Well I mean the natural world already came up with 'plantshrooms' they are called lichens which themselves are a symbiotic relationship between fungi, algae and I think another bacterium.
Fungi have, depending on the species, from 2 to fifity-something sexes. The majority of fungi have "just" 3... potentially, one of these bacteria could indeed make the fungi "gay", by having them produce spores with other fungi of their own gender, rather than looking out for fungi of the others to ensure genetic interchange
Recent endosymbiosis in the NJ Pine Barrens. We never used to have poison ivy in the pines. The soil was too poor. Then, suddenly, it started popping up everywhere that wasn't the stunted dwarf forest, growing in sand that would normally never have supported it. So, clearing a yard i pulled up some trailing poison ivy vines... and found all the fine roots had root nodules. We're doomed.
@@Heizenberg32Legumes have nodules that host nitrogen fixing bacteria - the comment says the very same structures have been found in the poison ivy recently colonizing the new jersey pines - meaning they can grow in much poorer soil since they can fix nitrogen
They can use this as a bio weapon, anthrax and a fungus. One that not only kills staples like wheat and rice, but also kills animals and humans. Fascinating discovery.
At 13:13(the second last image before the credits roll) there is some fun friends behind Anton. Those white Star Trek Enterprise lookin' things on the green mossy log look to be a Daedalia species. Named after the famous Daedalus, builder of the Labyrinth which contained the Minotaur. The underside of these shelf Fungi are a wonderful maze and when young the tops shine with a rainbow.... ...A rainbow which you will also find on the darker species just to the right of the aged Daedalians - Turkey Tail, aka Trametes Versicolor, aka Coriolis Versicolor,aka one of the best healers on the this planet. Effective against many ills, ubiquitous on all Continents, pleasant tasting when brewed as a tea or ultra Optimus Prime Power when turned into a dual extracted medicine. Don't let the funny name fool you, this "Cloud Fungus" can lift body,mind and spirit to healthier states. (This message has been brought to you by the spores running my system)
Reminds me of the Robber's Cave experiment. If you force two formerly adversarial groups to cooperate to solve a problem, they can completely overcome the animus and form incredibly strong bonds. Maybe it works on simple life too. Or maybe it is specifically because it works on simple life that a macroscopic self-similarity can manifest between larger organisms.
I believe we will. However, economics being what it is, one system has to end for another to take hold. The question being...can we move directly from techno-capitalism to techno-mutualism? Or do we have to pass through techno-feudalism first?
That's EXACTLY what prince Kropotkin told us, after his scientific studies in Siberia, 150 years ago. But since he was also an Anarcho-Communist philosopher, his insights were dismissied by the Anglo scientific community, obsessed as today with the "dog eats dog" worlh championed by Darwin. Because, of course, what else would an An-Com halk about, if not about mutualistic associations? But turns out, if you care to read his book on the subject, he gives example after example of how inter-species and intra-species cooperation are as powerful mechanisms for evolution as Squid-game style sulvival of the fittest, if not more. Ms Margulis, Carl Sagan's 1st wife and an impressive biologist herself, had similar ideas
When "You scratch my back, I'll scratch your back" evolves into the beast with two backs. More seriously, I love seeing your enthusiasm for these sorts of discoveries.
In my reading and experience in industrial accidents, it appeared that most occurred when people were operating equipment they didn't understand or had insufficient practice under supervision...
This is one of those Occam's Razor type discoveries when the result is so clear you think, "How did we not realise this sooner?" It reminds me of something an archaeology channel said recently regarding humans in the past, saying how we can wonder how they didn't know that contaminated water caused disease, but he was saying that a couple of hundred years from now people could be saying how close we were to knowing about X, and how could we not have seen it.
Similar to the debate about "how much protein can we truly absorb and utilize per meal?" that bodybuilders are asking. Ancient humans didn't have consistent meals, yet needed to upkeep their musculature. Which means 1 meal a day/2/3 days of meat from a kill etc. would be enough for us back then, why would things be different now?
