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How Grass Conquered The World. Even Antarctica.

World



This is how grass took over the world in just a few million years.

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CREDITS
Created by Dylan Dubeau
Executive Producer, Director, and Director of Photography: Dylan Dubeau
Host: Tasha the Amazon
Editor: Cat Senior
Researcher, Producer: Andres Salazar
Writer: Lauren Greenwood
Camera Operator: Colin Cooper
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Exploring the World of Plants and Fungi

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49 pemikiran pada “How Grass Conquered The World. Even Antarctica.”

  1. Kinda mindblowing to think that we are for the most part a product of, and part of, the grassland ecosystem.

    Balas
  2. Okay, I love this channel and all the hosts. But FFS DONT START doing that annoying open mouth thing like most SEO ytbers in the thumbnails. You’re better than that

    Balas
  3. the videos are interesting but i feel like animal logic are screwing themself over by making a channel with 2 subject, the algo isnt liking it

    Balas
  4. I have a hard time believing only a 25% of land is covered in grass? It might just be because i live in Oregon..

    Balas
  5. In the book "The Sand county almanac" The author Aldo Leopold suggests that we are slaves to grass rather than masters of the earth

    Balas
  6. Many grasses have rhizomes and stolons which make them some of the only plants capable of running away from stressors or toward more favorable habitat.
    Aggressive tropical grasses like St. Augustine grass have been known to smother bushes and small trees under a mat of stolons.
    Some grasses are allelopathic, meaning they poison other plants and grasses to make room for themselves.
    The C4 carbon fixation that grasses like corn, bamboo and miscanthus have is so efficient, that nothing on earth can beat them for biomass in a given area.

    Balas
  7. I find it fascinating how monocots gave rise to both the unassuming and useful grasses and also the wildly diverse Araceae which includes most popular houseplants like monstera and philodendron

    Balas
  8. Hey….

    I just love your videos!! I always wanted to be a professor of botany! But maybe I’ll be a historian because;
    I’m 18 & new to history or newly found the love of history. I asked my grandfather about this but he gave me an explanation I don’t think I can repeat….
    Why do people throughout history give J€w$ a hard time? And do they deserve it?

    Balas
  9. How did redwoods and red cedars evolve past their predators: they don't get sick, they don't rot….
    How where plants effected by the astroid?
    Do grasslands depend on disturbance: grazing, burning? How do our charismatic grazers create the ideal conditions for plants?
    Pleistocene park (using the mammoth step ecosystem to protect the permafrost) from an nerdy ecology perspective?
    ❤❤❤❤😂❤❤❤❤ Ty ty ty, srry

    Balas
  10. Well well well we evolved from some kind of monkeys, so why there are still monkeys on earth? Did they evolved back to monkeys? After seeing how we ended up as humanity

    Balas
  11. Omg, I’ve been trying to look into the evolutionary success of grass for a long time. It’s incredible how successful they are.thx!

    I also may or may not have an idea of making a plant evolution anime bc I’m that much of a nerd,but also seriously it’s cool

    Balas
  12. Victory Gardens, aka War Gardens, flourished in the United States during World War I & II in an effort to prevent food shortages during war time. The government imposed food rationing by encouraging civilians to plant their own vegetables, fruits and herbs gardens in available plots of land: front yards, back yards, rooftops, fire escapes, city parks, food forest . . .  Also, canning and preserves of produce were also promoted.

    The program was so successful that 20 million community gardens produced close to 40% of the U.S. fresh vegetables during the war.  The momentum quickly died after World War II ended and industry shifted away from war time production to domestic production.  The former war time chemical industries needed a new market for their retired war time commodities and started promoting front lawns full of green grass managed with chemical herbicides, fertilizers and pesticides repurposed from their stockpiles of military surplus weapons grade chemicals.  Ammonium nitrate repurposed itself from being the primary chemical ingredient in explosives & bombs to being used as a synthetic fertilizer to help plants grow.  Ammonium nitrate is derived from natural gas synthesized through the Habor-Bosch method and converted in to Ammonia, then combined with CO₂ to create Urea. Edible, medicinal and nutritious plants like dandelions were criminalized and branded as weeds requiring the eradication of theses felons from pure grass lawns with—toxic—chemical herbicides. 

    The American grass lawns models the European elites practice of displaying their wealth & abundance by misappropriating land arable for agricultural with nonproductive decorative flower gardens & landscaping.

    Balas
  13. Marvelous work as usual, Tasha. I have an idea for Danielle. For the next video, care to try discussing about the unique wildness of Przewalski's horse? Of all species of the Equus genus, this one is considered to be the only true wild horse in the world.

    Balas
  14. Im literally starting a variety of Dechampsia in my bedroom (it's warm and gets that nice evening sun when we have it) though it's been less than a week, and grass seed takes a bit to get going.

    Balas
  15. It's easy to forget that the most abundant plant on the planet is absorbing more carbon than all the world's forests combined and simply having a lawn is doing more to stop "climate change" than owning an EV and having solar panels all over your house ever could.

    Balas

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