This species of mantis(Pseudocreobotra wahlbergi) lays their eggs in a clutch. "The female praying mantis lays up to 400 eggs which are deposited in a frothy mass that is produced by glands in her abdomen. This froth hardens and creates a protective capsule with a further protective coat." (source Boreal Science)
Crabs are close to arachnids. I'm one of those trainers. Crabs, shrimp, lobsters, if it's a sea bug, it's a bug. Golisopod is a beast when he's not being a scaredy-cat.
He's my favorite Water type, and Bug type. Like. Individually. Not as a dual. I mean. I guess, by extension as a dual, as well, but I was just clarifying for those specific types....what the hell has this comment turned into?
All invertebrates. Folks who keep one kind of invertebrate often keep others. I dunno, there's just something about critters with no spine that appeals to some people!
I'm sure those are the right eggs, but I'm also almost sure it's not the eggs those creatures were born form. Considering the timeframe they need to grow and stuff, that skin blemish on the wrist doesn't change.
I would argue that the human "egg" that is analog to these eggs is the placenta from start (shortly after implantation) to finish (birth). So while these insects have a static "egg" size, placental mammals have a variable one, which begins at a microscopic size and eventually grows tremendous.
Although tbf, ovoviviparous creatures don't exactly skip the eggs altogether, it's just the location in which they hatch that's different if you think about it lol.
Bombaso
Interesting... but the music makes it creepy. Love it!
Akistos
This gif makes me want to raise more terrariums than I can adequately care for.
Masaya51
sauce : https://www.youtube.com/@InsecthausTV/videos
letgoofmyweiner
So many friends.
Quizz25S
Those are some crazy looking mantids holy fuck
NeverEnoughFoxes
Those are some strangely shaped and very compact Poke balls.
Hashbrown123
zeacorzeppelin10
SmidgeyWidgey
This is awesome
jamesCosmosBaron
You seem fun!
immunity
"Now draw the rest of the owl" made manifest!
DrDadJokes
Weird Pokemons
BoingBoingBoingBoingBoing
Thats some beautiful fauna
TheOhioGuy
So many of them.
WorldMillipede
Great video! Nice to see more arthropod love around here.
LiterallyAWizard
Some of these should have been longer than half a second. >.>
ProbablyABadPun
I can't put my finger on it, but something about this bugs me.
Arbitrarynamehere
I definitely won't put my finger on it
CheeseborgarSoop
Couple of these don't look too safe to be holding...
ToSisPoS
What does a mantis that size need to eat in a day?
ellmaux
Bean! Bug! Bean! BUG!
(Yes, I do actually know those are eggs)
illmx
AnalFistingPornstarLegendWolverine
Big bug neat.
whateverthevoicestellme
Crab.
UristImiknorris
Hand.
circlebreaker
Hand. Hand. Hand. Hand. Hand. Hand.
ballsoutflyer
Frighten.
nemocares
Was the fourth one really an egg, and not a cocoon or some such?
AC1D1C
This species of mantis(Pseudocreobotra wahlbergi) lays their eggs in a clutch. "The female praying mantis lays up to 400 eggs which are deposited in a frothy mass that is produced by glands in her abdomen. This froth hardens and creates a protective capsule with a further protective coat." (source Boreal Science)
Naemless
Bug type Pokémon trainer who also runs a Krabby.
FizzleBurger
That's lame, I would NEVER run a Krabby in my Bug team. I stick with REAL Bugs, like Drapion, and Vibrava, and Gliscor...
ZoBrightlance
Crabs are close to arachnids. I'm one of those trainers. Crabs, shrimp, lobsters, if it's a sea bug, it's a bug. Golisopod is a beast when he's not being a scaredy-cat.
ToSisPoS
In the end we all become crab
Alsenoth
He's my favorite Water type, and Bug type. Like. Individually. Not as a dual. I mean. I guess, by extension as a dual, as well, but I was just clarifying for those specific types....what the hell has this comment turned into?
NewtGinGrinch
*sigh .. unzips
RocketKokket
ElbowDeepInAJedi
mars23fi999
Some good nope right there.
Gnakenheimer
All aboard the nope.wav train
DeamgonDork
Crab and mullusk? Seem like hard outliers! But this was very cool!
basiccricket8444
They will all return to crab in time
KilljoyWasHere
Ocean bugs
MuseMatar
Shrimps is Bugs!
Twyll
All invertebrates. Folks who keep one kind of invertebrate often keep others. I dunno, there's just something about critters with no spine that appeals to some people!
Whooa
Shrimps is bugs
Skevoid
The millipede is a larger outlier than the crab is, myriapods diverged before crustaceans/insects did.
DeamgonDork
Nerd <3
RunawaySpoons
That's both amazing and scary how such small eggs can turn into relatively large, cool creatures.
ADFluffy
Eggs are animal seeds
pareidoliaperson
I'm sure those are the right eggs, but I'm also almost sure it's not the eggs those creatures were born form. Considering the timeframe they need to grow and stuff, that skin blemish on the wrist doesn't change.
TinyLiehon
Egg cell to human sees even more inflation in size
RacecarIsRacecarBackwards
Now do a sequoia
jaggcomputing5
Beat me. I was going to say acorn 😁
RacecarIsRacecarBackwards
Yeah, considering Sequoiadendron seeds look like this, and grow into 270 ft trees it's pretty fucking unbelievable: https://images.fineartamerica.com/images-medium-large-5/giant-sequoia-seeds-quincy-russell-mona-lisa-productionscience-photo-library.jpg
yourbassist
What does that say about sperm and/or oocyte?
Zedrapazia
A human egg, which would technically be a newborn baby in a placenta, is not particularly small.
The sperm of bugs are also tiny.
thetonestarr
I would argue that the human "egg" that is analog to these eggs is the placenta from start (shortly after implantation) to finish (birth). So while these insects have a static "egg" size, placental mammals have a variable one, which begins at a microscopic size and eventually grows tremendous.
TheLastBootyBender
They said cool
Howlingowl
Wait, snails lay eggs? Now that I think about it, I find the idea of a snail giving live birth equally implausible.
njessup1992
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tg5rUUQ2mN8
NickRivieraMD
pretty much everything but mammals lay eggs
Howlingowl
Coral and starfish reproduce asexually through fission.
NickRivieraMD
You're right, of course, and a bunch of other things. Planarians and sponges.
Isikyus
Mammals, and certain sharks
AgentTasmania
Some snakes.
Twyll
Although tbf, ovoviviparous creatures don't exactly skip the eggs altogether, it's just the location in which they hatch that's different if you think about it lol.