The wild duck is an underrated predator with extraordinary biological adaptations: it sleeps with only half its brain working while keeping one eye open for danger, reacts to threats in less than 1/5 of a second, can drink salt water through natural desalination glands above its eyes, dives with a slowed heart rate and oxygen stored in muscles, and once a year loses all flight feathers while changing from bright to dull plumage for protection. Its ancestors, including Vegavis, were quacking back when dinosaurs walked the Earth, making ducks one of the oldest bird lineages that survived the dinosaur extinction and diversified into about 170 species with remarkable variations like the flightless steamer ducks and the brood-parasitic blackheaded duck.
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The Wild Duck Is the Most Underrated Predator on the Planet — Here's WhyAdded:
Right now, while you're watching this video, somewhere by an ordinary city pond, a creature is asleep with only half of its brain working. Not because it's tired [music] or in pain, but because that's how nature made it. One half of its brain is quietly dozing and resting, [music] while the other is wide awake, watching what's going on around it, and keeping one eye open and ready.
That eye doesn't sleep along with its owner. It scans the darkness, catches every movement, and waits for danger.
Scientists tested this on the most ordinary malards, the very same ones that swim in any park. They lined the birds up and watched how each one slept.
[music] And it turned out that the ducks sitting in the middle of the row could safely close both eyes and fall fully asleep because their neighbors were protecting them from all sides. But the ones at the edge couldn't relax.
The birds on the outside kept one eye open for about a third of the time. And they pointed that open eye not just anywhere, but toward the open space where danger could come from. In other [music] words, a duck asleep can decide for itself which side of its brain to rest and which eye to keep on guard for itself and the flock. And that isn't even the most amazing part. Even a half asleep duck with only one eye and only one half of its brain working reacts to a threat so fast that it's hard to believe. In [music] those same experiments, the birds were shown an image of a predator apparently closing in. And the duck that seemed to be dozing noticed it and jolted awake in less than 1/5if of a second. That's faster than you can blink. It turns out that even in sleep, this bird is more alert than we are when we're awake. And now for another miracle that happens to a duck right at the beginning of its life.
When a duckling has just hatched from an egg, there's still no image of its mother in its head. It doesn't know what she looks like, what color she is, or how big she is. But it does have a built-in rule, simple and strict. The first large creature that moves near me in the first hours of my life is my mother, and I'll follow it anywhere in nature. That's almost always the duck that sat on the eggs. But if someone else is nearby during those first hours, the duckling will bond with them with all its heart. There are known cases where a brood followed a person, a dog, and even a moving toy. Because that was what the ducklings saw first. This isn't stupidity or a mistake. It's an ancient survival mechanism that helps [music] a helpless newborn bundle avoid getting lost and stay close to whoever will keep it warm and fed. And here I have to shock you a little.
Everything I've just told you isn't about some rare paradise bird from the jungle that you might see once in your life on an expensive expedition. The creature that sleeps with one eye open and only half its brain. The creature whose babies from birth are ready to follow. The first thing they see is that very duck. The most ordinary gray brown duck from a city pond. The one you used to walk up to [music] with a piece of bread as a child. The one you pass a 100 times a year and don't even turn your head for [music] because well, what's interesting about it, it's just a duck.
And to me, that's the strangest thing of all. We're surrounded by these birds everywhere. They live in every city, on [music] every pond, in every park with a puddle big enough to matter. We've seen them thousands of times. We've fed them, photographed them, laughed at the way they waddle awkwardly along the path. We think we know everything about ducks.
What's there not to know?
Feathers, bill quacking, likes bread, swims in a pond, and that's the whole duck. But the truth is, we know almost nothing about it. We look at a duck and see only the surface, only what's on top. And beneath that dull gray brown surface [music] is a machine that can do things engineers are still trying and failing to copy. A bird that solved the problem of sleep in the middle of a dangerous world in a way we can only dream of. A bird whose ancestors, as you'll soon find out, were walking this planet when dinosaurs were still walking it. A bird that drinks salty seawater and doesn't die. A bird that loses the ability to fly once a year and then grows its wings back. A bird that dives so deep and for so long that any human in its place would simply drown. And we call all of that a duck, saying the word as casually as if we were talking about something completely obvious and empty.