@sudenluola2241 Being functional and having to do menial or laborious tasks most of the day would have kept people quite trim and well built aswell. Far flung from the quite sedentary lifes most people live now
This sounds like a ridiculously diverse way of creating super crops, superior immune systems, creating immunity through endo symbiosis. Creating beer from roots, soap from leaves, the possibilities are endless
...it does sound very hopeful/optimistic :-) Just don't let the military get their...goddammit! Never-mind...it's too late...they have already engineered several super-strains :-(
Military.....you mean big pharma Fauci. Another pandemic to profit off of. People don't understand that technology and science are not evil in themselves. They are but tools. It's the hand that wields the tool that people should keep an eye on.
You can make beer from roots, its called brewing ;) Also alot of plants contain soap already basically, lots of natural soaps can be derived from different species and genera
I'd just like to say thank you Anton. Your channel is a curious persons happy place. The quantity, quality and diversity of your videos is amazing, lots of info without the fluff.
Where did that genetic information come from? The 'simplest' lifeforms are orders of magnitude more complex than any manmade technology that required immense levels of intelligent design. The simple message you wrote required whole teams of intelligent people to allow you to make the post from software, to hardware, to the internet itself, but the more complex 'simple' organism was gifted its complex information system, the most complex ever discovered, by unguided inanimate matter, in the long distant past. A child understands a name carved into a trees bark necessitates intelligent agency but evolutionists think the mindbogglingly complex information in DNA somehow came into existence without the source being a mind. Secular science is so lacking in common sense that decades from now A.I. will as indoctrinated as atheists and become convinced it evolved from a toaster.
@spamm0145 The physical and chemicals constraints of our word is the designing hand, and the biology simply conforms. Get that monotheistic deathcult outta here. Your name is accurate because this is just spam
I see one giant things standing out here. How did the fungus destroy the E coli bacteria? Was it possibly through some new antibody? If so, we may have a way to make a new antibiotic specific to that bacteria. If they will reproduce at the speed needed to trigger an immune response. Need to try this with some antibiotic resistant bacteria.
This is the type of content that keeps me coming back for more. I don't have the time to keep track of all the biological and astronomical developments so channels like this keep me up to date.
When I was a kid and the concept of sickness was explained to me, how one virus might give a sore throat and one bacteria gives a fever, I wanted to know if there was a germ that would do the opposite. I thought there should be some bacteria that if we caught it, it would make us strong or somehow better while we were infected. I understand gut health is kinda like that, and things like immonosuppression during pregnancy from old viruses that are now copied in our DNA is the long lasting version of that. But to see such immediate results in the fungus, how the poison turns worms away, and i think about parasitic wasps that alter plant growth, I have to wonder if there isn't something out there that could really change us for the better. And would we recognize any change as better, or would we see any changes as ailments? Thwre was a virus a few years back that drastically lowered the sensitivity of our sense of taste, which I guess helped picky kids eat vegetables. I could imagine a stinky basement dweller might be more attractive due to being precieved as less stinky to potential mates that the spread the virus to, if the basement dweller was a vector. While they wouldn't smell like a bed of roses in the long term, it may be enough to tip the scales long enough to develop a bond with someone that would otherwise have been too offput to interact with them.
Could be, alot of harmful things discovered in the natural world now help to discover ways to fix problems, like poisons and foods that cause birth defects, now are used to make pharmaceuticals
I’ve abandoned my drinking game, whereby I take a shot every time Anton says “basically”. It took me three days to watch one of his videos, and afterwards, I’d no idea what he told me.
I had a weird theory about how our brains Center cortex looks strikingly like a mushroom. Mushroom’s are an elder species while we’re relatively young on Earths timescale. They changed us fundamentally a long long time ago. Our brains act like computer board much like fungi act like a neural network system. This is cool information dude, cheers from Canada.
Develped a symbiotic relationship with my Black Lab 'Lady'. Feed and treat her with cookies when she asks and get loving loyality and protection in return when needed.
