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@christianheichel4 ай бұрын
Rainbow eucalyptus is also common in Hawaii now I believe
@sassa824 ай бұрын
Use metrics! Dont say acre. This is not understood by non-americans.
@joebob5024 ай бұрын
Hey I must say: I tried Magellan and the majority of the content is hilariously out-dated and/or low quality. But, if they pay the bills, more power to you. Just some constructive criticism ❤
@thorloki54494 ай бұрын
You missed the golden opportunity to say "Treenager" instead of teenager
@AokiZeto4 ай бұрын
05:04 it sound like cauliflower…..
@loganl37464 ай бұрын
Last week: Everything is actually a fish This week: Nothing is actually a tree 😂
@julianshepherd20384 ай бұрын
And shrubs don't exist.
@julianshepherd20384 ай бұрын
On the up side, we are all Africans which is nice.
@MontgomeryWenis4 ай бұрын
You forgot Eons' everything is and will be a crab.
@restezlameme4 ай бұрын
@julianshepherd2038 I genuinely love the fact that we can trace all of humanity to one proverbial Eve from prehistoric Africa. So freaking cool!
@buzzsburner.82864 ай бұрын
memento mori
@cameliaac4 ай бұрын
"Its like a tree that eats trees" the excitement on his face🤭
@paradisepipeco4 ай бұрын
Well, we all know that old saying, _"It's a tree eat tree world"._ At least that's what the talking vegetarian dogs say.
@elisebrown51574 ай бұрын
Wait until he finds out about kudzu!
@livijakovbasakovbasa61694 ай бұрын
3:46
@kathrynmceachern95034 ай бұрын
@@elisebrown5157surely, Hank knows about Kudzu?
@MrMarinus183 ай бұрын
Before large plants there were fungus that could grow up to 6 meters tall and possibly even taller. It likely has something to do with competition that modern mushrooms can't grow that tall.
@caroljo4204 ай бұрын
I live in SoCal, and there are Yucca trees literally EVERYWHERE! It's illegal to cut one down, and one man bought a lot that he wanted to build a house on. But there was a problem. Right in the center of the lot was a Yucca tree, and he wasn't allowed to cut it down or even move it. So he redesigned his home with an open-air patio in the center of the house.
@edwardlulofs4444 ай бұрын
Yep. I live there too. They are unique.
@xXJoeyXxcoooool4 ай бұрын
I love them
@mandrakejake4 ай бұрын
Must be an awesome house
@edwardlulofs4444 ай бұрын
@@mandrakejake I would love that house
@edwardlulofs4444 ай бұрын
@@xXJoeyXxcoooool me too
@grkuntzmd4 ай бұрын
My parents were born and grew up in Rio, Brazil. My father told me that when he was a kid, jabuticaba trees grew all over and they used to pick the fruits and eat them right off of the tree. He also told me that the juice stains EVERYTHING and is really difficult to wash out, so it was hard to hide the fact that he and his brothers were out snacking between meals.
@biazacha4 ай бұрын
I knew Jabuticabeira would be here as soon as I saw the title. Jabuticaba is actually the name of the fruit and the taste is alright - you just gonna be careful looking up cause as you can imagine all those little berries popping means the bark itself is pretty brittle…. when I was 11 had to go to the hospital cause a piece fell into my eye 😂
@LostCylon4 ай бұрын
Jabuticaba are also mainly water. Since birds etc eating the fruit will often poop while eating, but their droppings are are a much more highly concentrated form of nutrients, hence it's a win for the tree overall.
@nunyabiznes334 ай бұрын
I'm surprised jaboticaba still haven't been introduced and naturalized here in the Philippines and rest of SEA.
@festerallday4 ай бұрын
@@nunyabiznes33 they have been in Hawaii. Although they don't really invade like albezia or guava
@robertb68894 ай бұрын
They are delicious. Only rarely have I seen plumb-sized ones. Most appear like a grape with an extra thick skin.
@Naiadryade4 ай бұрын
Tree is a ~lifestyle~
@zolacnomiko4 ай бұрын
this is actually accurate XD
@Abdega4 ай бұрын
A *_vibe_*
@greenben37444 ай бұрын
Ah, druids...
