Really interesting video but it has some factual errors: --- The Pando aspen is no longer regarded the largest organism on Earth. In the Malheur National Forest in Oregon there is a single specimen of the armillaria ostoyae fungus that is believed to cover 9.1 km2 of land and weigh a staggering 35,000 tons. That is more than 20 times the area and almost six times the weight of the Pando aspen. --- The quaking aspen has mixed polidity, that is some specimens are diploid, others triploid. The diploid ones are perfectly fertile and the triploid ones can also reproduce sexually although with difficulty. --- The Pando aspen is by far the biggest and oldest clonal tree we know of but the ability to grow multiple trunks from a single root isn't unique to the quaking aspen - it's actually quite common among trees.
I live in Colorado and 30+ years ago, I didn't know what to do with my backyard. So I planted an aspen tree in the middle of it and now have a small aspen grove for my dogs to run through and have shade whenever they need it! It's awesome actually!
Hi Anton I personally would love to see a video on time crystals. There have been some very interesting advances recently that I'd like to see covered. Well made video as usual :)
I just wonder if Anton is a real human sometimes, His vids are all so good and accurate. That it makes ya wonder if Anton is a real life super intelligent organisem in the name of Science. ✌️
The reason why there is not a strong correlation between physical distance and genetic distance is that -- with Pando being 18-60 thousand years old, and each sprout lasting only 100 years, that would mean about 180-600 generations of sprouts. If you were to trace linearly back from a current sprout to it's Nth grandparent, the path would look much more like a random walk within the grove than a liner travel away from a radiative spot. So, for example, a sprout may find itself right next to -- or even replacing -- it's great-grand-parent. Once an entity reaches a few hundred years old, the vast majority of new sprouts will be replacing fallen predecessors rather than breaking new ground.
Wait, I thought there was a massive mushroom colony (called the Humongous Fungus?) spanning 2,385 acres/estimated 35,000 tons (Pando weighs ~6600 tons). The fungus sounds more massive to me? Also what's with all the bots?
@@filipe5722 I read some more on it cause i was a little confused how it could weigh 5-6 times more and not have more mass. Feel stupid now though cause the fungus are not a single entity exactly, just clones of each other in incredible concentration. That does shine a new light on how unique this single branching tree is and how weird its' off shoots show genetic mutations, not to mention its' age.
Have you heard of the sydney sea grass that is growing off the coast of western Australia?? It grows the same way, and has no natural predators as it is native to the east coast but somehow some found its way all the way across the country and has been growing nonstop ever since. It is suposedly bigger than pando, one plant with fields of clones
Oh man, how I love to camp, hike and fish amongst the aspens. Aspen viewing is a multi-million or even billion, dollar industry. Driving the mountain ranges in October is breathtaking, awe inspiring. The sight can bring tears of joy to your eyes.
My Paw Paw grove spreads similarly. But it produces seeds in it's fruit also. I have seen quaking aspens on Michigan. I would like to get a start for my tree collection of 8.5 acres.
I used to live in Loa (first town southeast of Pando), and we started some quakies on our property. (Got them from Bowery Haven area, up at the north end of the lake, where I used to work.) Just dug up a couple of small ones and transplanted them along the fence between our driveway and our pasture. That was 55 years ago... the current owner is still fighting the blasted things. The horses eat the new stems on the pasture side, but the stems love to come up in the driveway. Mow them, they don't care. Roto-till them, and you get a population explosion.
Sorry if I heard wrong, but I think you said that aspens cannot reproduce sexually. They can. Also, there are fences in Pando that prevent browsers from damaging new saplings.
It’s because, just like in Yellowstone, the deer got out of control due to humans killing wolves. In Arizona, we also have to fence aspen stands because we eradicated the native elk, and the invasive elk browse aspens faster than they can regenerate. The invasive elk are here because of streams diverted to livestock ponds. We are the reason why barriers are needed. The Anthropocene is a mass extinction event.