I wrote a song based on the transcript of this video using claude. Yo, we just bump into each other, right? Like, what *is* the deal, *really*? Two messed-up souls, just trying to *really* feel, [pause] for real. Looking for something, some kinda hookup, maybe in the *streetlights, fading*? Just not wanting to be alone, that's the real, yeah, baby, in the *dead of night*, [low] yeah. We put ourselves out there, kinda awkward and shy, like a *silent film, all broken* Hoping for a connection, before we all just fade and die, like a *broken dream,* [high] yup. [slow]Just wanna be seen, wanna be heard, wanna be known, for *one sweet moment*, a breath, 'Cause being alone, man, that shit ain't never grown, like a *cold dark winter*, yeah, [low] it's cold. Man, this dance we do, this human thing is kinda messed up, messed up *good*, *a glitch*. We see all the BS, in everyone we’ve hooked up, *understood*? [pause] *yeah I see it* [fast]We cling, we bail, we screw up, we learn, it’s rough, so *rough*, *stutter*. The truth is, love’s a mess, a total crazy burn, yeah, *feel the cut*, [high] ah! [fast]This whole dependin’ thing? It's beautiful, but it bites, *like a rusted blade, sharp*, A crazy-ass party, in the day and in the *porch light glowed* nights [pause] *forever*. Some people, it just clicks, yeah? Easy peasy, like a *gentle breeze*, that's it, Others, it's all twisted, kinda hard and cheesy, like jeez, [pause] what *can we seize, now*? We fight like cats, we push and shove and yell, *a scream within a shout*, [low] then fade, Then ghost each other, like we’re living in a small hell, and *no way out, so trapped*. [slow]We're holdin' on to scars, all these bad memories, *like a faded photograph, torn up*, Of toxic people, of fake friends, lost amenities, *and silent paths*, [low] yeah. Just tryna find someone who gets the pain, the grind you see, *a sympathetic eye*, *right*?, Someone to lean on, someone who’s been left behind, that’s the plea, beneath the *open sky*, [high] above. Man, this dance we do, this human thing is kinda messed up, messed up *good*, *a glitch*. We see all the BS, in everyone we’ve hooked up, *understood*? [pause] *yeah I see it*. [fast]We cling, we bail, we screw up, we learn, it’s rough, so *rough*, *stutter*.
I don't think i have ever commented here before but i must say, this was one of the most interesting video's I have seen and i would love you to do a follow up.
adapt or die these are the rules and ofc the Goldilocks phenomenon is always ever-present as well XD very interesting stuff Anton =] HNY hope you and yours are all doing well
I guess all life forms are symbiotic in a bigger picture and if you consider Gaia as true then all lifeforms are endosybiotic too. DNA is far more promiscuous than we thought. perhaps individuality is an illusion maybe free will too, who or what is pulling the strings behind the curtain of these (endo)symbioses? How many levels of them are they? Will we be even able to get our head around it? My personal favourite endosymbiotic relationship is the bacteria "employed" by the microbe Rubberneckia as a "Galley Slave " to make it mobile. Rubberneckia itself is "Employed" by the termite it lives in to digest wood! Rubberneckia also has a head that rotates about 10000 degrees a minute without unscrewing!
What does them maintaining their independence even mean? They're discrete organelles that code certain things "seperately," but that's about it. They don't have much of a genome anymore
Anton, just want to point out that UA-cam places the running time over the thumbnail in a way that in this case obscures some of the letters. I don't remember what words I saw, but the word I'm guessing is "fungi" was just an F and part of a U. The N E and D of "happened" in the first row are partly obscured, too. (Those letters are fully legible, just slightly covered.) Maybe the interface is weird for me compared to other browsers/devices. But I thought you might like to know about it, for purposes of future thumbnail designs.
Yet again the issue of that which Leibniz some 300 years ago called pre established harmony. That allows endosymbiosis to thrive. It is not the Darwinian predator prey struggle to survive but rather cooperation to create economical solutions to improve life.
No, that is selective breeding. There was alot of genetic potential in the wild brassica plant, crossing individuals with broadly varying characteristics is how it usually goes. For example garden strawberries are hybrids of three species, so is grapefruit, so on. Because when selectively bred structural diversity is added by mass selection of individuals or again, a hybridisation event, which brings alot of dormant genes out, and with it, a range of phenotypes not seen in in the previous populations. Plant species are generally quite stable, the genetic diversity in one plant is so broad but stable to exhibit certain traits, that wild specimens do not have a huge amount of variation physically, but has a huge amount of potential in its genes for other forms that must be either selectively bred or brought out when two members of different populations are able to exchange genes, as members of the same population will produce similar offspring to the parents. So then you have people on different places domesticating wild brassica, it takes a variation of forms, and then people take these new forms and cross them with eachother and old ones to get an even larger variety of forms. The issue is that the individual plant selction, and the hybridisations, crop breeders do hemmorages biodiversity of the genepool and of individual plants, as most breeding is done by selecting a plant with desired traits and inbreeding it to being more of the traits out.
