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In this video, discover how elephants, fish, crickets and the venus fly trap sense touch and vibrations.
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How elephants, fish, crickets and the venus fly trap sense changes in pressure.
Right then children. Today we鈥檙e going to be looking at plants and animals and the different ways they use touch and vibrations.
You hear that chirping sound? That鈥檚 a cricket. Now crickets are very sensitive to vibrations and use them to sense danger. If they stop chirping that usually means something鈥檚 wrong.
Looks like everything鈥檚 just fine over here!
Ah, the Venus flytrap鈥 a flesh-eating plant that senses touch through little hair-like spikes on these unusual leaves. If an insect is foolish enough to trigger the spikes, the leaves close like a mouth and it gets gobbled.
Better not hang around here!
Vibrations travel faster through water than they do through air, so fish can easily sense movement on a lake.
They feel vibrations through special sense receptors along what鈥檚 called their lateral line.
Are you determined to become a fish supper? Come along now鈥
Ah, an elephant!
Elephants use vibrations to communicate over great distances by stomping the ground.
The vibrations travel through the ground and the elephants sense each other鈥檚 messages through their feet.
That means 鈥渟tand back.鈥
Oh dear鈥 Right then, come along children.
Children?
Well, flies will be flies I suppose鈥
Find out more by working through a topic
How do different animals communicate using sound?
How do different animals hear?
How do different animals see?
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