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Why Don't Blue Whales Eat Fish? - Video học tiếng Anh
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Why Don't Blue Whales Eat Fish?
Why Don't Blue Whales Eat Fish?
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자막 (74)
0:00
The most massive land animals in the
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world all eat little stuff, grass and
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leaves. And almost all of the most
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massive aquatic animals also eat
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something itty bitty. Tiny crustaceans
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called krill. Why do such big things eat
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such small things? Hi, I'm David and
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this is Minute Earth. The most ginormous
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animals all need to eat a huge amount of
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calories to fuel their massive bodies,
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but there aren't enough big super
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calorie dense meals around for them to
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eat. And even if there were, the giant's
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massive bodies aren't mobile or agile
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enough to actually capture that food.
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Instead, these mega creatures meet their
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mega calorie quota with something that's
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super abundant and requires almost no
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effort to procure. Little pieces of
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grass and leaves. And for our purposes,
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we're going to consider leaves to be
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little, even if they do come off of
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bigger things. And sure, leaves and
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grass aren't very calorie dense compared
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to things other animals eat, but the
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giant's giant digestive tracts can hold
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a lot of them at once. We're talking
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hundreds of kg. Plus, the bigger an
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animal is, the longer the food stays in
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its digestive system, and the more
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microbes there are in there to break it
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down. All of that means that the giants
1:00
are able to ring a lot of calories from
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grass and leaves, enough to meet their
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huge calorie demands. The abundance and
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ease of finding leaves and grass and the
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specialized digestive systems to deal
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with large quantities of them are why,
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at least on land, you see the same
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pattern in every biome. The very biggest
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animals are herbivores. Even back in the
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day when dinosaurs roamed the earth, the
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biggest animals weren't predators like
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T-Rexes. They were lumbering, leap
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eatating vegetarians. But what about the
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ocean? Like their counterparts on land,
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sea giants like blue whales are
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relatively unaggile and have giant guts.
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So it makes sense that they'd eat the
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ocean equivalent of grass. Huge blooms
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of tiny plant-like microorganisms called
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phytolankton. But these ocean behemoths
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need so many calories every day that
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phytolants, even lots and lots and lots
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of them, just aren't calorie dense
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enough to meet the demand. Luckily,
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those big phytolankton blooms attract
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something else. Billions of
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caloriepacked krill that come together
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to graze in huge slowmoving easy to find
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swarms. A blue whale that lunges back
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and forth through a swarm can easily
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take in more than enough calories to
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power its huge body. The equivalent on
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land would be if there were huge
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slowmoving swarms of grasshoppers that
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elephants could munch on instead of the
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grass itself. In that case, the
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packaderms could pack in even more
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calories and likely get even bigger.
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Either way though, the same truth holds
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for the biggest animals on Earth. It
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turns out food things come in small
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packages.