When in fact, every duck by the pond is a living textbook of biology, physics, and engineering that no one has bothered to open. We've walked past one of the most amazing creatures on the planet because it was too ordinary. Because a miracle you meet every day stops seeming like a miracle. And that's a shame. And I really want to change that. Right here in this video, I want to take you through the whole duck mystery step by step from the very beginning. I'll show you where ducks even came from and just how incredibly ancient their lineage turned out to be. I'll explain exactly how their superpowers work and why many of them were millions of years ahead of human inventions. I'll show you ducks you probably didn't even know existed.
And among them will be one that behaves completely differently from all the others and turns everything we think we know about these birds upside down.
And at the very end, I'll tell you how ducks are tied to us humans much more closely than it seems. And why whether they survive or disappear actually concerns every one of us. After this video, you won't be able to look at a park duck the same way again. I promise you that. That very bird you've passed a hundred times without a second glance will become something completely different to you. And maybe the next time you walk past a pond, you'll stop for a little longer and really look at it. If you like rediscovering the familiar world like this and finding miracles where no one else is looking for them, be sure to subscribe to the channel and hit the bell so you won't miss the next episodes. It only gets more interesting from here. And now let's go very far back in time to understand where the duck story even began. And believe me, that beginning is much older than you might think. To really understand a duck, we have to go very, very far back.
Not a hundred years and [music] not a thousand, but tens of millions of years into the past to an age when dinosaurs still ruled the earth. And we're going there to a very unexpected place, Antarctica. the coldest and most inhospitable edge of our planet. Today, Antarctica is an endless icy desert where almost nothing grows and almost nobody lives. But it wasn't always like that. About 68 69 million years ago, this southern continent looked completely different. There was no thick ice sheet there. Instead, [music] temperate forests grew across the land, a bit like the ones you can see today in the northwestern United States. The climate was mild. There were trees, rivers, [music] and lakes. And in those parts lived a bird that scientists named Vegavis. Vavis didn't sit on a branch and sing in the morning. It was a diving bird. It swam in cold water and hunted beneath the surface, pushing itself along with its feet and chasing fish the way many water birds do today.
If you had seen it from a distance, you probably wouldn't have realized you were looking at a creature from the age of dinosaurs. You'd have thought it was just some ordinary duck or goose splashing around in the water. And that wouldn't have been wrong because Vavis really was a close relative of today's ducks and geese. And this is what makes this bird truly special. Vavis is the oldest known representative of modern birds. That is [music] of the birds that surround us today, not their long extinct distant relatives. [music] It lived at the very end of the age of dinosaurs. Right on the threshold of the terrible catastrophe that wiped almost all life off the face of the earth. And it, [music] or rather its relatives, managed to step over that threshold.
Scientists call this boundary the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary, the very moment when the dinosaurs died out. Most creatures of that age didn't survive the blow.
But the ancestors [music] of ducks were among the few lucky ones that made it into the new era and gave rise to the birds we know today.
The story of studying Veavis itself reads like a detective case stretched over many years. First, back in 2005, scientists described its skeleton. Even then, it was clear that the find was important and that this bird was somehow related to ducks and geese. But there still wasn't full certainty because the main thing was missing, the skull. And the skull can tell you an enormous amount about a bird's relationships.
Only years later did researchers get truly lucky. They found an almost complete vig skull. beautifully preserved in ancient rock. That skull settled the long debate. It finally confirmed that Vegavis belonged right alongside ducks and geese and nowhere else. But that's not all. Veus preserved a detail that, as they say, took the scientist's breath away. In its fossil remains, they found a siren.
