8 Animal Friendships That'll Give You All the Feels - YouTube

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In the wild, it’s easy to imagine that every species is out for itself.
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But animals of different species form all sorts of relationships in nature,
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and some of them are downright friendly.
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That’s what you call mutualism: a relationship where both organisms benefit from the arrangement.
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Kind of like a “You scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours,
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because neither of us can scratch our own backs cuz our arms are wrong.”
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Such animal partnerships show just how interconnected the animal kingdom really is.
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So today, we’re gonna talk about 8 unexpected but very real animal duos,
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from hunting partners to grooming buddies,
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these animals make interspecies friendship look easy.
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Coyotes and badgers are both common predators in much of North America.
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But rather than fight for food, the two have been known to work together as hunting partners.
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You see, badgers generally hunt ground squirrels underground.
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They put dead ends in their tunnels, then scare them into that trap and dig them out.
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Sounds terrible. They are not friends. Not friends.
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Coyotes hunt these squirrels above ground
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by waiting until they venture far enough from their tunnels to pounce.
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And because their styles are so different,
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if these two predators team up, they can both benefit.
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When squirrels detect a badger, they often run above the ground to escape,
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right to where coyotes are waiting.
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And when squirrels detect a coyote, they usually retreat to their tunnels,
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putting them right where the badger wants them.
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A 1992 study found that when working together,
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coyotes captured 34% more squirrels than working alone.
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And while it’s harder to count the prey badgers catch when they’re in the dirt,
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badgers that work with coyotes spend more time underground.
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Biologists’ figure that’s because they’re hunting more or eating more,
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and either way, that’s a win for them.
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Both of these species are pretty smart and social and live fairly long lives,
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so it’s not too surprising that they’re able to form this kind of relationship.
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But scientists don’t see these pairings everywhere.
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They seem to occur more often where there are more coyotes and badgers,
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which makes sense, because there are a ton of them around, they’re bound to run into each other.
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And that means there’s more opportunity for an accidental assist to lead to a lasting partnership.
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They also seem to happen in areas where there’s a lot of dense, small bushes.
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These make it harder for both hunters to succeed solo,
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so the benefits of teaming up are all that more appealing.
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It’s not just predators that work together though.
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Prey species can also team up for extra protection.
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One of the most well-studied mutualisms is one that occurs
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between snapping shrimps and gobies, a kind of small fish.
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Dozens of species of these animals pair up.
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The shrimp is really good at digging, so it digs and maintains a burrow for the both of them.
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The goby, meanwhile, has better long-distance eyesight, so it watches out for predators.
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And in many pairings, the two communicate through touch.
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The shrimp taps the goby with its antennae to let it know that it’s there,
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and the goby flicks its tail to tell the shrimp that trouble’s brewing.
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Some species in this setup are obligate partners,
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meaning they literally don’t make it if they don’t have their brother from another mother,
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or like, I guess brylum from another phylum.
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Even when the partnership is optional, though,
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biologists have found that if you take away a shrimp’s fish buddy, it eats less,
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presumably because it’s more worried about being vulnerable while foraging.
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And in studies, gobies that don’t pair with shrimps tend to disappear.
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Without their well-maintained panic room, they just get eaten.
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Of course, it’s not always a single shrimp-fish pair:
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both the shrimps and the gobies will live with their mates, too,
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bringing the twosome to a foursome, or even a fivesome,
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since the shrimps frequently form thruples instead of couples.
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This partnership makes a lot of sense from an evolutionary perspective.
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Gobies are generally fond of hiding places,
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so it seems like they’d dart into a shrimp burrow on occasion.
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And the shrimps probably wouldn’t mind that,
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if having a goby roommate meant knowing when to duck underground.
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Then over time, selection favored individuals that formed partnerships,
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and the species began to influence each other’s evolution, or to co-evolve.
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Some scientists think they’re seeing this happen in real time.
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They’ve found species of shrimps and gobies that are doing their individual jobs together,
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but without the specific communication system.
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So basically, it’s the beginning of what is expected to be a beautiful friendship.
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Sometimes, though, a burrow isn’t cozy enough.
