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  • Hey it's me Destin, welcome back to Smarter Every Day. I did a video and I

  • put Mr John the butterly farmer in it and you had a bunch of questions about butterfly farming, so we're doing a video

  • about butterfly farming, is that OK with you? - That's good with me. - So, I'm gonna tell you what this

  • paper is at the end of the video but this is pretty important for my family, but for now,

  • let's go learn about how butterflies are made.. Or how they.. yeah. - Are farmed.

  • - Yeah. Let's do that.

  • OK. First step in the lifecycle of a butterfly is...

  • - Butterfly eggs. - Alright. Where do we go? - Let's go see if we can find

  • some in our flight house. - Alright John so you have a huge butterfly house here.

  • How do you know where the caterpillars are gonna be? - I bring in a certain host plant.

  • I know that the Spicebush Swallowtail will only lay eggs on a few plants, and one of them

  • is the sassafras tree. - So they have favourite plants?

  • - Yep, called their host plant. - But look at, I mean all these plants right here

  • have flowers and stuff. - They will not lay an egg on anything but this.

  • - Man that's amazing! So you put one little sapling in here, and you get

  • everything you need? - Yep. And when this one has what I want on it, I just take this pot out

  • and I bring another one in. - Oh wait. What's happenening here?

  • - She's about to lay an egg. - No way. So she's laying an egg on the bottom side?

  • - Yep. - So can we see that egg that she just laid? - That and probably several others.

  • - So she just laid that egg. - She laid one of these

  • two right here. - Thats.. And I caught it on film. - Here she comes again.

  • - No way. Come on girl.

  • - Notice she comes up to the plant downwind.

  • - Bam. I got it that time. She did not lay.

  • Is it normal? I just don't know what I'm looking

  • [chortle] messed that up.

  • - I should probably listen to the butterfly farmer. OK and I assume at this point they hatch right?

  • - Yes that's right. Next step they'll be hatching. In fact let's go over next door.

  • - Man those are little. - These guys are actually.. this is not

  • their smallest. They're probably already in their second instar.

  • - Second what? - Instar. - Insteer? - Or basically step.

  • The process between them moulting. Most lepidoptera moult between 4 and 5 times.

  • - Turn around. I think there's a caterpillar on your butt. [laughs]

  • - Wait there is. - You said the word you.. we can't say.

  • - Oh the B-word? I'm sorry.

  • Go catch more butterflies. I'm sorry I won't say that again. - So yeah this is sassafras tree

  • with the sleeve on it, and then the caterpillar.. - Oh man.

  • So he looks like he's got a huge head but he doesn't does he. - Right, yeah his actual

  • head is right down there on the very end. - Is he supposed to look like a snake? - Yeah exactly.

  • Which no bird likes. His first 6 legs there are actually his permanent legs

  • which are his only true legs. - So what you're saying is those legs will make it through metamorphosis?

  • - Right. As an insect he only really has 6 legs.

  • So lets also see if we can catch a caterpillar as it switch into its pupa.

  • - What do you mean, switching to its pupa? - The caterpillar will actually

  • split its skin, the same way it does a moult, and actually come out of the

  • caterpillar as a pupa. - Really? It doesn't build one? - No. That's actually

  • a common misconception. - Are you telling me a caterpillar just sits in one spot and turns into a pupa?

  • - I can tell you whatever you want? - Show.. show me! [ laugh]

  • - If you look down there should be a silk.. basically a tether line that he has just running

  • right across his back. - Oh I see it. - Their silk is quite a bit like spider silk.

  • It's extremely strong for its size. - Hey what am I seeing? There's something moving inside the skin.

  • - You know I think you're actually about to get to watch him split...

  • split and turn into a pupa. - What?

  • - Mm-hm, this should be good. The caterpillar skin is splitting,

  • and the pupa is actually going to wriggle right out of the caterpillar skin.

  • - I cannot believe we're catching this.

  • [music]

  • So the only thing holding him to the net is that one little silk thread that you showed me earlier.

  • - Yep, that one little security line. - What happens if it breaks? - It doesn't.

  • [laugh] - So he's done with his skin right? - Yep.

  • He actually.. he jumped off, reattached and now he's gonna wriggle around until that skin drops

  • down below him. You see there he just ejected.. he got loose and now he's gonna

  • wiggle around a little bit more and then he's gonna calm down. If you tried to pull on the pupa it would cut right

  • through him instead of breaking. - The silk thread would cut the pupa? - Yep. The pupa would

  • break before the thread would. Down here he's just shed, that's the caterpillar skin.

  • - This is totally backwards from what I thought. I thought that...

  • I thought that the caterpillar made this pupa and then crawled inside

  • and then turned into a butterfly but you're telling me he just sits there and grunts and turns

  • into a pupa. - That's right. After he's finished there, he's gonna start hardening.

  • He will lighten up to a nice light whitish background because he's on a white background.

  • So he'll end up with a colour similar to this guy right here. - So you're saying

  • that they change colours based on where the pupa.. - Based on the background

  • of where the pupa spins its cocoon. - So that means, think about that. That means that

  • this, when he was a caterpillar he had to look at the colour

  • he was on and remember it and then somehow

  • I don't know how... - I don't think anybody does. - Somehow he figures out what colour he needs to be.