@@DCDevTanelornYupp.! My grandpa was a biologist and was responsible for a couple different wolf transplants to reintroduce them back into the environment To help the deer and moose populations after they had been hunted to oblivion. One wasn’t so successful, as all 9 were shot within 3 weeks after being released (stigma about wolves being bad was way worse back then, ((n still lingers fs)), but they did have more farms/animals than nowadays to protect too. Not saying that’s what it was tho lol) And the other two, one at presque isle, another at isle royal in Lake Superior, were successful also, however it’s an ongoing process of observing the balance that needs to be happen every so many years. Fun fact: the place I work still has the very wolf cage he first reintroduced and acclimated the wolves to the environment in. Had no idea he had ever even done that until I started working there, and was told by another coworker. Talk about full circle.. I’ll still stumble upon researchers out in the woods a few times a year who, after being known, tell me that it was him who inspired them to become biologists. You truly never know how large of an impact you’ll leave after you’re gone. And that is a beautiful thing. Love and miss you, grandpa Duck ❤
I thought the largest organism, is the sea grass in Exmouth Western Australia. It’s huge, 180 square kilometres (70 square miles) huge. Anton can confirm? He did a story/video on the sea grass.
Great topic and glad Anton revisited it. I'd like an explanation on how there are more than one genetically diverse Quaking Aspens. As he mentioned, Quaking Aspens are all over the US mountain states, the Pacific Northwest and Western Canada. I have half a dozen stands on my property. Clearly, they also reproduce sexually. My trees put out pollen sacks and produce seeds, so does the species occasionally mutate resulting in the three copies of DNA?
I think what they are getting at is, because of the size of Pando and the distance that pollen drifts, alot of the trees never get pollinated by another stand. But even without outside sources of DNA, there are some differences within the stand due to mutations during vegetative growth / expansion.
@@DCDevTanelorn I agree. Thanks for the reply. There is a mountain near where I live that they found all the mosses and wildflowers in the top 1,000' were genetically different from everything below that elevation. Scientists concluded that the very top of this mountain was above the glaciers/ice sheets and preserved the plants genetically. All the plants bellow migrated in as the glaciers retreated.
A single organism created by interconnection of a root system. Together they are invincible. "We are all connected in the great web of life." Chief Seattle Or one from Sitting Bull that says As individual fingers, we can easily be broken, but all together we make a mighty fist. ~ Sitting Bull.
“Come on now children, stay close, touching roots, we are going to spread outward, because remember what I taught you about what happens to trees if they grow too tall? “
I can’t Remember at this Moment ?, But Is This Similar To The Trees That Grow Across Large Swathes of Swamps Where The Trees Stay Above Water But Their Root System Is Basically Continuously Linked Together , Making The Forest of Swamp Trees actually a Singular Tree That Keeps Spreading Across The Swamp areas ??? !!!
2 questions come to mind: 1) where did Pando come from ~60k years ago? Since these Aspins don't reproduce sexually -- How did Pando come into existence? I wonder if Pando is actually much older (maybe as old as this speces of Aspen), and the ~60k years represents the amount of time required for enough mutations to accumulate such that the original genetic code has been completely overwritten? Question 2 is -- do we honestly believe that in Pando's ~60k year existance, that it has never experienced a herd of deer grazing their way through the area??? Maybe having Deer graze on Pando is a way to "prune" its growth? Maybe by putting a fence around Pando, humans in their rather self-involved way are interfering with a natural, biological process?
Comme le dirait mon 'Pikachou': "un fou qui sait qu'il est fou est moins fou qu'un fou qui ne le sait pas". 🍂 As my 'Pikachou' would say: "a fool who knows he's crazy is less crazy than a fool who doesn't know it." ... (0:12) Yes, like you say... (i'm too fast, i'm guessing!)
Wasn't a huge underground fungal colony actually the most massive living thing ever? Can't remember and I'm fallibg asleep. This is pretty awesome anyway!!
Pando cannot be 80,000 years old. Fish Lake Plateau was glaciated during the Last Glacial Maximum, about 25,000 to 17,000 years ago. It also probably couldn’t have survived the Younger Dryas cold snap, ~14 to 12 thousand years ago. How could the geneticists not have known this?
If it's survived for thousands and thousands of years, why are they putting a fence around it to protect it from deer? I think it can survive on its own.
It’s because, just like in Yellowstone, the deer got out of control due to humans killing wolves. In Arizona, we also have to fence aspen stands because we eradicated the native elk, and the invasive elk browse aspens faster than they can regenerate. The invasive elk are here because of streams diverted to livestock ponds. We are the reason why barriers are needed. The Anthropocene is a mass extinction event.
True. It is risky to disturb any natural potential reciprocation process. The larger wildlife could provide beneficial pruning which prevents unhealthy overabundance and leave their poop behind as well. Maybe not a big difference maker but over time it could be important. Hopefully everything is considered before these types of decisions are made.