@KBRoller4 ай бұрын
@@greenben3744 "Did you say 'transport these plants' or 'transport via plants'? I might have misheard... yeah, I'm in Canada now, so what?"
@splitman11294 ай бұрын
That doesn't even make sense. It's a shame the world is getting dumber even though education is just a click away.
@bl72404 ай бұрын
I had no idea dragon's blood was endangered, which makes sense since I'm seeing it used everywhere. This definitely opened my eyes and now I want to educate others to try and save that wonderful plant. Thanks, Hank.
@ivanlagrossemoule3 ай бұрын
Talking about seeing it everywhere, if you look up dragon tree you'll find that it's a super common houseplant and you might even have one. They're from the same genus as the dragon's blood tree, will look about the same when they mature, but they don't produce the resin.
@CaptainMonarda4 ай бұрын
I'm a horticulture student and I love your plant based videos! Thank you for making plants interesting for people.
@dxthehardyzway19974 ай бұрын
Did you watch the crash course on botany? It might interest you even if it is rehashing stuff you already know. It was awesome for me as a mycologist, and the presenter is delightful.
@CaptainMonarda4 ай бұрын
@@dxthehardyzway1997 Yes, I loved that series!
@VicusUtrecht2 ай бұрын
I love The Happening and unfortunately the masses scoffed at the chemical dispersal. That movie should have gotten people interested in plants.
@jacoL84 ай бұрын
I would love a "Bizarre Beasts" style channel or video series which focuses on weird and wacky flora/plants !
@Abdega4 ай бұрын
Freaky Flora!
@KBRoller4 ай бұрын
@@Abdega This is a much better name than what I first thought of, "Bizarre Treests" >_>
@TragoudistrosMPH4 ай бұрын
Floral Logic does some. Offshoot of Animalogic
@loxeizakillr4 ай бұрын
@@TragoudistrosMPHmy thought exactly
@tashokukisune4 ай бұрын
@@TragoudistrosMPHI came to say this!
@buzzsburner.82864 ай бұрын
Edit: ( a couple other trees than the redwood too) I'm honestly kind of suprised redwoods aren't on here. they might be pretty mainstream as a 'cool and weird tree', but there's a lot more than just them being tall. not only are they the tallest trees, they also support a variety of organisms ONLY found high in their canopies; bacteria, vertebrates, mosses, and even other trees that only grow out of their already existing high branches. they also grow roots straight out of those canopies to catch the mist coming off the pacific coast, on top of being one of the only known conifers to be a clonal species; like the Joshua tree in this video, they can grow 'new trees' (genetic copies) of themselves, straight up from their roots. because they're rhizomous, (and we don't know if this is something specific to clonal conifers, or just the coast redwood) when one gets cut down or dies, a 'fairy ring' pops up around the stump, which is essentially just those new rhizomous trees from its roots, but in a perfect fairytale-esque circle around where the tree fell. Baldcypress trees are also a very weird tree. they are one of few deciduous conifers we know of (think pine tree that loses all its needles in the winter like maples, oaks, locusts etc.), and they also almost exclusively live in swamps. because of this, they have very wide bases with TONS of large 'spikes' sticking up through the water connected to their roots, called knees. nobody really knows why they grow these knees, some people think it's because they pull in oxygen, but the trees showed no lethargy in growth when they were cut off in multiple studies (my personal theory is that it's because they were evolved to break up big waves that could knock the tree over in the swamps they are native to.) quaking aspen are another amazing tree. they have white bark, just like paper birches, and with beautiful yellow, nearly circular leaves in the winter, and yes, they are also clonal with their rhizomes. however, while this sounds like a normal tree, one in particular is technically the OLDEST, LARGEST KNOWN, AND HEAVIEST LIVING ORGANISM IN THE WORLD. and while this sounds ridiculous, there is a 'forest' in Utah, which is just one individual quaking aspen named 'Pando' ('I spread' in latin) which has grown to a size of 110 acres, weighing 13 million pounds, with more than an estimated 50k individual trunks, all connected to the same root system. there is no way to know, because each trunk only lives for 50-100 years, but scientists estimate it is also the oldest living organism, at somewhere between 10k-15k years old, which would make it not only older than the pyramids, but also alive at the same time as wooly mammoths, sabretooth tigers, giant ground sloths and many other now extinct species from both north America that likely walked through it, and from all over the world as well.