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Sometimes what you really need is a turtle butt. Take it from oceanic crabs.
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They have been known to make a home on the butts of sea turtles,
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specifically, the little area between the tail and the upper shell.
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See, the crabs can’t swim very far, so they live on anything that floats.
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But they prefer places where they can hide, which makes turtle butts the obvious choice.
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It’s a good home, too.
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The crabs on turtles tend to be big and healthy, suggesting they get plenty of food.
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They’re also more likely to be monogamous, since there’s room for two and only two.
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And the females are more likely to be brooding eggs;
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a clear sign to biologists that turtle butt is awesome habitat.
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For awhile, it wasn’t clear what, if anything, the turtles got out of having these rear-end residents.
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Scientists used to think that the crabs ate the turtle’s poop,
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which would have made this a strictly one-sided relationship.
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But studies of the crab’s stomach contents revealed that
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they actually feed on barnacles and other organisms that attach to turtles.
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Since these can damage the turtle’s shells and make it harder to swim,
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the crabs provide a valuable cleaning service.
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They’re like live-in maids. On your butt.
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Some rove beetles live in the fur of small South American mammals, especially rodents.
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At first, scientists thought these beetles were parasites,
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though that would have made them the world’s only blood-sucking beetles.
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But back in the 1980s, a pair of biologists questioned this idea.
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The mice didn’t seem to care that the beetles were there,
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which is weird, because these are not small beetles.
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They’re about a centimeter long, on a roughly fifteen centimeter-long mouse.
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The beetles could even walk across their faces and the rodents didn’t do a thing about it.
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But, when the scientists placed these beetles on another mouse species, things were totally different.
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The mice immediately scratched them off and killed them.
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A closer look revealed that the beetles don’t feed on the mammals directly;
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they eat the fleas and ticks that do.
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So, they get a nice, cozy place to live and all the bugs they can eat.
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And it turns out the beetles only attach to the mammals’ fur at night when they’re active.
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During the day, they just hang out in the nest.
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That is most likely how this mutualism started;
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the beetles stumbled upon the feast of parasites in the mammal’s nest and decided to stick around.
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At some point, they got so friendly with their furry roommates that they started hitching rides,
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that way, they wouldn’t miss a meal if the animal decided to spend the day somewhere else.
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Some small mammals have several nests; others don’t have a formal nest,
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and just curl up wherever they see fit.
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So sticking with the source of their meal is kind of important.
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And intriguingly, this beetle-mammal pairing seems to happen on other continents, too.
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There are a couple of species of rove beetles in Australia
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that sometimes hang out on rats and possums there.
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So far, we’ve mostly covered partnerships between species
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that wouldn’t otherwise bother each other.
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But predators and their prey can team up, too.
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Look no further than frogs and tarantulas.
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Large spiders are opportunistic hunters that often eat frogs,
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but several species have learned to shack up with their potential food.
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These spiders let the frogs live in their burrows undisturbed,
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even though they still eat other frogs; they’re somehow able to tell frog species apart.
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And scientists think this recognition is chemical.
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You see, when spiders grab a potential meal, first they ‘taste’ it with chemical sensors.
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And researchers have actually taken the skin from a spider’s partner frog species
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and glued it onto another frog that the spiders usually eat.
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Lo and behold, when a spider grabs a frog wearing one of these skins, it lets it go, like,
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“You have no quarrel with me, little frog. You are wearing the skin of my friend.”
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The frogs clearly benefit from this partnership, because, like,
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they’re not eaten by the spider, and they get a safe place to hang out.
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In return, scientists think the frogs eat ants and other tiny insects
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that would otherwise attack the spiders’ eggs.
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It’s not entirely clear how these particular frogs got so lucky,
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but the species involved may be generally toxic or otherwise unpalatable to the spiders.
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So it’s possible that spiders don’t really want to eat them in the first place,
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though how they learned to just let them chill in their burrow is still a mystery.
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Speaking of tiny bugs that like to eat eggs: mites are usually considered pests.
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But if you’re laying eggs in a popular egg-laying area, it’s good to have them on your side.