The problem is that we've killed all the natural predators of deer and other animals in the area meaning there are too many grazing on Pando preventing new stems from growing. We broke it, we're fixing it.
Well, if you look online, there are many recipes for all types of invasive species. I think that with enough practice, anyone can be a 5 star chef. The only limit is yourself.
what makes these the clones one organism? two identical twins could be considered clones but they’re considered two organisms are siamese twins one organism?
🌲 "By inputting Pando’s genetic data into a theoretical model that plots an organism’s evolutionary lineage, the researchers also estimated Pando’s age." Doesn't sound that "definitive" to me.
There's a fruit here in Brazil we call Pitanga that kinda does the same, although not exactly. As it roots grow, new trees grow from it. The difference is that it also grows from seeds. (And the fruit is really good!)
Really interesting video but it has some factual errors:
---
The Pando aspen is no longer regarded the largest organism on Earth. In the Malheur National Forest in Oregon there is a single specimen of the armillaria ostoyae fungus that is believed to cover 9.1 km2 of land and weigh a staggering 35,000 tons. That is more than 20 times the area and almost six times the weight of the Pando aspen.
---
The quaking aspen has mixed polidity, that is some specimens are diploid, others triploid. The diploid ones are perfectly fertile and the triploid ones can also reproduce sexually although with difficulty.
---
The Pando aspen is by far the biggest and oldest clonal tree we know of but the ability to grow multiple trunks from a single root isn't unique to the quaking aspen - it's actually quite common among trees.
I think he meant to say oldest. @7:49
You beat me to it! 😂
The X-files did a great episode about something very similar...
I was thinking of the big fungi, too. We have one here in Michigan.
“There’s a humongous fungus among us!”
I live in Colorado and 30+ years ago, I didn't know what to do with my backyard. So I planted an aspen tree in the middle of it and now have a small aspen grove for my dogs to run through and have shade whenever they need it! It's awesome actually!
Dude, I don't care if you like dogs, cats or whatever. Life wouldn't make sense without those little pests! LOL
Yes, indeed. They do make nice attractive backyard groves for shade and relaxation.
I’m simply awestruck knowing Pando exists. Thank you!
The 2nd largest aspen grove is the clone aspen grove at Kebler Pass in Colorado. Fascinating tree.
Hi Anton I personally would love to see a video on time crystals. There have been some very interesting advances recently that I'd like to see covered. Well made video as usual :)
OK I admit I thought "OMG some woowoo new age thing, really?" But no, it's an actual thing and I agree, it's perfect Anton fuel.
@@civildiscourse2000It's not that, but it could be... So, don't freaking give them ideas!
My family has had a cabin down at Fish Lake for 3 generations. You see the Pando grove as you drive into the lake area proper.
They should have a festival there called “Pando-monium”
I guess it was a world event back in 2020...
A festival would ruin all nature around it for years afterwards, not to mention the likelihood of some smoker setting it on fire.
@@Yezpahr that’s a little dramatic
And the shuttle to take you there should be called the Pando Express.
@ geeze with branding like that it could be a year round tourist destination
I thought that the mushrooms were bigger than pando. A pando clone in Colorado talked to me so I'm aware of it's collective consciousness and wisdom.
Amazing, I never ceased to be amazed at new discoveries we make!
I just wonder if Anton is a real human sometimes, His vids are all so good and accurate. That it makes ya wonder if Anton is a real life super intelligent organisem in the name of Science. ✌️
The reason why there is not a strong correlation between physical distance and genetic distance is that -- with Pando being 18-60 thousand years old, and each sprout lasting only 100 years, that would mean about 180-600 generations of sprouts. If you were to trace linearly back from a current sprout to it's Nth grandparent, the path would look much more like a random walk within the grove than a liner travel away from a radiative spot.
So, for example, a sprout may find itself right next to -- or even replacing -- it's great-grand-parent.
Once an entity reaches a few hundred years old, the vast majority of new sprouts will be replacing fallen predecessors rather than breaking new ground.
Wait, I thought there was a massive mushroom colony (called the Humongous Fungus?) spanning 2,385 acres/estimated 35,000 tons (Pando weighs ~6600 tons). The fungus sounds more massive to me?
Also what's with all the bots?
Yeah, I was going to comment that. Panda is the most massive organism, but Humongous Fungus is way larger.
❤🎉
They're on every major channel- it's not the creator's fault. Just insult and report as spam.
