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

The Secret Life of Plankton


2m read
·Nov 9, 2024

[Stories from the Sea]

[Fish Tale My Secret Life as Plankton]

How did I get here? Well, it's a stranger story than you might think. I came from a world of drifters, a place few humans have ever seen. The world of plankton. I came from a batch of a million eggs, and only a few of us survived. When I became a larva, I moved among other drifters. "Plankton" comes from the Greek "planktos" for wandering. My fellow plankton came in all sizes, from tiny algae and bacteria to animals longer than a blue whale. I shared my nursery with other embryos and juveniles, from clams and crabs to sea urchins and anemones.

(High pitch sound) We drifting animals are called zooplankton. The most common animals here are copepods and krill. (Buzzing) You could search the world over, but you'd never find a place more diverse than my childhood home. A teaspoon of seawater can contain more than a million living creatures. It can be a pretty tough existence, though. Trillions are born here, but only a few make it to adulthood. He may be no larger than a pin head, but this crab larva is an arrow worm's worst nightmare.

(Bumping noises) (Buzzing) Epic battles between carnivores like these are just one way to get food. But the real powers of this place come from phytoplankton. Single-celled life that transforms sunlight and carbon dioxide into edible gold. Phytoplankton are the base for the largest food web in the world. During the night, many animals like me would rise up from the depths to feed on this sun-powered feast. (Maraca sound) I was part of the largest daily migration of life on Earth.

During the day, I'd return to the darkness, where I'd join my bizarre companions. (High pitch buzz) (Flapping noises) Cannibals, like this sea butterfly mollusk, that eats its next of kin. And comb jellies, that beat cilia like rainbowed eyelashes. Some of these snare their prey with sticky tentacles, while others just take a bite out of their cousins. And siphonophores that catch prey with toxic fishing lures.

But my favorite would have to be the crustacean Phronima. Its monstrous looks inspired the movie "Aliens." It can catch tiny bits in its bristles, but prefers larger prey like salps. With two sets of eyes, this female prowls the deeper water. Prey in hand, she performs one of the strangest behaviors in the entire animal kingdom. With body parts from her victims, she delicately assembles a barrel-like home feeding her young until they can drift off and survive on their own. Best of all, they make the perfect snack for a small fish like me.

Here among the plankton, the food web is so tangled and complex, even scientists don't know who eats whom. But I do. At least now you know a bit of my story. There's so much more to me than just a tasty meal.

More Articles

View All
15 Ways Rich People SHOW OFF
To flex is to show how much money you can afford to unnecessarily waste in order to draw attention, admiration, or envy of those you perceive as lesser than you. If you’ve been around rich people long enough, you realize that some of them still need valid…
Office Hours with Sam Altman
All right, so this is going to be the first office hours we’re doing on YouTube, and people have submitted questions on HN, so we’re jam ready. And so, yeah, that’s Sam Altman. Here we go. This is kind of a couple questions put together. As a B2B company…
Building for the Enterprise with Aaron Levie (How to Start a Startup 2014: Lecture 12)
Can we keep playing with they? Okay, good! We turn up a little bit so it’s more pump up. Okay, here we go! [Applause] Okay, I guess we got to clap, we got to find the beat, and then we got to clap to the beat. Okay, all [Music] right, okay, that’s pretty…
How Do Billion Dollar Startups Start?
Every founder looks at Airbnb and just imagines Airbnb in the early days must have been something special. Actually, they kind of all look the same. For founders just starting out, they think that the trajectory and the growth graph of all the successful …
2015 AP Biology free response 1 d e
All right, part D. To investigate the claim that exposure to light overrides the genetically controlled circadian rhythm, the researchers plan to repeat the experiment with mutant mice lacking a gene that controls the circadian rhythm. Predict the observe…
Selling corporate jets isn't easy!
How long can that process take? Days, weeks; sometimes you’re working on a transaction for a year or two. Sometimes it’s a month, still right up to the line. I’ve had a transaction where we’ve signed the contract, they put up a deposit, and we’re going t…