BRAZILIAN GONZO BOTANY EXCURSION #4 - Carnivorous Plants, Lithophytic Orchids
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- Опубліковано 16 лип 2024
- In this episode we cast a long list of remarkable plants including one that was not even known to science until 3 years ago (Hoplocryptanthus knegtianus).
We also look at the bizarre dimorphic stamens of Lavoisiera imbricata, a plant in the family Melastomataceae that engages in a division of labor with separate "feeding stamens" for bees and pollination stamens.
The Carnivorous Plant Utricularia tricolor eats protozoans, and Cattleya rupestris is a beautiful orchid that grows on rocks (known as a lithophytic habit).
Your contributions support this content. It sounds clichéd, but it's true. Whether it's travel expenses, vehicle repair, or medical costs for urushiol poisoning (or rockfalls, beestings, hand slices, toxic sap, etc), your financial support allows this content to continue so the beauty of Earth's flora can be made accessible to the rest of us in the degenerate public. At a time when so much is disappearing beneath the human footprint, CPBBD is willing to do whatever it takes to document these plant species and the ecological communities they are a part of before they're gone for good.
Plants make people feel good. Plants quell homicidal (and suicidal!) thoughts. To support Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, consider donating a few bucks to the venmo account "societyishell" or the PayPal account email crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt@gmail.com...
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Thanks, GFY. - Наука та технологія
Hey dude, Kill Your Lawn televised for the first time in the UK the other night and I watched it with my parents - my dad is thinking about it!
Thanks for everything you've taught me over the years! Love your life never stop!
Joey: “Look at the fruits on this pilosocereus they look like little…”
Me: “Pumpkins!”
Joey: “Clenched butt holes” 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Tomatillos!
Just looked up your channel to go watch some old episodes since im craving some explicit botanizing while I use botanicals explicitly, what a nice surprise to see a new video posted minutes before
I've managed to entice my teenage grandson to learn a little Latin by teaching him how to insult idiots without them ever understanding how badly they've been dissed. Hey, whatever works! He's discovered crunchy guys like our Tony can be smart & cool! Nothing wrong with being smart 🤓
😂
So hilarious, glad you found something fun to learn xD
When Tony said, Check out this red pea"....
Learn your plant families folks. Then, wherever you go, you'll never be completely lost. Thanks again for all you do Joe.
Mind blowing once again. Thank you for taking us on a journey.
As always so much fun to watch and listen to, I’m never bored of watching you ❤
I'm glad Tony Poppins with his umbrella is wandering around going "what the shit", it was nearly 8 minutes in and I was going 'what is this shit?' before I recognised vaguely anything
Kinda nice seeing you actively trying to figure out what the shit we're looking at as you wander around. Makes us feel more involved in the discovery process.
I am very grateful for the part this content plays in my life and the perspective it reminds me to take on my environment. Thank you.
Thank you again for taking us around and showing us the plants!
I know the highly derived adaptations of angiosperms make for interesting stories about evolution, but my eye was drawn straight to the gleichenaceous ferns @3:25 - it is still a marvel to me that an evolutionarily conservative clade of plants dating back at least as far as the _early Permian_ are still around, doing their thing. That's after _three_ of the _five_ mass extinction events our planet has has endured. _Survivors._
2:31 We call it "canudeiro/mamoninha do cerrado" - it's absolutly fantastic for bees, they secrete extrafloral nectar at the beggining of the dry season, a lot of insects go crazy around that tree
Forging my vocabulary arsenal with every upload.
Indumentum? Nice!
Any insight into the recent climatological stability in this part of Brazil - specifically, change in yearly rain distribution? Just wondering if this region is experiencing any extraordinary divergences from normal pattern. Thanks for the armchair view of places I'll not make it to!
more excellence
Man your Brasil trip is amazing!!
if anyone has ever seen that old video of christopher walkin narrating where the wild things are, i wanna listen to tony narrate dean koontz books when he talks about landscaping plants for pages at a time
I was gonna say ‘hey! little tomatillos!’, but I suppose ‘little clenched buttholes!’ works just dandy, too?!
Excellent vids the whole trip, ya prick… keep ‘em comin’, Joey.
Love seeing rupicolous Cattleyas in habitat! Tough little bastards.
That first orchid was Cattleya jewel/oscosia. That's where I see them all the time.
love the Gonzo Brazilian Botany Journal! that's great! Hey, when do you think you'll be back to the Butano Cypress grove? I'd love to see how it's recovered since the fire (that almost took my house)
2:36
Moraceae are another family notorious for bleeding latex. In the case of Ficus, it has even been used for rubber (F. elastica).
Fascinating as ever Tony but you need to be there when growth and flowering are optimal.
So different native plants😮..Vellozia, Asteraceae, Bromeliaceae...força "botânicos" do Brasil...( another issue -with that disguise you could tell to that people of that houses that the lawn make people sick, they have less days to live)
i like this
I think you’d like the plants on mount Ruapehu, Central north island New Zealand during the summer
that leiothrix sp. looks like ornamental chrysanthemum inflorescences except it's actually an adaptation in this case. Two very different themes with that same variation, kinda crazy.
City of Quartz! My man
For the dimorphic stamens, is it possible they are two different growth stages?
Thanks for what you're doing.
9:03 They're evolving fruits to blend in with the yuppie poachers...
Silently bonk the cactus at 12:00 ... Just can't help it huh :p
I GO TO SCHOOL HERE, FELLOW SOUTHSIDER HELLO
When is your next live??
What type of (dwarf) palms were those?
Arid Aroid abscission scars ooooh!
You know about utricularia neottioides? It's a rhenophyte..
That iron rich dust is everwheres! Honga Tonga rain or sths? Apparently it hasn't read the memo about the global warming crisis since it usually proceeds an ice ages. Stupid dust. Love the meanderings of no-fear and loathing in Brazil, Thanks.
Have you touched a plant and regret doing so?
> Clenched buttholes
Learnt a new way to describe a flower!
Did you taste the sweet Pea water?!?🧐🤔 /"nector" if it makes you feel better....👀🤣💚
no GFUS outro? I am offended!
Poi kilo hydric....
Poi kilo hydric...
Poi kilo hydric....
Poi kilo hydric...
Poi kilo hydric....
Poi kilo hydric...
Poikilohydric vellozia.
I'm trying to comprehend the mentality of a person who would downvote this video. Ten so far.
How can you even see those? They're invisible to me
@CrimePaysButBotanyDoesnt there's a plug-in you can get to show dislikes again. On Google Chrome or whatever
@@boscorner ah cool to know I guess. Dislikes are not very important to me in the end. There will plenty of people who just aren't into it. That's all good with me. It's not a flavor for everyone.
❤ Can anyone recommend someone similarto @Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't (He is so cool enthusiastic and passionate) for Appalachian and Eastern Woodland Plants !?! ❤
*similar to
Edited cause i Forgot to add the but in the channel name and this new YT comment thingy made it harder to edit. Gees i wish we had the type of plants he is passionate bout round here.
I have no idea where he is but this guy is good
www.youtube.com/@LearnYourLand
In defense of plants has some stuff
@@weregoat529THANKS 🤗 I actual know who your speaking of and have some of his stuff on on a playlist! He is eastern, Pennsylvania i believe. I know i marked his video on identifying fungus infected Cicada.