A sirenx is the vocal organ of birds, the thing they use to make their sounds, a kind of living musical instrument hidden inside the body. And do you know how rare this find is? It's the only siren known to science from the entire age of dinosaurs. No other one has been found from all those millions of years.
But Vavis had one preserved. And when scientists studied its structure, they were able to understand what sounds this bird might have made. It turned out that Vavas could sound very much like modern ducks and geese. In other words, quite simply, it quacked. Just think about that carefully. It means that quacking, that very sound you hear by any pond, the sound that seems so simple and even a little funny to us, is actually older than the dinosaur's final days. When giant reptiles were still walking the earth, somewhere on the shore of a cold Antarctic lake, there was already a sound very much like a duck quacking.
These birds were in effect quacking back in dinosaur times.
And when you hear a duck calling to its own kind next time, remember that you're hearing an echo that has rolled across tens of millions of years almost unchanged.
When the terrible catastrophe finally struck and the dinosaurs vanished, the world was emptied out. Vast numbers of species died, and it seemed as if life had been dealt a blow from which it could never recover. But it's precisely in moments like that that the survivors gained huge room to expand. The groups that managed to make it through the disaster were handed an entire freed up world. And the ancestors of ducks were among those few lucky ones. They didn't just survive. They began spreading across the planet, occupying new places, taking over new rivers, lakes, marshes, and seashores. And then something happened that biologists called divergence. Birds that had originally been rather similar gradually began adapting to different ways of finding food and slowly turned into very different species. Some specialized in diving.
They learned to go underwater, get food from the bottom, catch prey in the depths, and their bodies changed to match that way of life. Others moved in a different direction. They became masters of filtering. Their bills turned into delicate natural savves through which the bird passes water and mud, holding back the tiny edible bits, seeds, and minute living creatures. And so from common ancestors came diving ducks and those that feed right at the surface by straining the water. One and the same duck lineage spread around the world along many different paths. And there turned out to be so many paths that even now they're still impossible to fully untangle. The duck family, which includes ducks, geese, and swans, became truly enormous. It includes about 170 species. It's a very large and varied family, and scientists still haven't managed to bring perfect order to it. [music] There simply isn't one accepted system everyone agrees on.
In the past, birds were divided into groups mainly by how they looked, by body shape, bill shape, and habits. But then molecular studies came to the rescue. meaning the study of the hereditary material inside birds themselves, their relationships at the deepest level. And those studies turned a lot of things upside down. It turned out that some birds thought to be close relatives were actually fairly distant, while others on the contrary turned out to be much closer than people had believed. Because of that, scientists had to reshuffle entire groups and genera like a deck of cards. And arguments over who belongs with whom haven't died down among ornithologists even today. So the duck you see by a pond isn't just a bird. It's a representative of an ancient lineage whose roots go back to the age of dinosaurs. [music] It's a descendant of those few who survived the end of the world and didn't give up.
It's part of a vast, tangled, and still not fully understood family that scientists are still trying to figure out. Behind it lie tens of millions of years of history, disasters, victories, and adaptations.
And all of that is hidden inside an ordinary gray brown bird that's quietly splashing around in a city pond right now. But ancient history is only the beginning. The most interesting [music] thing is what this bird's body can do here and now. And that's where we're headed next. [music] Now that we know how ancient the bird in front of us is, let's get to the most interesting part.
Let's understand exactly how its body works [music] and why I called the duck a real machine from the very beginning.
Because inside this modest gray brown creature are so many clever solutions that they'd fill an entire engineering exhibition. And almost every one of those solutions was invented by nature long before humans came up with the same thing. Let's start with a problem that seems almost unsolvable to people.
