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17,800,004 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren •via X (Twitter)

10 Kommentare

Profilbild von MissFacto
MissFactovor 2 Jahren

It’s a rolling swarm of caterpillars 🐛

Profilbild von AlluringVee_💎
AlluringVee_💎vor 2 Jahren

It's a group of caterpillars, moving in a formation known as a rolling swarm. This rolling swarm of caterpillars moves faster than any single caterpillar😬

Profilbild von Ser, Lord
Ser, Lordvor 2 Jahren

Me searching the comments for the right answer

Profilbild von Trig
Trigvor 2 Jahren

Why does NASA spend all that money looking for aliens in space when we have aliens on our home planet?

Profilbild von Pharaoh of X
Pharaoh of Xvor 2 Jahren

It's fungus gnat larvae. Backstory: the larvae empire lost the war with an ant army and lost all their food, So many larvae ended up leaving to form a United new nation.

Profilbild von Chima Echefule
Chima Echefulevor 2 Jahren

I don't have any idea

Profilbild von A Life Without Humans
A Life Without Humansvor 2 Jahren

Those are fungus gnat larvae and it’s believed that they travel in snake like chains to help deter predators.

Profilbild von Adebayo Olumide
Adebayo Olumidevor 2 Jahren

Wait what

Profilbild von Yusuf Kailani
Yusuf Kailanivor 2 Jahren

Rolling swarms of caterpillars, also known as "caterpillar trains" or "processions," occur when large groups of caterpillars travel together in a line, often following one another in a continuous loop. This behavior is typically observed in species like the pine processionary moth caterpillars or tent caterpillars. They engage in this behavior for various reasons, including finding food, seeking shelter, or migrating to new locations. The sight of these caterpillar trains moving in unison can be both fascinating and mesmerizing to witness.

Profilbild von Ride_Guy
Ride_Guyvor 2 Jahren

I’m not sure, but when it’s done, this is the result

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