  • - Like a chameleon, he matches the best he can to that background colour.

  • - So can you show us some different coloured ones? - Absolutely. Usually get anywhere from

  • about 40-60 out of a sleeve, and

  • most of these guys here will actually be going to the bronx zoo. - Really?

  • From Alabama to the Bronx Zoo. - Pretty neat. - That's pretty cool. - And of course I always keep a few,

  • that I save out for my own breeding stock. - So do you get to see them come out, like the

  • emergence out of the cocoon, or the pupa, excuse me. - Yep, sure do. And in fact

  • why don't you take a few of these and we'll see if you can catch them on camera, coming out of the cocoon and drying their wings?

  • - Oh, I bet its, it feels like a trick. Is it hard to do?

  • - Oh no you'll be alright. - Thank you.

  • (wife) ... wings, so I turned this upright so he could crawl. So he crawled from the bottom to to top. - Just now. I've been

  • waiting for weeks for this to happen. Alright so this is one of the most amazing

  • parts of the process. This butterfly which is a totally different looking creature than

  • what went into this pupa just came out of it, and what I think is cool is that those

  • wings were folded up in such an efficient way that they were crammed into this thing.

  • That's amazing. So when he comes out, those wings are obviously

  • kind of new, so they're wet and floppy. So they have no real structural

  • integrity so he can't use them, so he's pretty vulnerable for the first little bit. He comes

  • up to the top here and he dangles his wings down. He's got fluid in his abdomen

  • and he starts pumping it into those veins on his wings so he can inflate it.

  • It's actually called inflation.

  • Oh.. you see it? That's excess fluid that the had in his body that he

  • was getting rid of because he's already inflated his wings. I can't believe

  • I just caught that. I just induced it really. Anyway, he just ejected that meconium because

  • it was no longer needed for his wings because they're already inflated. So it looks like he's got

  • one more fold in his wing that he's trying to straighten out. He's almost there but not quite.

  • Where you going buddy? Oh! He just flew!

  • That was the first moment that guy flew, so his wings were ready.

  • OK so it turned out that butterfly emergence was a little too difficult for me, so I'm bringing it back to John.

  • John's gonna borrow the camera for a week or so and he's gonna see if he can catch it for you.

  • You gonna catch butterfly emergence? - We're gonna try. - Alright. Next thing you're gonna see is John with a camera.

  • My timing was off. - Alright we'll see what we can do. These are the guys that I think

  • are gonna be hatching over the next day or two. And down here I have my

  • trusty old carrying case and I'll actually be hanging the pupa from up on the roof there.

  • Now if everything goes well, the next thing you should be watching

  • is a butterfly as it hatches from its chrysalis.

  • [music]

  • Oh no! [laugh] A little bit in a hurry there.

  • - Little bit higher? 123.. go!

  • How's that? - Good. - OK, so I mentioned earlier in the show

  • I was going to show you what's in this envelope. I was hand delivered this at work and it's called

  • a notice of decision to furlough, which means

  • basically I no longer get paid on Fridays. This is a pretty big

  • deal as a dad of 3, so there's a way you can help me out of this situation. I'm very

  • thankful that audible.com has decided to use

  • Smarter Every Day to advertise. You know I don't run advertisements on Smarter Every Day so this is a pretty big

  • deal. During this time please consider going to audible.com/smarter

  • and clicking on the free trial. That would help me a lot.

  • They're audio books, you can listen to tons of different types, but I'm gonna let her

  • tell you what her favourite is. - Hello this is my favourite book. It's called

  • The Dawn Treader. I like it very much because they go on

  • adventures and like.. they are actually in a picture frame

  • and they go to the end of the world. - Going where? - To the end of the world.

  • They don't have a... - Tell them who wrote it.

  • - By umm.. C.S.Lewis. - And tell em who's in it that I like.

  • - Reepicheep. I'll see if I can find a picture.

  • - Who's that? - Reepicheep. If you look

  • on some of his videos you can see a little Reepicheep right here.

  • - OK. You wanna swap back? - Yes, swap! - I used audible

  • before they used me to advertise. Clearly now's a good time for me.

  • You're smart people, you know what's up here. Anyway, I'm Destin, you're getting Smarter Every Day,

  • audible.com/smarter, free trial, it helps me out.

  • Have a good one. Who planted these flowers? - I did.

  • - Yeah? - One of my favourites is right here.

  • - What colour is it? This little pink one? That's your favourite huh?

  • - ahuh. Let me show you one that's not from the rules.

  • - I didn't know flowers had rules. - It's not attached.

  • - Oh, so the base of the bloom

  • That's strange, why would it do that. - Your favourite place you ever gone

  • - Umm.. I like Peru a lot.

  • - Maybe... Are you filming that? - Maybe.

  • - Aww.

  • [ Captions by Andrew Jackson ] captionsbyandrew.wordpress.com

  • Captioning in different languages welcome. Please contact Destin if you can help.

Hey it's me Destin, welcome back to Smarter Every Day. I did a video and I

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蝴蝶養殖是很神奇的--(全生命週期)--每天更聰明 96 (Butterfly Farming IS AMAZING - (Full Life Cycle) - Smarter Every Day 96)

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    ok08832190 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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