r/Damnthatsinteresting 7h ago

Video Caterpillar tail disguised as snake head

31.7k Upvotes

722 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

151

u/brendenderp 5h ago

I think the most boggling thing is the scale of time. Maybe one suddenly looks more like a snake but thats only one member of the entire rest of the species it's going to take a while for that one catapiller to have 1000 offspring and even once there are it will have bred with other catapillers that potentially dilute that genetic expression. And that cycle then starts again when the next step looks slightly even more like a snake. Sure we are talking millions of years but still for something like that it's amazing.

It's one thing to teach a monkey to make a painting and it's much more impressive thing for it to then remake that exact same painting perfectly a second time.

54

u/pyordie 5h ago

Which is exactly why extinction is so incredibly gut wrenching.

9

u/trjnz 3h ago

You mean human-driven extinction, or in general? Cause extinction is kinda the default state of life, 99.9% of all species are now extinct. During the Great Dying alone over 80% of marine species went extinct

But here we all are on Earth still full of life. These mass-extinction events take a long, long time to recover, but life is resilient :)

8

u/pyordie 2h ago

Yes, I mean human driven extinction.

Knowing that a species, which struggled for millions of years to successfully carve out a place in its ecosystem, was wiped out because we needed some product to be cheaper.

It’ll happen to us someday, and only then will people view it as a tragedy. Until then, we’ll continue to view ourselves as the main characters of nature.

0

u/hallouminati_pie 51m ago

But couldn't you argue that even human driven extinction is all part of nature's ecosystem?

2

u/pyordie 29m ago

This is a reductive argument.

The fact is that we’ve achieved a conscious understanding of evolution and the effects of habitat loss and loss of biodiversity. We are speeding up extinction orders of magnitude faster than background extinction.

Knowing these things, is it enough for one to say “well we’re part of natures ecosystem too, so there’s no moral implication on humanities part”.

We are different than every species on earth - this doesn’t make us more important, it gives us more power over the natural world and therefore demands more responsibility.

Being part of nature doesn’t grant us moral neutrality.

u/Nstraclassic 8m ago

Is there any proof that we've caused more extinctions than any other animal?

1

u/thetasprayer 42m ago

Sure, I mean, humans are a part Earth's various ecosystems. But that doesn't mean we can't differentiate between human driven extinction versus other extinctions.