@@filipe5722 I read some more on it cause i was a little confused how it could weigh 5-6 times more and not have more mass. Feel stupid now though cause the fungus are not a single entity exactly, just clones of each other in incredible concentration.
That does shine a new light on how unique this single branching tree is and how weird its' off shoots show genetic mutations, not to mention its' age.
Didn’t Anton say this early in his video?
Aspens are beautiful trees. I did not know about their interconnectedness until rather recently.
Thanks for the update, Anton.
Great show as always
Lots of aspen groves in the mountains where I grew up. They seem to survive fires.
They may actually depend on fires removing competition (the roots survive).
@@donaldcarey114 Too right. Also Mycelium also covers square miles. Could they co-operate?
Have you heard of the sydney sea grass that is growing off the coast of western Australia?? It grows the same way, and has no natural predators as it is native to the east coast but somehow some found its way all the way across the country and has been growing nonstop ever since. It is suposedly bigger than pando, one plant with fields of clones
If I had to guess it was probably transferred by whale or by boat.
I literally watched a video about this topic this very morning... amazing
Utah is one of the most beautiful places on earth.
Oh man, how I love to camp, hike and fish amongst the aspens. Aspen viewing is a multi-million or even billion, dollar industry. Driving the mountain ranges in October is breathtaking, awe inspiring. The sight can bring tears of joy to your eyes.
There's a couple very large fungal substrates/mushrooms that could contend with Pando for the largest organism.
There are similar super-trees of Houn pine in Tasmania.
My Paw Paw grove spreads similarly. But it produces seeds in it's fruit also. I have seen quaking aspens on Michigan. I would like to get a start for my tree collection of 8.5 acres.
I used to live in Loa (first town southeast of Pando), and we started some quakies on our property. (Got them from Bowery Haven area, up at the north end of the lake, where I used to work.) Just dug up a couple of small ones and transplanted them along the fence between our driveway and our pasture. That was 55 years ago... the current owner is still fighting the blasted things. The horses eat the new stems on the pasture side, but the stems love to come up in the driveway. Mow them, they don't care. Roto-till them, and you get a population explosion.
More botany, please.❤❤❤❤
Sorry if I heard wrong, but I think you said that aspens cannot reproduce sexually. They can. Also, there are fences in Pando that prevent browsers from damaging new saplings.
This tree lived for 80000 years, and now somehow we need to build a wall around it.😂😂😂
It’s because, just like in Yellowstone, the deer got out of control due to humans killing wolves. In Arizona, we also have to fence aspen stands because we eradicated the native elk, and the invasive elk browse aspens faster than they can regenerate. The invasive elk are here because of streams diverted to livestock ponds. We are the reason why barriers are needed. The Anthropocene is a mass extinction event.
@@DCDevTanelornYupp.! My grandpa was a biologist and was responsible for a couple different wolf transplants to reintroduce them back into the environment To help the deer and moose populations after they had been hunted to oblivion.
One wasn’t so successful, as all 9 were shot within 3 weeks after being released (stigma about wolves being bad was way worse back then, ((n still lingers fs)), but they did have more farms/animals than nowadays to protect too. Not saying that’s what it was tho lol)
And the other two, one at presque isle, another at isle royal in Lake Superior, were successful also, however it’s an ongoing process of observing the balance that needs to be happen every so many years.
Fun fact: the place I work still has the very wolf cage he first reintroduced and acclimated the wolves to the environment in.
Had no idea he had ever even done that until I started working there, and was told by another coworker.
Talk about full circle..
I’ll still stumble upon researchers out in the woods a few times a year who, after being known, tell me that it was him who inspired them to become biologists.
You truly never know how large of an impact you’ll leave after you’re gone. And that is a beautiful thing.
Love and miss you, grandpa Duck
❤
where there's humans, species go extinct, so it might not be uncalled for after all.
BUILD THE WALL! 😂
cool, i am from Utah and went to see that area so many times! it is beautiful!
I literally just visited Pando for the first time last weekend. How coincidental!
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. ☺️⭐️👍
Hello Wonderful Episode! Thank you.
I thought the largest organism, is the sea grass in Exmouth Western Australia. It’s huge, 180 square kilometres (70 square miles) huge.
Anton can confirm? He did a story/video on the sea grass.
Great topic and glad Anton revisited it. I'd like an explanation on how there are more than one genetically diverse Quaking Aspens. As he mentioned, Quaking Aspens are all over the US mountain states, the Pacific Northwest and Western Canada. I have half a dozen stands on my property. Clearly, they also reproduce sexually. My trees put out pollen sacks and produce seeds, so does the species occasionally mutate resulting in the three copies of DNA?