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Which is why some carrion beetles have struck a deal with them.
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As their name implies, carrion beetles eat dead things, and they lay their eggs in them, too.
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Well, them and every other fly and beetle in the vicinity.
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So, to get a leg up on the competition, the carrion beetles let the mites ride around on them.
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The mites eat up all the other eggs and larvae they can find,
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leaving the beetles with the perfect nursery for their eggs.
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In return, the mites get a free ride to food supplies they couldn’t otherwise reach.
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It’s so beneficial for the beetles and the mites alike that it has turned into a lifelong partnership.
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The mites reproduce in the same brood chamber as the beetles,
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so the mite babies can attach to the beetle babies from day one.
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But it’s a delicate partnership.
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You see, if there are too many mites, they tend to start eating the beetles’ eggs, too,
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reducing the brood’s chance of survival.
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Too few mites or no mites at all doesn’t immediately harm the beetles,
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so you’d think that they’d err on the side of caution.
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But without the mites, other critters, like, little worms called nematodes, reproduce unchecked,
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and the beetles end up carrying them along with them to each brood site.
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Those not-so-nice hitchhikers can harm the beetles’ young,
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either directly or by competing with them.
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So, without mites, every subsequent brood is a little less successful,
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fewer survive, and those that do are smaller.
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So ultimately, it’s in both the mites’ and the beetles best interest to team up.
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Sunfish are the world’s heaviest bony fish, but they also have another claim to fame:
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they’ve been known to host more than 40 different parasite species.
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No one likes having parasites, but in the open ocean,
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there aren’t any, like, cleaner fish stations to stop at.
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So, these oceanic travelers head to the surface and follow flocks of seabirds instead.
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Birds have no problem lending a beak, since they get a snack in the process.
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But it’s not exactly easy for them to spot a fish that’s underwater, even one as big as a sunfish.
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So the sunfish angle their huge bodies sideways at the surface and just sit there,
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patiently waiting for the birds to pluck off worms or other parasites clinging to their skin.
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People used to think that this cleaning behavior happened by accident.
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Sunfish spend a lot of time in deep, cold water,
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so they thought this surface behavior was just them, like, basking in the sun to warm up.
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But scientists have found this idea questionable, since there’s no relationship between
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how long the fish spend in cold water and how long they spend basking.
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It makes a lot more sense if the basking is for parasite removal specifically.
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These worms can cause serious damage, so it’s in the sunfish’s best interest to get them off.
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Perhaps the cutest pairing in the animal kingdom
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is the one between common warthogs and banded mongooses.
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Not meerkat. Mongoose. It’s not quite Timon & Pumbaa.
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We got real close, but it’s not.
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See, mongooses clean ticks and parasites off of the warthogs.
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If a group of warthogs runs into a band of mongooses,
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they signal their interest in spa services by lying down.
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Then, the mongooses approach and give them a full body anti-parasite treatment.
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The warthogs get clean, the mongooses get a snack.
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And as the 2016 article in Suiform Soundings describing the behavior notes,
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it’s only one of a few known cases of a mammal cleaning another mammal species.
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And one other thing that stands out: it only seems to happen in areas
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with a good number of people, too, which might explain how the friendship formed.
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You see, something similar happens with coatis,
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a small South American raccoon relative that looks surprisingly like a mongoose,
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and tapirs, an animal that is not all that different from a warthog.
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Both mongooses and coatis spend a lot of time around human settlements scrounging for food.
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And since garbage dumps are popular areas for wildlife,
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these animals end up spending a lot of time around other species.
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Biologists think that they spent so much time eating next to other species,
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that eventually they got comfortable enough to start picking food right off of them.
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As these 8 partnerships show, not every species is out only for themselves.
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Whether it’s for food, protection, or a little healthy grooming, a lot of animals
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have figured out that life can be a little bit easier when you have a little help.
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After all, when you’re trying to survive in the wild, you need every friend you can get.
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Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!
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If you think these animal friendships are pretty neat,
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you’ll probably love our episode on symbiotic bacteria.
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And to stay up to date with all of our episodes, be sure click on that subscribe button!
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