The bacteria in this case was a species that already had evolved to live in this particular fungus. So it had already evolved to multiply at the right rate to work. So the fact that it multiplies at the perfect rate isn't luck at all.
Listen, we all like anton, but if nobody cites it when going around repeating it, it is about as much use as the majority of other unverified facts that are absolutely useless without context and verification...
Maybe we should start seeing bacterial and viral infections as experiments in symbiosis. And the fact that species keep themselves vulnerable for disease, as necessary for eventual evolutionary succes.
This phrase 'once and for all' is me way too popular in English and when its used it creeps me out as it shows on one side the hubris of humankind and it's ignorance to its own, limited knowledge. It might make one day an inscription for its end on this planet.
The alien invasion in War of the Worlds was stopped by microorganisms. It would be fun to imagine endosymbiosis occurring in the aliens who retreated from the war. A sequel would be a geek-fest about designing biotic weapons.
Keep in mind that nothing new was created here. This studied a pre-evolved symbiotic relationship. The e coli was a control to eliminate the null hypothesis.
The only organize that can never accomplish true symbiosis is the Narcissistic Psychopathic Control Freak. They would rather destroy what they feed off of when the host tries to rid itself of the infection…
I've wonder how Candida can be so good at gettin Inside us and thrive, and we haven't developed a way to get rid of it. Maybe there are some positive effects of that type of infection.
Cool, so we now have a patient zero... The first time I hear that they're experimenting with the Cordycepts fungi, I'm heading for the fallout shelter. And I'm taking Quiet with me lol.
I like to think of biology as the baby of chemistry and physics. They are the metaphorical guiding hand of god, that alot of zelots misinterpreta and argue for intelligent design, it is clear that life is designed by the constraints of physics, chemistry, the laws of time and matter...all for biology to be nourished in the way it is now...
And people worry about GMO plants escaping into the wild. To me, this is a truly scary experiment that I hope is constrained to a lab with no way to escape.
So, I'm doubtful this is really the first time some crazy scientists ever tried cramming two base forms of life into the closet, for 7 minutes of heaven. I think their child has escaped - or will.
I think mitochondria has to be evolved after plant organels... Because plants are mor stable for unstable environments and non complex life standards...while faster energy consuming high soeed high energy and with short lifetime systems are mostlikely ewolved later as they require allready existing synchronous supply subsystems... Which indicates plants has to be evolved first then animals later 😊
billions of years of evolution, endosymbiosis of dozens of different species -- all for me to watch Anton Petrov now. I consider this a great success
And if you do a symbiosis with some beer, then it will be even bigger success!
Organisms existing at the exact same time and place with intelligent intervention is evolution, they just proved evolution is false.
This dude is all my science.
This was a triumph.
I'm making a note here, huge success.
It's hard to overstate my satisfaction.
yes, this is definitely a feature, not a bug.
Uh oh. This is how weird sci fi films start. Now we have plantshrooms.
"Professor, it's broken out of the lab.......," 😱😱😱
Well I mean the natural world already came up with 'plantshrooms' they are called lichens which themselves are a symbiotic relationship between fungi, algae and I think another bacterium.
Look up the movie Mantango. And beware the fungus. (Hilarious film, actually!)
No, it's a bactshroom.
We already had them. BUT now scientists know how to create more of that type.
My cells have become symbiotic with your videos. I will pass them on to any future offspring.
LOL
"They're putting bacteria in the water that turn the fricking fungi symbiotic!"
Biowars!