Imagine you're in the middle of the ocean. All around you for miles is nothing but salt water and you're thirsty. On the face of it, there's a solution. There's water right there at hand, but you can't drink it. Sea water is so salty that a person who tries to quench their thirst with it only feels worse. There's so much salt in it that our bodies can't cope. And water like that makes a person suffer even more than simple thirst does. But sea ducks such as iders can calmly drink salty sea water and feel just fine. How do they do it? The secret is hidden right above the eyes. These birds have special salt glands there. tiny natural devices with exactly one job. They pull excess salt out of the blood and send it out through the nostrils. So, the duck drinks water and all its salt and then its body calmly separates that salt and gets rid of it. In effect, the bird has a natural desalination unit built right into its head.
People have spent huge amounts of money and years of work building desalination plants that turn seawater into fresh water and supply entire cities. And the sea duck carries a tiny desalination system above its eyes from birth and doesn't even think about what a miracle that is. Let's keep going. Now imagine a diving duck needing to get food from the bottom. It takes in air, dives under the water, and stays there for a long time, much longer than an ordinary human could manage without any training. And at the same time, it doesn't suffocate or panic. How is that possible? The thing is, the moment it dives, the duck's body switches into a special mode. The bird's heart starts beating noticeably more slowly so it can conserve strength and not waste oxygen. Blood is redirected and most of it goes to the most important organs, the ones without which life can't continue for even a second.
First and foremost, the brain and the heart.
And the precious oxygen supply is stored not only in the lungs, but right in the muscles too, like little personal tanks.
Thanks to all of this, the duck can stay underwater for a long time, calmly search for food, [music] and not suffer from lack of air. If you think about it, a duck is doing pretty much the same thing people do when they dive on a single breath [music] and go deep without any equipment. Only those people need years of hard training to teach their bodies to slow down and conserve oxygen. [music] A duck doesn't need to learn anything.
Its body knows how to do it from the start by right of birth. A natural diver that never took a single lesson. [music] The third ability is tied to a very dangerous time in a duck's life. Once a year, something happens to it that sounds like a real disaster for any flying bird. A duck sheds all of its flight feathers at once. The very big, strong feathers on its wings without which flight is impossible.
And it doesn't lose them one by one gradually, like many other birds do, but almost all at once. For several weeks, the duck completely loses the ability to fly. It's pinned to the water and the ground, and if danger comes, it can no longer simply take to the sky and get away from a predator. It's a very vulnerable time when the bird is almost defenseless, and nature came up with a way to help the duck get through this dangerous period. In many species, drakes, meaning male ducks, usually show off bright, beautiful, noticeable feathers. That beauty helps them attract females. But just for the molting period, when they can't fly and have to hide, the drakes seem to change clothes.
Their bright outfit is replaced by dull, modest, inconspicuous plumage, very much like the females. In that gray plain suit, a male is much harder to spot among the grass and water. It's as if the bird has two wardrobes for different occasions.
One is festive and showy to attract attention, and the other is modest and protective to make itself invisible exactly when danger is greatest. A change of wardrobe tailored strictly to the situation.
The fourth miracle you've held in your hands almost every winter, even if you've never thought about it. I'm talking about duck down. [music] The very down used to fill warm jackets, duvys, and pillows. [music] Why does it keep you so warm? It all comes down to its amazing structure. A down feather isn't a flat plate like an ordinary feather. It's built like a fluffy three-dimensional tuft that throws out countless fine filaments in every direction. And trapped between those filaments is air, a lot of air. And air trapped in tiny pockets that keeps heat from escaping is the best heat holder there is. That's why duck down is still one of the best insulating materials in nature.
People have invented many artificial materials trying to copy this trick, but they still haven't fully managed to beat the tiny down feather at its own game.
And finally, the fifth. Look at a duck's feet. On land, they seem clumsy, and the duck waddles along, comically moving its webbed feet. But the moment it gets into the water, those feet turn into a perfect tool. The webbing [music] between the toes works both as an ore and as a rudder. When the duck paddles, it spreads its foot and the wide webbing pushes forcefully against the water, driving the bird forward. And by turning its foot just a little, the duck changes direction [music] as if steering. One and the same part of the body serves as both engine and steering wheel at once.