@kathleendavidson33164 ай бұрын
I came into the comments specifically to bring up the quaking aspen. They grow around here and they look and sound so pretty.
@TitularHeroine4 ай бұрын
This is awesome, thank you!
@paradisepipeco4 ай бұрын
@@kathleendavidson3316 You learn something new ever day. Today I learned that if it looks like like a duck, and walks like a duck, and quaks like a duck, it might be a quaking aspen. Hooda thunkit? Go figure.....
@ElevatorLasagna4 ай бұрын
This is sick as hell, thank you so much for writing this. I didn’t know about pando. Comments like these are why I actually bother to read the comments on scishow (I don’t usually bother on KZbin)
@merveilleuxetmagique3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for this lesson! Awesome!
@loveboundselkie4 ай бұрын
As a librarian at an arboretum, THANK YOU for agreeing that trees aren’t real, Hank and SciShow! Let me tell you that was a weird moment of realization two weeks into my fancy new plant librarian job.
@JeremyPaulStiles4 ай бұрын
Vegetables aren't real either.
@cavvieira4 ай бұрын
Okay, help me out here. There are non vascular plants (mosses and the like) and vascular ones. And don't the vascular ones at least get divided in monocots (grasses) and dicots (plants with distinct stem and leaves like herbs, bushes and trees)? I get that we likely won't find an evolutionary distinction between trees and bushes and probably even little herbs, but what is the lowest clade that we can confidently say "here are all the trees. Plus some other plants too, but no trees beyond this"?
@emilydavis1624 ай бұрын
Dude that sounds like the most incredible job ever
@lamiaceae77744 ай бұрын
@@cavvieira Yeah, this video is incorrect in saying there is no such thing as trees. Yes, there is no 'Taxanomical definition of a tree', but there are CERTAINLY defining characteristics of trees. Shrubs are included in trees. They require woody stems, and must be perennial. That's the basis. The Yucca listed in this video looks like a tree, but it's absolutely not a tree. It doesn't have a true woody stem, just a dense herbaceous one. Trees cannot be succulent or herbaceous following the definition of distinct woody bark.
@kenmartin76944 ай бұрын
I'm treed.
@festerallday4 ай бұрын
I am an arborist in Hawaii and we have all of these trees. jaboticaba taste like a grape and a plum. Banyan are regularly one acre in size out here
@stop-the-greed3 ай бұрын
Hi from syilva arb UK
@nickiemcnichols53972 ай бұрын
Hi, retired arborist/urban farmer here. I was surprised to find that a banyon can actually outgrow an aspen!
@festerallday2 ай бұрын
@@nickiemcnichols5397same principle but banyan have mostly aerial roots that spread
@barbthegreat5862 ай бұрын
When I almost threw up when I first saw jabuticaba tree because I thought the tree was infected with some vile parasite (the fruits). I've never felt comfortable eating it.
@bgbrofish4 ай бұрын
Just went to Hawaii and saw two of these beautiful trees! Rainbow eucalyptus and banyans
@andrewgraves40264 ай бұрын
Neither is native to poor invaded Hawaii, sadly. I, too, am lucky enough to have experienced both without going to SE Asia or India.
@flamethrowex4 ай бұрын
Don't forget the pisonia trees native to Lady Musgrave island, that make their own fertiliser by trapping birds with an abundance of sticky seeds and letting them die and decompose. 'straya. (Annother Australian one, many of our wattles technically don't have leaves; they grow the stipules of the leaves to be large enough sizes to photosynthesise instead.)