I think what they are getting at is, because of the size of Pando and the distance that pollen drifts, alot of the trees never get pollinated by another stand. But even without outside sources of DNA, there are some differences within the stand due to mutations during vegetative growth / expansion.
@@DCDevTanelorn I agree. Thanks for the reply. There is a mountain near where I live that they found all the mosses and wildflowers in the top 1,000' were genetically different from everything below that elevation. Scientists concluded that the very top of this mountain was above the glaciers/ice sheets and preserved the plants genetically. All the plants bellow migrated in as the glaciers retreated.
Dude, I just went to Pando last week. Quite coincidential.
I’ve never heard of pando before. This is one of the oddest things I’ve heard of in a long time! The whole mutation- clone thing…… wow! 😮
A single organism created by interconnection of a root system. Together they are invincible. "We are all connected in the great web of life." Chief Seattle Or one from Sitting Bull that says As individual fingers, we can easily be broken, but all together we make a mighty fist. ~ Sitting Bull.
I was there last year. So beautiful and very few other people
“Come on now
children, stay close, touching roots, we are going to spread outward, because remember what I taught you about what happens to trees if they grow too tall? “
Thanks wonderful person, excellent as usual!
I can’t Remember at this Moment ?, But Is This Similar To The Trees That Grow Across Large Swathes of Swamps Where The Trees Stay Above Water But Their Root System Is Basically Continuously Linked Together , Making The Forest of Swamp Trees actually a Singular Tree That Keeps Spreading Across The Swamp areas ??? !!!
There's a cashew tree in Brazil that covers an area of 9km² and is located in the middle of a city
Wasn't paying super-close attention and saw the thumbnail and thought it said "LARGEST ORGASM ON THE PLANET".
Sigh
Well, it _is_ a massive woody.
The Yellowstone eruption is when the Earth busts a nut
Churning trees and rocks in it's path, flooding low-lying areas, drowning the local inhabitants... but with it the promise of new life.
Ok. I need to scale this next to some of the gigantic living fungus things that live under some regions, such as here in Michigan.❤
2 questions come to mind: 1) where did Pando come from ~60k years ago? Since these Aspins don't reproduce sexually -- How did Pando come into existence? I wonder if Pando is actually much older (maybe as old as this speces of Aspen), and the ~60k years represents the amount of time required for enough mutations to accumulate such that the original genetic code has been completely overwritten? Question 2 is -- do we honestly believe that in Pando's ~60k year existance, that it has never experienced a herd of deer grazing their way through the area??? Maybe having Deer graze on Pando is a way to "prune" its growth? Maybe by putting a fence around Pando, humans in their rather self-involved way are interfering with a natural, biological process?
Anton’s daily reminder that my existence is meaningless and last a blink of an eye
Comme le dirait mon 'Pikachou': "un fou qui sait qu'il est fou est moins fou qu'un fou qui ne le sait pas".
🍂
As my 'Pikachou' would say: "a fool who knows he's crazy is less crazy than a fool who doesn't know it."
... (0:12) Yes, like you say... (i'm too fast, i'm guessing!)
Thank you, this information about dna and the reproduction by the roots is very interesting.
Can you make a video about the dream to dream communication study they came out recently???
5:58 "sexual trees" is a phrase that is going to keep me up at night
Sounds like the "Bobiverse". We may be clones, but some of us develop differently.
a discussion about earth sciences? on my favourite space science channel? i could kiss you
I thought that the largest organism on Earth was a fungal network that covered an entire forest in Oregon.
Yo I want 12 advanced mystics to meditate by the central node and TALK TO PaNdOoOooOo.
Try the Hazmat Modine song, "Bahamut"!! Much too big to see!
So, where did the "first" tree come from and how did it get there? And is there a way to determine the "point of origin"?
Wasn't a huge underground fungal colony actually the most massive living thing ever? Can't remember and I'm fallibg asleep. This is pretty awesome anyway!!
nice informative title
_Tell me Pando, tell m'aspen ♪_
_Tell me Pando, Pando, Pando ♪_
I thought that fungus among us in Oregon or Washington was much bigger.
Pando cannot be 80,000 years old. Fish Lake Plateau was glaciated during the Last Glacial Maximum, about 25,000 to 17,000 years ago.
It also probably couldn’t have survived the Younger Dryas cold snap, ~14 to 12 thousand years ago.
