• 2 days ago
Imaginez un prédateur si furtif, si imparable, que vous ne sauriez même pas qu'il est là—jusqu'à ce qu'il soit trop tard. Pas de fuite, pas de cachette, pas d'échappatoire. Ce chasseur se déplace d'une manière que vous n'auriez jamais imaginée, frappant avant que vous puissiez réagir. Qu'est-ce que c'est ? Et comment parvient-il à être si mortel ? Regardez maintenant pour découvrir la terrifiante vérité sur ce prédateur invisible ! Animation créée par Sympa.
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Category

😹
Fun
Transcript
00:00You have one hour before giving your last breath.
00:03Even if there is just a second, you were in perfect health and nothing threatened your life.
00:09Good news, your life can still be saved.
00:13Effective antivenins are available, but if you choose to ignore the sting, you will pass the weapon to the left at once.
00:19This camouflage artist is the deadliest fish in the world.
00:23In total, there are about 1,200 venomous fish on our planet.
00:27But the stone fish is the most formidable.
00:30It has 13 dorsal fins capable of injecting an extremely toxic venom.
00:35Remember when I mentioned the camouflage skills?
00:38This is the main twist of this story.
00:40You see, unlike sharks or any other predatory fish, the stone fish will not attack you.
00:47It is not a predator, it is a prey.
00:49So to stay safe, it must protect itself in one way or another.
00:54Thus, it has developed a super ability to turn into stone, in a way.
00:59So, if you ever get stung by this one, it is not because it is aggressive.
01:04It is because of an unfortunate sequence of events.
01:07Most people have experienced this unpleasant experience simply because they accidentally walked on a stone fish while pretending to be a stone or a coral on the bottom.
01:17As you may have guessed, something that can easily pretend to be a stone is not exactly cute.
01:23These guys seem to have no scales.
01:26Their skin is covered with many veils and they are multicolored.
01:29You can see shades of gray, brown and orange, red and yellow.
01:35Sometimes they can even be covered with algae.
01:38They occupy a fairly vast territory in the Indo-Pacific Ocean.
01:42Which means they are everywhere.
01:44From Mauritius to Queensland in Australia.
01:47Well, we are going to need a warning here.
01:50This fact is very sensitive.
01:52But if you want to live long and in good health, I suggest you not to ignore it.
01:57It is a fly.
01:58Quite harmless and certainly much less powerful than you.
02:02A human being.
02:03Yet, there are chances that this nice companion can destroy your body.
02:07Here is how the story unfolds.
02:09Some time ago, a lady from the United Kingdom decided to go on a great trip to South America.
02:14It seems exotic and not common at all.
02:17Rochelle, who was then 27 years old, went to Peru with her girlfriend.
02:21On her return to her country of origin, she began to have severe headaches.
02:26She did not understand what was going on.
02:28Then, half of her face felt a vivid discomfort.
02:31And suddenly, a strange noise in her head began to haunt her.
02:35One day, she went to bed to wake up the next morning.
02:38And discover that her ear was soaked with a strange liquid.
02:41No blood, no water.
02:43Just one substance.
02:45She rushed to the hospital, where the doctors said she had an ear infection.
02:50But by examining more closely, the doctors discovered a hole in her auditory tract.
02:55It was about 12 mm, but it was crawling with larvae.
02:58Rochelle was lucky.
03:00The emergency brain scanner showed no major damage.
03:03The tympanum, the blood vessels, the facial nerves, everything was fine.
03:07The big question was, how to get the clots out of poor Rochelle's ear?
03:12We all understand that the inside of the ears is quite narrow.
03:15And even small tweezers were not very useful.
03:18To save the lady, the doctors decided to use olive oil.
03:22They expected the clots to drown.
03:24And indeed, two clots drowned.
03:27Yet, there were eight others left.
03:29The most frightening thing was that the laboratory analysis had shown that a new world-oriented fly,
03:34the official name of the fly that had disturbed Rochelle's health,
03:38had laid eggs in the auditory tract where the clots were crawling.
03:43But how the hell could this have happened?
03:46While she was on vacation in Peru, she crossed a swarm of flies.
03:50One of them entered her ear.
03:52She chased it, but she had plenty of time to lay eggs inside.
03:56The doctors helped Rochelle to expel the unwanted guests.
04:01Fortunately, there will be no long-term consequences.
04:04But we all understand that it could have been much worse.