@ulgenrabishlave46454 ай бұрын
My favorite story as a kid was le petit prince (his home planet get overwhelmed with baobabs) so i started one from seed 10years ago and as been my pride and joy since then 😁
@bartman644 ай бұрын
My toxic trait is every time I see an interesting tree, I want one
@blakake4 ай бұрын
Eucalyptus trees are a big problem in California. Their oils are flammable and cause wildfires.
@LordOfElysium4 ай бұрын
@@blakake o…kay?
@remliqa4 ай бұрын
@@blakake So you're saying I should make firewood farm with them.
@RainAngel1113 ай бұрын
I'd love to have a baobab
@Manj_J9 күн бұрын
Same! I don't even have enough land space in my yard for a dang lemon tree, let alone all the other ones! But omg, imagine having all the cool trees! All the pretty ones! All the fruit trees! It'd be a tree paradise and I'd be in heaven 😍
@frikativos4 ай бұрын
Here in the Canary Islands we have a relative of the Socotri dragon tree (dracaena cinnabari). Ours is called "drago" (dracaena draco), and it also bleeds.
@Tser4 ай бұрын
Another Seussian tree: Look up the boojum tree! Fouquieria columnaris grows only on the Baja California peninsula and one small isolated population in Sonora, Mexico, and it is so weirdly awesome!
@Dylan-vd6rz4 ай бұрын
Trees, crabs, moles. These are the shapes we should've been learning as children!!!
@therongjr4 ай бұрын
That's right! It goes in the square hole!
@ava96164 ай бұрын
personally my favorite shape is crab. cool little guys
@christopherchapman9894 ай бұрын
missed opportunity at 5:30 "treenager"
@JD-qq8fz4 ай бұрын
Agent Chapman reporting for Missed Ops
@Dzdzovnica4 ай бұрын
who is this treen and why does someone/-thing want to age it? /j
@TitularHeroine4 ай бұрын
@@Dzdzovnica It is Groot.
@witzman3 ай бұрын
youtube.com/@atreeager
@Skanking-Corpse4 ай бұрын
Im genuinely surprised the sandbox tree also known as the dynamite tree didn’t make the list. It’s perhaps the most dangerous tree in the world as literally every part of it wants to hurt or kill you. Its fruit literally explodes into pointy bits of shrapnel and its sap is so poisonous it can cause severe burns.
@Ekilibrion4 ай бұрын
The face Hank makes at 3:46 😭😭😭"It's like a tree that eats trees"
@thatguy62254 ай бұрын
Lol, paused to post exactly that. Like an excited kid. Love the energy.
@joeybulford52664 ай бұрын
Hahahahaha 😂😂😂
@ZannerIn4 ай бұрын
Yes I thought the same 😂😂😂
@Jynx2154 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Banyans make great houseplants, and are available at most plant stores under the nickname Ficus Audrey
@Jenny_Digital4 ай бұрын
When I read Ficus Audrey, I immediately remembered Little Shop of Horrors! Oh my. OTOH, I now have a desire to try weird fruits.
@entropic-decay4 ай бұрын
Dragon's Blood tree resin has also been used for varnish specifically for wooden musical instruments, such as violins.
@jonnyphenomenon4 ай бұрын
There's a recipe in the old mechanics handbook that reads the a witch's curse. It's titled "varnish for philosophical instruments" and "best dragons blood" is one of the ingredients. (Along with crushed glass and other wild ingredients). Look out up
@nickiemcnichols53972 ай бұрын
Look up the Red Violin. It’s weird.
@Codexionyx1014 ай бұрын
I remember visiting Hawai'i and getting to see rainbow eucalyptus trees in person. They're even more stunning than in pictures.
@myladycasagrande8634 ай бұрын
I saw them in Costa Rica - a bunch together that were like an enchanted forest!
@astralb.26474 ай бұрын
Some "normal" trees also produce saps and resins that resemble blood. I saw it on a tree as a 12-year-old and actually called the police because it genuinely looked like someone's head had been smashed against the trunk repeatedly, it was so gruesome. The cops were very worried/shocked by the scene as well until a sample was taken. That sure scared the hell out of me!😂
@vivrbn4 ай бұрын
3:46 "It's like a tree that eats trees" You were way too excited there ...lol...
