yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Animals Cannot Be Blue | Explorer


3m read
·Nov 11, 2024

[music playing] Sometimes nature plays tricks on us. What we think we know to be true may not be. Animals, for example, have lots of secrets, like their remarkable use of color to attract mates or disguise themselves from predators. Well, it turns out they've been using colors in ways that have been tricking us humans as well. We reached out to the Explorer and [inaudible] communities to crowdsource this special Explorer segment, True Blue.

[music playing]

NARRATOR: White, black, red, green, yellow. Animals have evolved to come into every color of the rainbow. But with few exceptions, animals are not blue. For animals, most color comes from pigments, color chemicals that are produced by special cells. Pink, orange, chartreuse, animals can produce many different types of color pigment, but blue is a problem.

NARRATOR: Some animals appear blue, but they're deceiving you.

SARAH GARRET: Instead of using pigments, most blue animals have developed a way to trick your eyes and play with light, using physical structures to appear blue. Most of the blues you think you know really aren't blue.

[music playing]

NARRATOR: Humans can only see light in what we call the visible spectrum, a narrow band of electromagnetic wavelengths. Color is how we perceive different wavelengths of light in that spectrum. And that visible spectrum contains all the colors that we see in this world.

SARAH GARRET: This is the blue morpho butterfly. Yes, the emoji one. It is the perfect example of an animal that only appears blue because of the clever way that its wing scales interact with light. Similar to how a prism disperses different wavelengths of light, a blue morpho wing has microscopic structures that scatter light to cancel out other colors, reflecting only blue. This is based on how the light reflects. As you change your viewing angle, different colors appear stronger, giving us an incredible iridescent effect, the telltale sign of a fake blue. And because that reflection is based on the structure of the wing, if you filled that structure with something different, say, alcohol, that color would change. Don't worry. It dries back to blue.

Many other animals use physics to deceive us. For example, there are no blue feathers on birds. All birds that appear blue have some structure in their feathers that reflects only blue light. And almost all fish use light scattering to create their vibrant blues. Less than 1% of the animals that you perceive as blue actually have any blue pigment in them. That 1% with blue are very rare. They are true blues.

[music playing]

NARRATOR: This is the olivewing butterfly. It's one of very few insect species on Earth known to have a true blue pigment. This is the blue poison dart frog, one of the only vertebrates known to contain blue pigment. No matter how you look at them, they're blue. All of the other animals only appear blue. You may perceive blue, but it's because these animals have all evolved a way to trick your eyes, using the physics of light to control what you see.

But why blue? Maybe it's to let predators know that you're poisonous. Maybe it's to impress a mate. Maybe it's because blue pigment is so rare, and evolving a way to fake blue simply allows certain animals to stand out from the crowd. We don't yet know why blue is so rare.

But the rarity of blue is not just limited to animals. Blue pigments are uncommon everywhere in nature. There are no blue foods. Less than 10% of flowers are blue. And the two things that most of us think of as quintessentially blue, the sky and the sea, also only appear blue because of the physics of light scattering.

NARRATOR: They say you have to see something with your own eyes to believe it. But nature shows that your eyes are easily deceived. We may not know why blue is so rare, but now we have to wonder, if you can't trust your own eyes, what can you trust?

More Articles

View All
Khan Academy Live: SAT Writing
Hello and welcome back to Khan Academy live SAT. I’m Eric, I’m an SAT tutor and one of the SAT experts here at Khan Academy. Today is our third and final class as a part of this series. We’ve covered SAT Math two weeks ago, last week we covered SAT Readin…
Wait, so is the U.S. in a Recession?
GDP, gross domestic product, explained by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, is a comprehensive measure of U.S. economic activity. Now, you might have heard GDP pop up in the news lately because in America, their GDP is currently shrinking. In Q1, U.S. GDP …
10 People + AI = Billion Dollar Company?
What is the state of these AI programmers? Like, is it reliable yet, and where are we at? Well, we just see software companies have way less employees and converge on a point where you could have unicorns—billion-dollar companies—that have like 10 people …
Tornadoes 101 | National Geographic
[Narrator] They begin life as ghosts, gently coursing through a solitary existence, but slowly, their gentility turns to rage. They grow larger and larger, hurling and twisting, and desperately reaching down from the sky, and what began as an invisible sh…
More formal treatment of multivariable chain rule
Hello everyone. So this is what I might call a more optional video. In the last couple of videos, I talked about this multivariable chain rule, and I gave some justification. It might have been considered a little bit handwavy by some. I was doing a lot o…
Why Fundraising Is Different In Silicon Valley - Michael Seibel
Neither day I did office hours with the YC company, and they were very concerned about fundraising because they had tried really hard to fundraise in their local community. They grew up in North Carolina, and it was impossible for them to raise any money.…