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How AI Is Revolutionizing Deep Ocean Research

Youth Nature
With so much of the ocean left unexplored, and a limited number of deep ocean specialists, could AI help scientists to drive major breakthroughs?

Pants On Frogs?

Youth Nature
A team of researchers from Stanford University in California recently took on the unusual task of making tiny pants for rainforest frogs. Watch to find out why!

Japan's 2011 Tsunami

Youth Nature
The March 11 earthquake and tsunami left more than 28,000 dead or missing. See incredible footage of the tsunami swamping cities and turning buildings into rubble.

How Fish Get Away With Being Colourful

Youth Nature
Coral reef fish get away with being colourful thanks to a weird quirk of underwater optics.

Banding A Baby Bald Eagle

Youth Nature
Christian helps a team of experts band DC9, a baby bald eagle, which is no small feat.

A Lesson In Impermanence: Beavers

Youth Nature
An engaging, insightful, and educational video for waking up with a soothing narration guiding us through the role of a beaver in its interconnected, natural habitat.

A Lesson In Impermanence: Fungi

Youth Nature
With calming narration and soothing nature visuals, we’ll learn about how fungi grows and how mushrooms play an important part in the life cycle of all living things.

Do Butterflies Taste With Their Feet?

Youth Nature
Butterfly and moth expert Dr. David Lees explores what we know about butterflies’ sense of taste.

Entomologists Hate This Word

Youth Nature
Entomologists refer to a specific class of insects as bugs, but is it wrong to call other things bugs?

Microworlds: Bug Mimics

Youth Nature
Mimicry takes a few forms here on the coast in the world of bugs, all in the name of survival.

A Love Letter To The Ocean

Youth Nature
Learn about the vital role the ocean plays in the carbon cycle and in regulating Earth’s climate with this poem.

Accepting Change Through Colour

Youth Nature
A story of change in nature, helping us cope with change in life and acknowledge it as a constant part of our experience.

Microworlds: Bugs—Bugs 101

Youth Nature
This episode is part of Microworlds: Bugs series, where we shrink down and discover the wonderful lives of the tiny, the miniature, the microworlds.

The Mindful Evolution of the Dandelion

Youth Nature
Take a closer look at this flower (or weed, depending on how you look at it) for a lesson on impermanence and transformation.

Studying Forest Biomass From Space

Youth Nature
Forestry expert Maurizio Santoro explains how the use of various data can bring a great contribution/benefit to the field of mapping biomass.

Hagfish: The World's Slimiest Creatures

Youth Nature
Discover the extraordinary capabilities of hagfish, the slime-producing fish that has survived on Earth for over 300 million years.

Angel Falls 360°

Youth Nature
A 360° video of Angel Falls — the highest waterfall in the world.

The Geometry Of Life

Youth Nature
Researchers have come up with a new way to create patterns in petri dishes using bacteria.

What Is The Best Shape For A Farm?

Youth Nature
The shape of a farm can tell you a surprising amount about the land it's on and the people that use it.

See The World Like An Insect

Youth Nature
David Attenborough and the cast and crew of Kingdom of Plants explain the extraordinary technique they've used to recreate the world of an insect.

The World's Loneliest Tree

Youth Nature
Tucked away in a corner of London's Royal Botanic Gardens, there is a very peculiar plant. It is, in fact, the very last of its kind on Earth.