@duanesamuelson22564 ай бұрын
You can see strangler figs in the palm beaches and south. Quite a few on the gumbo limbo nature trail (its between the Atlantic and intercoastal in boca raton if anyone cares). They also rescue sea turtles etc there
@vivrbn3 ай бұрын
@@duanesamuelson2256 Interesting. Thanks for the info.
@ms.debourghofrosings68294 ай бұрын
The Bristlecone Pine should be included in this discussion. It’s a tree that lives above the tree line and can live four to five thousand years. Their longevity and their habitat are closely related. The lousy soil conditions (high and dry desert) necessitate a long life to produce enough seedlings to make life worth living.
@RainAngel1113 ай бұрын
It's basically a tree extremophile, but it isn't very obviously different or extraordinary like these others. It's recognizable as a pine and less obviously unique
@Metalkatt4 ай бұрын
Hank *spooky voice*: Blood coloured sap! Me: Ooh, I hope that's Dragon's Blood. It smells soooo good.
@mrhyney14 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@miezepups154 ай бұрын
Next to a path in the field where I live, there was a single rowan tree. The person who owns the field didn't like how big the rowan tree was getting. So they cut it down. Now there's close to 100 rowan trees which have grown from the roots and I feel like, it's a bit overkill but that tree certainly made its point.
@durch_meine_Augen4 ай бұрын
1. LOVE banyans! I saw a ton of them in NOLA on a walking tour in early 2005. They were majestic! Them and mangroves are 2 favorites because of how they grow 2. Also love that rainbow eucalyptus. It's so beautiful.
@airypersiflage4 ай бұрын
I was surprised to come upon a planting of rainbow eucalyptus trees at the Dole pineapple farm in Hawai'i. I'd never heard of them and stepping into a Crayola-like forest was the most magical experience. They're much more multi colour in person and do look painted!!!
@dragonbornluna52744 ай бұрын
The only way I can get my shots and blood drawn is talking to the doctor about trees. So now I have more trees to entertain them with.
@yland60034 ай бұрын
Roots are so fascinating. The vanilla orchid has adaptable roots like banyan trees. The roots start as arial roots but can turn into terrestrial roots, in the right conditions.
@runnergo13984 ай бұрын
And supposedly trees can communicate through roots, too.
@abydosianchulac24 ай бұрын
I was rooting cuttings of Winterberry holly at home, and saw these strings growing off it all up and down the stems. I thought it was a parasite like dodder, but it turns out it was so humid in the box, and they love water so much, that they were sending out roots from every node above ground as well as below. I was able to double my number of successful cuttings that year.
@jhndr0nia4 ай бұрын
There is not that much difference between "aerial" and "terrestrial" roots actually
@yland60032 ай бұрын
@@jhndr0nia the function similar, but the difference is present. The terrestrial roots on Vanilla develop fuzzy Mycelium which assists in the symbiotic relationships between plant roots and mycorrhizal fungi. Areal roots on vanilla don’t possess mycelium and can’t access all the benefits from the mycorrhizal fungi symbiosis. Specifically in Vanilla, areal roots provide mechanical support to anchor the vine. The difference might seem small, but the jobs are different. One sucks water from air, uses photosynthesis, and anchors the plant. The other can break through to inaccessible nutrients deep in the soil. Not much of a difference, but enough to have separate titles.
@stonefish13184 ай бұрын
0:10 being a tree is a lifestyle and philosophy!
@psychic57193 ай бұрын
I've heard it's a branch off budism
@hugoiwata4 ай бұрын
In Brazil, "jabuticaba" is sometimes used as a pejorative slang for something unusual that "only exists in Brazil"
@hugoiwata4 ай бұрын
To be fair, the fruit jabuticaba exists in many other countries
@pattheplanter4 ай бұрын
@@hugoiwata To be fair, Jair Bolsonaro is also a native Brazilian who has existed temporarily in other countries.
@seth88774 ай бұрын
This is the first video ive seen where youre back and it feels so good to see you well
@megatronjenkins24734 ай бұрын
Your hair looks good, man!!! Keep up the Good Fight!!!