And in diving ducks, nature went even further and shifted the legs closer to the tail. In that position, the feet work like a powerful rear motor, and that makes the bird an excellent swimmer and diver. Of course, everything has a price.
Because the legs are shifted back, such a duck feels quite awkward on land and moves clumsily. But in the water, in its native element, it has no equal. So, the result is an amazing picture. [music] In one ordinary duck, you get a natural desalination plant, a master of breathold diving, two changeable wardrobes for dangerous seasons, one of the best insulators in the world, and its own ores with a rudder. And all of it works on its own with no button, no engine, and no instruction manual.
People came to each of these solutions slowly and with great difficulty. ran experiments, built factories, invented materials, and the duck just lives with all of it inside, floating around in a pond, and not even suspecting that it's a walking collection of inventions nature assembled long before we did.
When we say the word duck, the same image usually comes to mind.
A calm gray brown bird swimming in a pond, occasionally diving for food and quacking.
But in fact, there are countless ducks in the world, and some of them are so unusual that you wouldn't immediately recognize them as kin of that park duck.
Let's meet a few of them, and you'll see just how different these birds can be.
Let's start with the steamer ducks that live in South America. Even their name should catch your interest. The thing is, almost all of them can't fly. They have wings, but they're too short and weak for flight. On the face of it, what kind of bird is that if it can't rise into the sky? But nature found a use for those wings here, too. And it was completely unexpected. When a steamer duck wants to move very fast across the water, it doesn't just paddle with its feet. It starts beating the water with its short wings. And it does this at the same time as working its feet. From the outside, it looks as if a little paddle steamer is moving across the water, not a bird, slapping its paddles on the surface and throwing up a spray.
That resemblance to old-fashioned paddle steamers is exactly why they got the name steamer ducks. And such a duck doesn't move slowly at all. Hammering the water with its wings and feet, it can reach about 24 km an hour. That's a very respectable speed for a bird moving on water rather than flying through the air. On top of that, steamer ducks turned out to be the heaviest of all wild birds that are called ducks at all.
The largest of them weigh up to 7 kg.
That's no longer a light feather from a pond, but a serious, solid, muscular bird. And their temperament matches their size. Steamer ducks are known as real fighters. They're feisty, quick to pick a fight, and fiercely defend their territory, yielding [music] to no one.
These birds were noticed and described by the famous Charles Darwin himself, the very scientist who gave the world the theory of evolution.
That happened a long time ago back in 1,833 during his great voyage.
Darwin took note of these noisy, awkward birds and remarked on how much commotion and splashing they make when they race across the water, beating it with their wings. So, the steamer ducks have had a reputation for a long time, nearly 200 years. [music] Now, let's head to the mountains. There's a duck that chose not a quiet pond for a home, but the exact opposite. [music] It's called a torrent duck, and it lives right in the raging rapids of mountain rivers, rushing between rocks. There, the water crashes, [music] foams, and roars, tumbling over stones and forming powerful currents.
For most birds, such a place would be deadly because the current could easily sweep them away and smash them against the rocks. But the torrent duck feels at home in that chaos. It dives into the freezing boiling water, holds itself steady among rocks and rapids, and gets food there that other birds can't even reach. A similar story belongs to the harlequin duck. This duck doesn't look for an easy life either.
It chooses fast rocky [music] rivers and also places where the sea surf pounds the shore with force where waves crash again and again against the rocks and it seems impossible to hold on. The harlequin duck feels confident. These birds seem to have deliberately chosen the harshest, wildest water you can find and learned how to live in it. But I've saved the most amazing one for last.
Among all the ducks in the world, there's one that's completely special, unique of its kind. To understand what makes it unusual, think of the cuckoo.
Everyone knows that a cuckoo doesn't build a nest and doesn't raise its own chicks itself. Instead, it lays its eggs in other birds nests, and unsuspecting host birds have to raise its young.
Well, among all water fowl, there's a duck just as sly. It's the blackheaded duck from South America, and it's the only true brood parasite among all water fowl.