How could the geneticists not have known this?
An absolute wow factor ! Thank you sharing something from country even if it may allow people to be more but sadly for Christian Nationalist to "woke"
"tell me when will you be mine, tell me Pando, Pando, Pandoooooo"
How do we know this one is the oldest or largest? There are aspen/poplars all over North America, have all others been investigated?
Very cool
🙋🏽♀️💖anton everyday
Maybe pando IS Mother Earth
I leave tree eating beetles in Pando.
Maybe pando built the pyramids
Maybe Pando is aliens an shit, here to deliver us crystals from the soul mother.
Or perhaps it's just a vegetatively propagated aspen tree.
Maybe... the very large fungus on "La Reunion" is bigger....
3:00 Sapling?
I'm going!
dear god a video about campers favorite fire starter
calling this a single animal is stupid they are clones a lot of life are clones this is some LotR level of elf bull crap
@@Sutairn But each tree (sprout) is a part of the same organism.
If it's survived for thousands and thousands of years, why are they putting a fence around it to protect it from deer? I think it can survive on its own.
❤❤❤❤ cool!
*Tree:* _exists for 60k+ years naturally_
*Government:* "we need to protect it from deer, hurry build a fence!"
It’s because, just like in Yellowstone, the deer got out of control due to humans killing wolves. In Arizona, we also have to fence aspen stands because we eradicated the native elk, and the invasive elk browse aspens faster than they can regenerate. The invasive elk are here because of streams diverted to livestock ponds. We are the reason why barriers are needed. The Anthropocene is a mass extinction event.
True. It is risky to disturb any natural potential reciprocation process. The larger wildlife could provide beneficial pruning which prevents unhealthy overabundance and leave their poop behind as well. Maybe not a big difference maker but over time it could be important. Hopefully everything is considered before these types of decisions are made.
The problem is that we've killed all the natural predators of deer and other animals in the area meaning there are too many grazing on Pando preventing new stems from growing. We broke it, we're fixing it.
@@kevinslater4126Yes, "fixing."
Well, if you look online, there are many recipes for all types of invasive species. I think that with enough practice, anyone can be a 5 star chef. The only limit is yourself.
what makes these the clones one organism? two identical twins could be considered clones but they’re considered two organisms
are siamese twins one organism?
Now we know why the planet in Avatar is called Pandora. All living things are connected over there 🤣🤣
🌲 "By inputting Pando’s genetic data into a theoretical model that plots an organism’s evolutionary lineage, the researchers also estimated Pando’s age." Doesn't sound that "definitive" to me.
A piece of Pandora on earth.. Probably a good place to hook your ponytail up to a tree. (too bad now I am a bald 55+ year old)
I also enjoy marijuana sometimes. Good for you.
I thought that the largest organism was that underground fungi in oregon
I do not think it will out live us, because we are absolutely taking the biosphere with us on our way out.
I WANT TO BE INSIDE PANDO
I wonder if there is any way to test to determine is some of the genetic drift was cause by cosmic rays and solar radiation.
So the bears who live there are Pando Bears.
Everything pando pando pando 😂😂😂
Hmmmm, I thought the Fungi in Washington/Oregon was the Biggest????
It covers a much larger area but pando has more mass if I understand correctly
@@ryangibson7192 No, the "homungus fungus" has a much bigger mass too. But it was discovered fairly recently so not everybody knows about it yet.
It would have no Reason to Mutate. It has already Found Its Niche.
I thought the largest organism on Earth was that fungus in Oregon.
So, it's like Eywa in Avatar
thought the largest organism is a fungus in Oregon which is about 400 tons??
I really appreciate your hard work and professionalism! Your videos are a true example of quality content on UA-cam.👒👺🙈
Begone, thotbot.
Damn bot....
What if Pando wants to escape the fence?
8:05 sunlight radiation
Helloooo
Triple DNA?? So one of the ISOs escaped from the grid!!
What came first, the chicken or the pando?
Can I order a furniture made out of Pando?
Of course there is a highway running right through the middle
Most based organism
"Where is Utah?"
😂 Bro is in the joke.
Mushroom Fields
There's a fruit here in Brazil we call Pitanga that kinda does the same, although not exactly. As it roots grow, new trees grow from it.
The difference is that it also grows from seeds.
(And the fruit is really good!)
deers are gonna murder it
i thought the biggest living organism on earth was a fungus.
This is erasure of Humongous Fungus 😭