@vpolite14 ай бұрын
I am surprised he didn't talk about Giant Sequoias. The tops of some of them are so large that they have "top soil". They actually have other species of trees growing out of this soil.
@anyascelticcreations4 ай бұрын
That is one of the coolest things I've ever heard about plants. I knew about the soil. But I didn't know there was enough to grow other trees.
@marvolom7874 ай бұрын
Years ago i bought 'Dragon's Blood' watercolour paint, because i liked the name. I didn't know at that time it was made out of dragon's blood resin. Anyways, it's beautiful rich red color that have bit of 'rusty' tones to it. Works really well if one intend to paint blood
@SariloLecram4 ай бұрын
Jabuticaba is my favorite fruit. Our family farm have dozens of it 😊. Sad part is it takes about 10 years to start giving fruits and grows very slowly. Also a popular exotic bonsai tree outside Brazil.
@KBRoller4 ай бұрын
At one of the two colleges I attended, we had a rainbow eucalyptus on campus. It was beautiful to walk past each day! And right behind it was the library, underneath which... was a Dunkin' Donuts 😂 The juxtaposition of beautiful nature and delicious human achievement.
@LawTaranis4 ай бұрын
4:06 small correction- they are the largest trees *above the ground* that's an important distinction because there are trees like Pando in the world.
@arthurfrayn76194 ай бұрын
I've been meaning to look up trippy trees to use for landscape paintings so thanks. This is awesome.
@erinmoore64634 ай бұрын
I hope you guys cover Madrona trees one day. They’re so cool.
@dorknoremak4 ай бұрын
Rainbow euc! This is a banger! Literally an album drop. This vid is 🙌🏼
@mudgetheexpendable4 ай бұрын
Another "tree" that fits this complete botanical weirdo profile is native to the Galapagos ( of course): Scalesia pedunculata Basically the world's tallest daisies.
@ninin118 күн бұрын
My aunt has a jabuticaba tree in her backyard, they’re pretty common, and though i’ve thought it is weird they fruit from their bark, i’ve never truly considered how amazing it is. they taste super delicious btw
@zThisPlay3 ай бұрын
Trees aren't real... got it
@Hazdazos4 ай бұрын
Fascinating video. While not as wild as the trees on this list, I'd also add Ipe and Cumaru wood which is so dense it is nearly fire proof and so hard you typically need to cut it with tools usually reserved for metal.
@erickhian4 ай бұрын
Im from Brasil and Jabuticaba is awesome! I'm like to make a liquor out of it, it's just cachaça (Brazilian run ) and you just throw a bunch of Jabuticaba fruits on the bottle and leave there for a while. It's the best liquor that I ever had!!
@artemesiagentileschini73484 ай бұрын
I saw a Mindanao rainbow gum eucalyptus, I click. I am a simple man
@billfarnsworth75364 ай бұрын
Great to see you branching out into interesting plant topics. Gotta love trees!
@merveilleuxetmagique3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much+++ . Wonderful lesson, stunning pictures!
@paulguastavino32224 ай бұрын
im so glad you beat cancer you Champ!! keep up the amazing science spreading Hank!!
@johnashleyhalls4 ай бұрын
So many cool tree forms but I think one was missed. The world spanning varieties of Arbutus. I have only seen, and touched, the type in the Pacific Northwest and can report that the exposed skin (where the bark has been shed) does mostly feel LIKE SKIN! Dear Hank, you need to go to the Oregeon or Washington coast to experience this tree that looks like a supersized rhododendron. Love your stuff, so glad we get to have more time with you in the world.
@brianpowell50824 ай бұрын
The awesome Pacific Madrone (Arbutus menziesii)! They are actually related to the Rhododendrons, but more closely to manzanitas!
@zolacnomiko4 ай бұрын
The first three trees on the list are all common where I live in Hawai‘i!
@earlaker4 ай бұрын
"Pando" a quaking aspen in Utah's Fishlake National Forest, laughs at your 5 acre Banyan tree. It is the world's biggest tree and spans 106 acres! It is the world's biggest single living organism.