The word parasite sounds a bit harsh, but in science, it means exactly this kind of behavior when one bird shifts the care of its offspring onto others.
The blackheaded duck doesn't build a nest or sit on eggs. Instead, it finds other birds nests and quietly slips its eggs into them. Most often it chooses the nests of coots and rosy build poards, but it doesn't limit itself to them. In fact, it lays its eggs in the nests of dozens of different bird species as long as it can find a suitable foreign nest. After that, the hosts incubate its egg along with their own, never suspecting that one of their own brood is actually a stranger. And this is where the real twist comes. The thing that breaks all our usual expectations. When we talk about a cuckoo, we think of a sad and cruel scene. The cuckoo chick, barely hatched, throws the other eggs and chicks out of the nest, so all the food goes to it alone.
The foster parents are left only with its greedy, hungry mouth, and their own children die. It would seem that you'd expect something similar from a duckling raised in another bird's nest, but it's completely different. Blackheaded duck chicks don't harm the host nest at all.
They don't throw out other eggs. They don't kill their nest mates, and they don't make life especially difficult for the foster family. The reason is that these chicks are born highly independent. They're called precocial because as soon as they dry off, they're ready for life. They don't need to be fed from the bill the way many other birds do. A blackheaded duckling can find its own food almost immediately after hatching. So, it doesn't sit in a foreign nest demanding food and depriving the host's young. Very soon after it hatches, it simply leaves the foreign nest and goes off to live its own life.
So, this duck uses another bird's nest only so its egg can stay warm and hatch safely. And after that, its child bothers no one and eats no one out of house and home. That's how one single duck turns everything we think about foundlings upside down. We're used to thinking that laying your egg in another bird's nest must always mean harming the hosts, ruining them and dooming their young. But the blackheaded duck shows that it can be completely different. You can take advantage of another's care and still do no harm. And there are far more ducks like that. Ducks that break our usual assumptions than it seems. Some slap across the water like steamers.
Others live in roaring mountain rapids and pounding surf. Still others slip eggs into foreign nests, but remain surprisingly harmless. Behind the boring word duck is an entire colorful world of the most varied characters, habits, and destinies. And the more you learn about them, the harder it becomes to call them just ducks.
So far, we've looked at ducks from the outside as amazing but still alien creatures to us. Now, let's talk about how closely their lives are woven into our own. Because the bond between ducks and humans is much deeper and more interesting than just the piece of bread you toss to birds by a pond. Let's start with a benefit that few people know about. In Asian countries, people have used ducks for centuries as real helpers in agriculture. Rice has been grown there since ancient times. And rice, as you know, grows in fields flooded with water. And ducks are released into those flooded rice fields. The birds wander between the young green shoots [music] and do very useful work. They eat the harmful insects that damage the crop.
They devour snails and they nibble at the weeds that keep rice from growing.
But that's not all. As they walk around the field, ducks loosen the soil and water with their feet. And at the same time, their waste fertilizes the field, making it more fertile.
In the end, the farmer gets a rich rice harvest without any chemicals, without poisons, and without bagged fertilizer.
Nature itself sets things right in the field. The ducks feed, people get clean rice, and everyone wins. It's a very wise way of farming, invented long before modern machinery. And now I'm going to tell you an utterly incredible story in which ordinary toy ducks helped big science. It happened on January 10th, 1992 in the northern Pacific Ocean. That day, a fierce storm was raging there. A huge ship, a container vessel, was carrying many goods across the ocean. And the waves [music] were rocking it so violently that one of the containers broke loose and went overboard. And inside that container were bath toys, a full 28,800 plastic toys. Among them were those familiar yellow rubber ducks every child knows.
