Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn)
5th Feb 20
⭐68.97%
: 7
Thor: Ragnarok
2nd Oct 17
⭐75.84%
: 12
A Quiet Place
3rd Apr 18
⭐74.00%
: 12
Wonder Woman
30th May 17
⭐72.15%
: 30
Dune
15th Sep 21
⭐77.82%
: 20
Us
14th Mar 19
⭐69.58%
: 7
Get Out
24th Feb 17
⭐76.18%
: 10
Suicide Squad
3rd Aug 16
⭐59.20%
: 8
Insidious
31st Mar 11
⭐69.44%
: 8
Spider-Man: No Way Home
15th Dec 21
⭐79.00%
: 27
The Shape of Water
1st Dec 17
⭐72.43%
: 5
Top Gun: Maverick
21st May 22
⭐81.70%
: 25
Joker
1st Oct 19
⭐81.34%
: 14
Captain Marvel
6th Mar 19
⭐67.98%
: 8
Twisters
10th Jul 24
⭐68.22%
: 9
Split
19th Jan 17
⭐73.41%
: 9
Create with Love ❤️ by Zaw Myint
How Some Jellyfish Are Born
⭐64.00% /
1st Jan 60 /
Documentary
At a marine biology station, a clump of algae reveals polyps, stomachs with limbs, limbs with buds, buds with poison cells. This animal reproduces by buds, which we watch close up in time-lapse images. In another kind of jellyfish, the buds grow inside then live outside for a few days until being on their own. Another produces eggs, sometimes self-fertilized. Some single eggs become buds with colonies. Another clump gathered at low tide consists of filaments of a colony - plumes with poison ends. In images taking 72 hours, we see filaments grow and produce a feeding organ from which a plume emerges. New jellyfish emerge from buds twice a day at set times to form a new colonies.