Back to Show
Deep Look
Silkworms Spin Cocoons That Spell Their Own Doom
Season 9
Episode 7
Those precious silk garments in your closet were made by the caterpillars of a fuzzy white moth – thousands of them. Silkworms spin a cocoon with a single strand of silk up to 10 city blocks long. Humans have bred these insects into weaving machines that can no longer survive in the wild.
Support Provided By
17:48
Fire ants, kidnapper ants, honeypot ants and Argentine ants are ruthless!
4:42
Tiny parasitoid wasps might help you say bye-bye to those smelly mothballs.
4:36
The mosquito buzzing that you find annoying and disgusting is irresistible to a male mosquito.
4:12
A male long-jawed orb weaver spider uses his huge jaws to avoid getting eaten while mating.
4:47
Regal jumping spiders are masterful hunters with their athletic leaps, sharp fangs and lethal venom.
3:28
A rice weevil is a stowaway that sneaks into your pantry and turns your rice into its new home.
17:44
We hope your spring cleaning doesn’t uncover these house pests!
15:06
Praying mantises, barnacles, newts and earthworms have some of the strangest love lives.
14:54
Watch these hunters use stealth, speed and lethal weapons to dispatch their prey.
3:49
Excirolana chiltoni hang out in the wet sand at the beach and might nibble at your feet!
3:49
Green lacewings vibrate their bodies and sing to each other!
23:22
These five types of bees collect food and make their nests in surprising ways.