Back to Show
Deep Look
What Makes This Frog's Tongue So Fast AND Sticky?
Season 10
Episode 4
How are frogs and toads so amazing at catching bugs? They smack ’em with a supersoft tongue covered in special spit, which flows into every nook and cranny of their target. Then, in less than a second, that spit transforms into a tacky glue, yanking the meal back into the toad’s maw.
Support Provided By
4:38
Jellyfish clone themselves by morphing into a stack of squirming jellyfish pancakes.
4:28
As temperatures rise, the brown dog tick is more likely to feast on you.
5:46
This fuzzy acorn weevil uses her snout to drill through an acorn's shell.
6:41
Beekeepers and scientists are helping honeybees fight off varroa mites.
5:14
Ladybugs may be the cutest insects around, but they don't start off that way.
3:57
Do cockroaches -- daring, disgusting disease vectors -- have anything at all to offer us?
5:42
Covered in a shiny bubble, the alkali fly scuba dives in California's Mono Lake.
4:58
A “bee fly” is a freeloader that takes advantage of a bindweed turret bee’s hard work.
4:05
The scaled wormsnail cements its shell to a rock and snags its meals using mucus!
4:04
Step right up to see tiny springtails spin through the air with the greatest of ease!
3:44
Geckos navigate nearly any surface with an electron dance at the atomic scale.