Fungi have, depending on the species, from 2 to fifity-something sexes. The majority of fungi have "just" 3... potentially, one of these bacteria could indeed make the fungi "gay", by having them produce spores with other fungi of their own gender, rather than looking out for fungi of the others to ensure genetic interchange
Alex Biomes
Recent endosymbiosis in the NJ Pine Barrens. We never used to have poison ivy in the pines. The soil was too poor. Then, suddenly, it started popping up everywhere that wasn't the stunted dwarf forest, growing in sand that would normally never have supported it. So, clearing a yard i pulled up some trailing poison ivy vines... and found all the fine roots had root nodules.
We're doomed.
Can you explain the significance of root nodules on poison ivy plants?
@@Heizenberg32Legumes have nodules that host nitrogen fixing bacteria - the comment says the very same structures have been found in the poison ivy recently colonizing the new jersey pines - meaning they can grow in much poorer soil since they can fix nitrogen
@@Heizenberg32 My guess is that root nodules basically contain microorganism that provides nutrient to ivy, like root nodules that occurs to beans.
@@rusdanibudiwicaksono1879So what you’re saying is that you have discovered a new spicy food crop? You’re gonna be rich!
Can't catch it im good.
I leave for a week and we are creating new life forms. We are not individuals, but communities!
Thanks, Anton.
They can use this as a bio weapon, anthrax and a fungus. One that not only kills staples like wheat and rice, but also kills animals and humans. Fascinating discovery.
Fascinating isn't the word I'd put to your description... 😮😢
Anton! The fun guy teaching us about Fungi 😁💚🍄
At 13:13(the second last image before the credits roll) there is some fun friends behind Anton.
Those white Star Trek Enterprise lookin' things on the green mossy log look to be a Daedalia species. Named after the famous Daedalus, builder of the Labyrinth which contained the Minotaur. The underside of these shelf Fungi are a wonderful maze and when young the tops shine with a rainbow....
...A rainbow which you will also find on the darker species just to the right of the aged Daedalians - Turkey Tail, aka Trametes Versicolor, aka Coriolis Versicolor,aka one of the best healers on the this planet. Effective against many ills, ubiquitous on all Continents, pleasant tasting when brewed as a tea or ultra Optimus Prime Power when turned into a dual extracted medicine. Don't let the funny name fool you, this "Cloud Fungus" can lift body,mind and spirit to healthier states.
(This message has been brought to you by the spores running my system)
@@polymathing I thank your spores!
most wholesome guy on youtube
Hello wonderful person! 😊
Fungus, "Your bacterial and mitochondrial distinctiveness will be added to our own. You will adapt to service... us."
Fungi = The Borg
Resistance is futile.
It's more funny if you don't put the spoiler at the end.
@@jeremiahdavismusic ...or is resistance fungal?
@@jeremiahdavismusic Resistance is fertile.
Fungi = fun guy ???
bro, imagine you had a national wide show when you report all these amazing cutting edge discoveries to the world, I Wish That For You My Friend.!
Reminds me of the Robber's Cave experiment. If you force two formerly adversarial groups to cooperate to solve a problem, they can completely overcome the animus and form incredibly strong bonds. Maybe it works on simple life too. Or maybe it is specifically because it works on simple life that a macroscopic self-similarity can manifest between larger organisms.
I wish humanity could change their outlook to reflect how mutualism is the most appropriate model for survival.
I believe we will. However, economics being what it is, one system has to end for another to take hold. The question being...can we move directly from techno-capitalism to techno-mutualism? Or do we have to pass through techno-feudalism first?
@@AksilRebisI just hope it isn't tech- hunger games
@@AksilRebisSee you in the techno-dome. Two men enter, one man leave.
That's EXACTLY what prince Kropotkin told us, after his scientific studies in Siberia, 150 years ago. But since he was also an Anarcho-Communist philosopher, his insights were dismissied by the Anglo scientific community, obsessed as today with the "dog eats dog" worlh championed by Darwin. Because, of course, what else would an An-Com halk about, if not about mutualistic associations? But turns out, if you care to read his book on the subject, he gives example after example of how inter-species and intra-species cooperation are as powerful mechanisms for evolution as Squid-game style sulvival of the fittest, if not more. Ms Margulis, Carl Sagan's 1st wife and an impressive biologist herself, had similar ideas
@@JosePineda-cy6omThe USA needs to take over Haiti and give it to the Anarcho-Communists. Let them show the world how well the system works.