@firelunamoon4 ай бұрын
I love that this episode came out of someone finding a bunch of cool tree photos and deciding it needed to be a video 😁
@justinatherpointofview73864 ай бұрын
A tree trunk is just a plant stem. Blowing my mind again Hank! Also, I’m surprised you didn’t mention the sandbox tree, another weird one. Great video tho. 😊
@MiepyCat4 ай бұрын
There are so many other really weird trees you could've easily made a top ten, wether that includes Manchineel, Gingko, Bristlecone pine, Cashapona, Sequoia, Pando, sandbox tree... I could probably do a whole essay about the topic. I could teach you how to care for succulents too Hank ;D
@Spectacurl4 ай бұрын
In Costa Rica they make a park full of the Rainbow trees. I remember them from childhood and there were a lot of them, basically a small artificial forest. They cut them all very recently, because they are not from Costa Rica and well… all the animals hate them
@merlapittman50344 ай бұрын
Fantastic video! I knew some of these things already, but somehow, the one that really stood out to me is that the baobab is a succulent. I never heard that before!
@BritishBeachcomber4 ай бұрын
I found a Banyan tree in Sri Lanka. It only spread to an acre, but was like a jungle. It was so cool underneath, even at 35°C (95°F) outside
@zeddybear2574 ай бұрын
What amazing trees. This was a particularly interesting episode.
@crimsonraen4 ай бұрын
Sooooooooo cool! Thanks for the video Hank! :D
@sharkzillah4013 күн бұрын
My friend's neighborhood growing up had a jaboticaba tree! The fruit are delicious. Grapes are the closest flavor, but they also have a pit inside the fruit, abd the pit is coated in a membrane with a sour flavor.
@ped-away-g13964 ай бұрын
dragon's blood tree is a living proof that we can't have nice things. when you're too useful you'll be exploited to extinction.
@BleuSquid4 ай бұрын
4:53 The concord grape gets its name from the town of Concord, MA (Yes, the same Concord of the famous ride of Paul Revere), where it was developed in 1849. If you ask any local, they'll tell you the correct pronunciation is identical to the word "conquered" (with or without the Boston accent).
@BleuSquid4 ай бұрын
I almost forgot ... the other pronunciation is reserved for the supersonic plane with the French name, the Concorde.
@meganperry13884 ай бұрын
So I read that as concerned ape... I was very confused as to why the video game developer for Stardew Valley was being talked about on this kind of video.
@BleuSquid4 ай бұрын
@@meganperry1388 LMAO
@eiaboca1Күн бұрын
Your brief mention of a particular gene being a direct causal force makes me think of Phillip Ball's book "How Life Works," which makes a very cool argument about complex systems dynamics being fundamental to life, genes only being a constituent part. You might like it! I'm learning a lot from it.
@TamTam_774 ай бұрын
I live on Hawaii island, and the banyan trees are amazing to see! The rainbow eucalyptus are beautiful ❤️
@nerdynanny4 ай бұрын
SOMEONE SEND THIS MAN TRUNK FRUIT.
@SimSam-Oke4 ай бұрын
So interesting! Please more vidéos on plants and trees. Thanks for high quality, originality and pédagogy. Wish only a few seconds more for thé photos or explainatory drawings😊
@sarahfingerhutherbst37304 ай бұрын
Jabuticabas are just the sweetest in looks and taste! When they are not fruiting or blooming they are all spoted and cute! Just the best fruit tree ever :3
@Articulate994 ай бұрын
Always informative, thank you.
@sirjamesfancy4 ай бұрын
Beautiful video, I love trees. Can we have a part 2?
@leonardo.10244 ай бұрын
A lovely and fascinating video, as always. A speculative suggestion, nothing more, but it struck me during the fruiting tree bit that maybe the team could use lines closer to "why this mutation (might have) brought this species success" instead of variations on "why this tree developed this trait/strategy" to better fit/normalize/inculcate the actual processes of evolution vs creationist (or animist, I guess) mindsets?
@eldritchyarnbeing32954 ай бұрын
8:58 "are you suggesting seeds migrate?"