04:08I don't need to tell you that cave exploration is extremely dangerous, right?
04:13In June 1990, a man named Gary Lutz took his sons, Buddy and Tim,
04:20for an adventure of speleology at the New Trout Cave in West Virginia.
04:26He had brought food, water and spare headlamps.
04:30But here's where he made a mistake.
04:32He left the bag behind him when they arrived at The Maze,
04:36a narrow passage with teethed rocks.
04:39They thought they would catch pay and supplies before their headlamp was discharged.
04:44Bad choice.
04:45The boys' headlamps went out shortly after,
04:48and their attempt to return on their feet made them get lost.
04:52Then, Lutz's headlamp also discharged,
04:55plunging them into total darkness.
04:57For five horrible days, they had no food, no water, no light.
05:02They began to cough up the dust of the cave and hallucinate because of dehydration.
05:07Fortunately, someone noticed that their car had been parked for days and called the authorities.
05:13The rescue team pointed out that the family had broken the cardinal rules of speleology.
05:18Always bring three sources of light each,
05:20and always inform someone of your destination and the time of your return.
05:26Some tourists never come back from vacation.
05:29They become statistics,
05:31and some people sometimes escape the accuracy of the searcher without even realizing it.
05:36Here's just one example.
05:38A tourist in Australia filmed himself manipulating an extremely dangerous creature
05:43and downloaded the video on Reddit.
05:45In the video, the tourist holds a blue ring octopus,
05:49with a mandarin inscription on the screen saying,
05:51A beautiful octopus.
05:53After filming, they shake the octopus out of their hands,
05:56and happily put it back in the water before they can steal it.
05:59The fact is that the blue ring octopus is one of the most dangerous marine animals in the world.
06:04It contains enough venom to kill 26 adults.
06:07The tourist didn't know how dangerous it was.
06:10People on Reddit went crazy.
06:12One person commented,
06:13Do they even know how lucky they are to be alive,
06:16after doing something so incredibly stupid?
06:21A woman from New Hampshire suffered serious burns
06:23after getting off the trail in Yellowstone National Park
06:27and falling into boiling water near the Old Faithful geyser.
06:31The sexagenarian, accompanied by her husband and their dog,
06:34had left the safety of the promenade
06:36and walked off the trail designated near the Mallard Lake trail
06:40When she crossed a thin crack above the water,
06:43she ended up with burns to the 2nd and 3rd degree on the bottom of her leg.
06:47Fortunately, her husband and dog were fine,
06:49but the lady was urgently transported to the hospital for treatment.
06:53Park officials remind everyone to stay on the promenades and trails
06:57in the hydrothermal zones and to be extremely careful.
07:01The ground there is fragile and thin,
07:03with boiling water just below the surface.
07:07Company animals are allowed in certain Yellowstone zones,
07:11but they are not allowed on promenades, hiking trails,
07:15in the hinterland or in the thermal zones.
07:18The hot springs of Yellowstone have injured
07:21and caused the premature loss of human lives
07:23more than any other natural feature.
07:26At least 22 people have died from injuries
07:29caused by the hot springs since 1890.
07:32Hey, what's buzzing?
07:34Oh, it's you!
07:37Jumping from a bridge in a river full of crocodiles,
07:39what could go wrong?
07:41It turns out, a lot of things.
07:43On New Year's Eve,
07:45Australian tourist Erin Langworthy
07:48decided to try the elastic jump of the bridge
07:50that connects Zimbabwe and Zambia,
07:52right next to the Victoria Falls.
07:55It's a 110-meter fall of pure adrenaline.
07:58But for Langworthy, things went wrong
08:01when her elastic jump rope broke.
08:04She plunged it into the Zambian river,
08:06famous for sheltering many crocodiles.
08:09Erin herself says it was a miracle that she survived.
08:12When she fell, she lost consciousness under the impact
08:15and felt like she was whipped all over the place.
08:18But the cold water brought her back to consciousness.
08:21It is easy to judge tourists who take risks like this,
08:25but the elastic jump is an activity
08:27practiced in this place for more than a decade,
08:30attracting more than 50,000 tourists each year
08:33and bringing income to Zimbabwe and Zambia.
08:36Authorities say the elastic jump is safe.
08:40The probability of an incident like Erin's
08:43is 1 in 500,000 jumps.
08:45So, I think Erin should buy a lottery ticket.

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