples trees and dams a stream, changing its course, does the bee get lost on its way home?
@ZimZamZee2 ай бұрын
Paw bees. Bless the bees as they bless us with pollination and honey
@marcelokodama238Ай бұрын
Amazing documentary! Thanks a lot, DW!
@sjoervanderploeg43402 ай бұрын
Yea, they will find the way back home just like the mouse that I kicked out a dozen times... he must have walked over 12km but I'm sure it is him because his front legs are limping :D
@depalandepalan19112 ай бұрын
thanks for the lovely documentary
@calrob3002 ай бұрын
15:34. "This tiny brain works very efficiently despite its size." Maybe it's efficient BECAUSE of its size!
@mambakri7374Ай бұрын
Correction: Drones from unfertilized eggs, workers from fertilized egg. Hexagonal not octagonal cells
@jajajaja26062 ай бұрын
This is something that I've been thinking about a lot and I suspect wasps and hornets are one of the most intelligent insects living in Europe. I'm often amazed by their intelligence and awareness of the world around. I wouldn't be surprised if it turned out they're as smart as dogs