@MrMoosu5 күн бұрын
I really appreciate the intro because sometimes I (in a surprisingly completely sober state) look at trees and go "Dang these things are weird, like look at this long Boi. What is it? What makes a tree a tree" and then I snap back to reality and question if my coworkers slipped something in my coffee
@TheRinYT4 ай бұрын
Great video, as always! These trees are super interesting, and I'm glad I got to learn about em!
@sevearka4 ай бұрын
I love trees, and particularly weird ones. I am growing three Dracaenas and one Baobab at inside my home in little pots. Unfortunately I live in Sweden so they don't get as much sun as they would need. Grew them all from seeds! Also have a ginkgo I'm very fond of.
@RichardFoster-v6r4 ай бұрын
Growing fruit on their trunks also relieves trees of the need to use resources for growing branches strong enough to support the weight of that fruit, an advantage that anyone who has ever propped up the branches of a backyard fruit tree cultivar to keep them from breaking or touching the ground will appreciate
@TearyEyesAndersonReacts4 ай бұрын
Scientifically speaking... Trees don't have Bark{s}... They "Meow" instead, but this is mostly heard when a tree falls in the forest, and they are left alone. 😉
@GardenUPLandscape4 ай бұрын
Plants are freaking amazing ❤️❤️❤️🌲🌳🌴 trees are no exception! I'm kind of surprised the Sandbox tree and monkey puzzle tree weren't on your list. But these were still fascinating!
@KiriKiriKiki4 ай бұрын
My horticulture professor, bless her heart, was obsessed with Africa and the Baobab tree (which sounds really wrong when you say it). Bless her, the university forced her to retire. The Baobab is such an important tree to local tribes across Africa.
@TMtheScratcher4 ай бұрын
At 3:14 - you say very astonished "5 Acres", but me as a european using the metric system, I was only astonished after a google search. Please add some text with metric units, too. Thanks
@sluttymacycheezboiiii4 ай бұрын
I oppose this learn you some American
@TheThief98124 ай бұрын
Acres are widely used in more rural areas of Europe For example, I have no idea how many km my property covers, but I know it's about 2 acres A km measurement would also be useful, but acres are not one of those weird imperial measurements, it's more common than not
@TMtheScratcher4 ай бұрын
@@TheThief9812 yes, they are used elsewhere, but this does not change the fact, that a large proportion of the audience does not understand it. That's why I suggest to add a text remark in the editing of the video, that both audiences get it
@TMtheScratcher4 ай бұрын
@@TheThief9812 or tldr: why not using just both
@samandom87723 ай бұрын
You could fit 20 of them in Pooh's home.
@DerfLrakАй бұрын
My wife and I saw the Rainbow Eucalyptus and Banyan trees on Maui. Amazing plants
@Stogryn4 ай бұрын
When you mentioned the bleeding trees, I was hoping it'd be the Bloodwood Corymbias (in the same Family as Eucalypts) If anyone's curious why they're called that, look them up - and just remember it's only sap.
@tiffanymarie97504 ай бұрын
The universe is definitely like 90% microbes, 9% crabs and trees, and 1% everything else.
I know you guys covered it in a different video, but I'd love a shout out to Pycnandra acuminata, the New Caledonian tree that absorbs nickel from contaminated soil and bleed bright teal/blue sap.
@DEMONOFLOVEANDDEATH4 ай бұрын
Bless the SciShow. Stat healthy Hank
@danilincks58094 ай бұрын
Jabuticaba is the fruit and jabuticabeira is the tree. The fruit is absolutely delicious!
@austinoliver74634 ай бұрын
Redbuds, a very common species of native and planted tree here in the US, also produce pink flower buds on the stems. These flowers are edible and taste like sweet peas! They can be a nice little snack on a walk :)
@bethsmith34214 ай бұрын
This just reinforces that I really like trees (not trees?!?). So many distinct plant forms that have used the tree shape to help its survival. So very cool 😎!
@pressuredroping4 ай бұрын
Very surprised Scalesia weren't included on the list, they are some of the only trees on the Galapagos islands and are actually types of Daisies!