Fact Show Animal Edition

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Tune in for this animal edition of our amazing Fact Show!

NC State University (USDA-NIFA Grant):

Purdue Engineering:

Legal Stuff.
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At my IT Department, we had a manager who was diagnosed with cancer. He read of a treatment that supposedly helped fight it. Carrots. After some time his skin took on a noticible orange tinge. The fact that he preferred wearing green suits made it more noticible.
I have also read of people taking large amounts of colloidal silver for certain ailments. This can turn their skin an odd bluegrey color.

lancerevell
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Last time I was this early beetles could be squished

cysion
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Title : "No one can squish this bettle"
The snake : "YES I'M FIRST!"

MaliqIbrahim-
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4:09 baby flamingos are naturly white but as they get older they eat things that turn them pink.

brendarojas
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Once my friend saw a lioness on a safari. It didn’t actually live up to it’s fearsome name because it came up to the vehicle, and then actually attempted to interact with them. She says she would have pet it if she wasn’t absoloutly terrified 😂. Also a story on my own, I was in a zoo on a school trip when we saw a Komodo dragon, and it also tried to interact with us. It didn’t even try to bite and with some protective gloves me and some other brave souls we actually got to pat it for a bit. It was AMAZING! I honestly loved it.

That_randomSwiftie
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“No one can crush this beetle” *every hydroelectric press channel starts frothing at the mouth*

jaxoncicchella
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"no one can crush this beetle"


boy tho, you never met a mad mom with a chancla

dmaysx
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Fun fact: woodpecker's tongues are so long it wraps around it's skull.

retronimus
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The clips of the cheetahs and dogs playing are so cute❤❤❤

roguer
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I've got a photo of a baby elephant jumping as he's running ahead of the herd.
He looks SO happy!😊

kathleenkalman
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Happy Easter everyone! Thank you Be Amazed!

macmac
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Who else just randomly found Be AMAZED and started watching him ever since

AllahTheBest
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I once held a tarantula spider in my hands and while at first it seemed scary, it wasn’t as scary as I thought. It sort of tickled my hands but that was it. I have also had a living snake around my neck before and again was not as scary as I initially thought

NrthTower
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1: Cheetahs are also the largest cat that purrs. Also, kudos to people who found a potential way to help the species.
2: I think the most shocking thing I've heard in this video is the idea that most people will never encounter a skunk. Probably because I live in Kansas, and skunks are a nuisance animal here. There's no one in the state that hasn't somehow run afoul of one or more in any given year. They get hit by vehicles, have near misses with vehicles, get angered by something too close to a house or building, or end up spraying a pet or person all the time.
3: Personal experience with a potentially dangerous species: Similarly to skunks, there's no one in the state who hasn't come across coyotes from time to time. I grew up on a farm, and spent many years working on the farm and as an oilfield worker. The coyotes in this area rarely bother people or pets. They're a smart and adaptable species, and have generally figured out that many of us won't bother them or interrupt their hunting of rabbits, mice, rats, or other nuisance animals, as long as they don't try to go after the critters we care about. In some instances, people may even be willing to toss out old food to certain locations on their properties that are away from the house, livestock, pets, etc. for coyotes or any other critters to eat on, rather than just throwing it in the trash or down the garbage disposal. We may sometimes also imitate their howls, which they will humor us for a bit with a verbal game of Simon. They howl a specific way, we howl back, they howl differently, we try to match that. Once the person howling back messes up, or doesn't respond within a few minutes, they'll go back to their normal howling behaviors. I wouldn't advise anyone to ever approach one, but as long as they aren't being aggressive or aren't rabid or something, they tend to make for good neighbors. Usually, they're just looking to survive, and if they can do so without coming into conflict, it's a win-win.

vladyvhv
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I was camping in rural Arkansas and Iran into full sized brown bears 🐻. They were friendly to me. I think they know that I'm no threat.

soupwifey
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You always forget how entertaining these videos are until you click on one.

coopadoop
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Elephants: *Finally, A Worthy Opponent*

AishandHawa
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I was waiting for a nother education video

litced
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While a kid living with my parents up in the mountains of PA, I overheard my dad tell mom to be really carefully with us kids- - especially when she hung laundry out to dry. It seems that a women with a baby had been out hanging up a very large amount of recently cleaned clothes, when she heard her baby scream in pain. She ran to the other side of the clothes line and a pig had started eating her baby’s feet!!

slcRN
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I was kayaking in Mallorca when I was about twelve. A shark became interested in me, or more specifically, the canoe. I do not know what type of shark it was, probably a young bull shark. But it was bigger than the six or so foot sea canoe. I was not even far out into the bay, but I had drifted further than I realised. And I was alone, too far from the shore to be heard. I was having problems with turning the canoe around in some sea currents.

It followed me for a while, circling curiously. After a bit, it started swimming underneath me, making me rock back and forth. Watching that huge shadow sliding underneath me over and over again made my blood run cold. Then it either took a nip at the canoe or bumped it with it's nose. It knocked me clean out of the canoe, rolling the kayak over. Obviously I panicked, lashing out with the paddle and my legs, trying to hit the eyes. I felt the paddle hit something solidly. I think I startled it, hitting it on the head or nose, because it swam away very quickly. After that, it left me alone, and did not return.

Unfortunately I couldn't get back into the canoe, as I was not strong enough to turn it back over. So I had to swim pushing it ahead of me still upside down, back to the dock. I was convinced it was about to come back and bite me. I ended up standing on various sea urchins when I could put my feet down. The urchins hurt me a lot more than the shark, who did not touch me at all.

Obviously I was terrified at the time, but now that I am an adult I realise that the animal was probably just acting out of curiosity, maybe mistaking the kayak's shape for a sea lion or something.

Guinea pigs cannot vomit either. That's why if they have an operation, you do not have to make them fast. In fact, they have to eat constantly, if they do not it can be fatal quite quickly.

lotharsoran