The container split open [music] and thousands of little ducks spilled out into the vast ocean and drifted off wherever the currents carried them. On the face of it, just an unfortunate accident and a lost shipment. But one person saw it very differently. An oceanographer named Curtis Ebism, [music] a scientist who studies the ocean, realized that a rare opportunity had opened up in front of him. Those [music] thousands of ducks were now floating across the sea exactly where the currents carried them. So if people could report where they found the ducks, it would reveal how water moves through the ocean. It was like a giant experiment that nature itself had set up for free. And the scientist asked people all over the world to let him know if they ever found one of the toys on a beach. And the ducks set off on their incredible journey. They were found on the shores of Alaska. They washed up in Hawaii. Some of them drifted north, passed through the Bearing Strait, and reached the cold Arctic waters.
And after many years, traveling thousands of kilome, [music] some of those toys made it all the way to the shores of Great Britain.
Little plastic ducks lost in a storm became tiny travelers that helped scientists refine maps of ocean currents. A story that began with the bitter loss of a shipment ended as a real gift to science. But not all stories involving ducks are so cheerful.
There's a sad side, too, and it can't be ignored. The thing is, some duck species have come right to the edge of extinction, and humans are unfortunately often involved. And yet, I want to tell you not a story of hopeless loss, but a story of hope. There once lived a duck called the Madagascar postard. For a long time, no one saw it. Searches came to nothing. Years went by and in the end, scientists sadly concluded that the species was extinct. It seemed that another bird had vanished from the earth forever and we would never see it again.
But in 2006, something nearly impossible happened.
On a remote, forgotten volcanic lake.
Researchers suddenly discovered a tiny group of those very ducks. Just 26 birds. 26 survivors for the whole planet. A species thought to be lost forever turned out to be alive. It was simply hiding in a secluded corner no one had known about. That find gave people a second chance and they took it.
Scientists didn't sit on their hands.
They launched a breeding program for these birds in captivity in safe conditions where the ducklings were in no danger.
The chicks were born, grew up, and little by little, the small group turned into a real population.
Then the ducks that had been raised were released back into the wild, returned to their native waters. And it worked. A species that had already been buried once was brought back to life. That's an important lesson. It shows that conservation isn't empty talk. When people take it seriously, they really can save what seemed lost forever.
And here it's worth understanding one important thing. When some duck species disappears, the damage isn't limited to that bird alone. Ducks live in wetlands, on lakes, in marshes, in river flood planes. And those places are complex living communities where everything is connected. Ducks in them aren't random visitors, but part of a single mechanism. They feed on some creatures and serve as food for others. They carry plant seeds. They affect the cleanliness and life of the water body. And if one link falls out of this living chain, the whole community suffers. So when we protect ducks, were really protecting entire lakes and marshes with all their inhabitants. And those wetlands [music] matter to us humans, too, because they clean water, hold back floods, and give life to countless other creatures. And now at the very end, let's go back to where we started. To the ordinary gray brown duck on a city pond, to the one you passed a hundred times without looking back.
Only now you know something very different about it. [music] You know it sleeps with one eye open, shutting down only half its brain. And even in sleep, it guards itself in the flock. You know that the bird's sea dwelling relatives can drink salt water and dissalinate it right in their heads. You know that it dives with a slowed heart and saves oxygen like a true diver. You know that once a year it loses its [music] wings, hides in modest dress, and then grows its feathers back. You know that among its kin is one that lays its eggs in other birds nests without harming anyone. and you know that its ancestors were quacking back when dinosaurs were walking the earth. So the next time you're walking past a pond and see a duck, stop for at least a minute. Look at it for real. Not as a familiar and boring part of the cityscape, but as a living miracle you've passed by so many times without knowing anything about it.
Behind that plain appearance hides an ancient history, a whole set of astonishing abilities and a delicate connection to the living world around it. You don't have [music] to look for miracles on the other side of the planet. Sometimes they're swimming in the most ordinary puddle under your window, and all you have to do is want to see them. If this video helped you look at the familiar world in a new way, support the channel. Give it a like, leave a few words in the comments, and subscribe if you haven't already. That helps new episodes come out where we'll again find miracles where no one is looking for them. Thanks for staying with me to the very end, and I'll see you in the next video.
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