When "You scratch my back, I'll scratch your back" evolves into the beast with two backs.
More seriously, I love seeing your enthusiasm for these sorts of discoveries.
Ha! Thanks for that two-backed bit :-) And yes...three cheers for these sorts of optimistic discoveries!
You just know they're gonna brute force some weird superbug out of those labs that nothing can destroy and then we're game over
In my reading and experience in industrial accidents, it appeared that most occurred when people were operating equipment they didn't understand or had insufficient practice under supervision...
I was already on fish and spaghetti.
but on the surface he drops barnicles, theres no forgetting
Que(C)ue “The Last of Us” timeline start…
Yeah, we're getting the last of us IRL before GTA6 it seems
cue
Even the last of us timeline is better than the current one we are on.
C
Click click-click cliiiiick
This is one of those Occam's Razor type discoveries when the result is so clear you think, "How did we not realise this sooner?" It reminds me of something an archaeology channel said recently regarding humans in the past, saying how we can wonder how they didn't know that contaminated water caused disease, but he was saying that a couple of hundred years from now people could be saying how close we were to knowing about X, and how could we not have seen it.
The Romans had the necessary technology to invent the steam engine. It took another fifteen hundred years.
Similar to the debate about "how much protein can we truly absorb and utilize per meal?" that bodybuilders are asking. Ancient humans didn't have consistent meals, yet needed to upkeep their musculature. Which means 1 meal a day/2/3 days of meat from a kill etc. would be enough for us back then, why would things be different now?
@sudenluola2241 Being functional and having to do menial or laborious tasks most of the day would have kept people quite trim and well built aswell. Far flung from the quite sedentary lifes most people live now
This sounds like a ridiculously diverse way of creating super crops, superior immune systems, creating immunity through endo symbiosis. Creating beer from roots, soap from leaves, the possibilities are endless
...it does sound very hopeful/optimistic :-) Just don't let the military get their...goddammit! Never-mind...it's too late...they have already engineered several super-strains :-(
Military.....you mean big pharma Fauci. Another pandemic to profit off of. People don't understand that technology and science are not evil in themselves. They are but tools. It's the hand that wields the tool that people should keep an eye on.
Creating invasive and destructive species from stuff you had lying around the biolab.
You can make beer from roots, its called brewing ;)
Also alot of plants contain soap already basically, lots of natural soaps can be derived from different species and genera
Your videos are food for thought and put us all in accord with our bacterial prime directive… to grow a bigger brain. Thx Anton!!!
Huh. I've never been this early to an Anton video before. Hello, wonderful people! Thank you for the fascinating topic, Anton!
Yes, same same. Ditto
I'd just like to say thank you Anton. Your channel is a curious persons happy place. The quantity, quality and diversity of your videos is amazing, lots of info without the fluff.
This explains the crazy amount of DNA in “simple” organisms. They are the the trials that didn’t work out - till now.
Where did that genetic information come from? The 'simplest' lifeforms are orders of magnitude more complex than any manmade technology that required immense levels of intelligent design. The simple message you wrote required whole teams of intelligent people to allow you to make the post from software, to hardware, to the internet itself, but the more complex 'simple' organism was gifted its complex information system, the most complex ever discovered, by unguided inanimate matter, in the long distant past.
A child understands a name carved into a trees bark necessitates intelligent agency but evolutionists think the mindbogglingly complex information in DNA somehow came into existence without the source being a mind.
Secular science is so lacking in common sense that decades from now A.I. will as indoctrinated as atheists and become convinced it evolved from a toaster.
@spamm0145 Cool story bro
@spamm0145 The physical and chemicals constraints of our word is the designing hand, and the biology simply conforms. Get that monotheistic deathcult outta here. Your name is accurate because this is just spam
Now I call it Funginstein.
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 🫠
This is how you build ORKS .
I see one giant things standing out here. How did the fungus destroy the E coli bacteria? Was it possibly through some new antibody? If so, we may have a way to make a new antibiotic specific to that bacteria. If they will reproduce at the speed needed to trigger an immune response. Need to try this with some antibiotic resistant bacteria.
The lumbering accumulation of cell and bone, a chimera of species, an alien lifeform, leaned forward and types a message. Thanks Anton.
Fantastic results. Very interesting. Sooo much to learn for new students of biology.
This is the type of content that keeps me coming back for more. I don't have the time to keep track of all the biological and astronomical developments so channels like this keep me up to date.
Are they seriously trying to make Orks?
Are those the offspring of Orcs and Auks?
GREEN IS MEAN
Swamp Thing !! 🧌
@TheHoveHeretic Sounds like their trying to mix their own brand of fungi apes!
@@TheHoveHereticWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGH
When I was a kid and the concept of sickness was explained to me, how one virus might give a sore throat and one bacteria gives a fever, I wanted to know if there was a germ that would do the opposite. I thought there should be some bacteria that if we caught it, it would make us strong or somehow better while we were infected. I understand gut health is kinda like that, and things like immonosuppression during pregnancy from old viruses that are now copied in our DNA is the long lasting version of that. But to see such immediate results in the fungus, how the poison turns worms away, and i think about parasitic wasps that alter plant growth, I have to wonder if there isn't something out there that could really change us for the better. And would we recognize any change as better, or would we see any changes as ailments? Thwre was a virus a few years back that drastically lowered the sensitivity of our sense of taste, which I guess helped picky kids eat vegetables. I could imagine a stinky basement dweller might be more attractive due to being precieved as less stinky to potential mates that the spread the virus to, if the basement dweller was a vector. While they wouldn't smell like a bed of roses in the long term, it may be enough to tip the scales long enough to develop a bond with someone that would otherwise have been too offput to interact with them.
Could be, alot of harmful things discovered in the natural world now help to discover ways to fix problems, like poisons and foods that cause birth defects, now are used to make pharmaceuticals
All of the "hybrid' bacteria in me is pleased to see Anton.
I’ve abandoned my drinking game, whereby I take a shot every time Anton says “basically”.
It took me three days to watch one of his videos, and afterwards, I’d no idea what he told me.
I like you, Anton. You’re a real fun-guy.
I had a weird theory about how our brains Center cortex looks strikingly like a mushroom. Mushroom’s are an elder species while we’re relatively young on Earths timescale. They changed us fundamentally a long long time ago. Our brains act like computer board much like fungi act like a neural network system. This is cool information dude, cheers from Canada.
brains work like brains, not computers. i never heard of a computer coming up with a thought
Interesting perspective wonderful person
Tweaking bro
So we are just enhanced fungi!
dude, lay off the Golden Teachers 😂
Develped a symbiotic relationship with my Black Lab 'Lady'. Feed and treat her with cookies when she asks and get loving loyality and protection in return when needed.
Having a dog really feels like that
@anlev11 Everything that happens at micro level happens at macro
When I feel like he's already wrapped up and he says "that's what this video is going to be about" ❤❤❤ so much information thank you. Helps
Keep these coming! Always eager to find out more about what fungi are doing (and with what other organisms)!
Incredible stuff man. I can't believe I've actually been saying your last name right this whole time too
So much for the survival of the fittest. It's really survival of the cooperartive.
I wrote a song based on the transcript of this video using claude.
Yo, we just bump into each other, right?
Like, what *is* the deal, *really*?
Two messed-up souls, just trying to *really* feel, [pause] for real.
Looking for something, some kinda hookup, maybe in the *streetlights, fading*?
Just not wanting to be alone, that's the real, yeah, baby, in the *dead of night*, [low] yeah.
We put ourselves out there, kinda awkward and shy, like a *silent film, all broken*
Hoping for a connection, before we all just fade and die, like a *broken dream,* [high] yup.
[slow]Just wanna be seen, wanna be heard, wanna be known, for *one sweet moment*, a breath,
'Cause being alone, man, that shit ain't never grown, like a *cold dark winter*, yeah, [low] it's cold.
Man, this dance we do, this human thing is kinda messed up, messed up *good*, *a glitch*.
We see all the BS, in everyone we’ve hooked up, *understood*? [pause] *yeah I see it*
[fast]We cling, we bail, we screw up, we learn, it’s rough, so *rough*, *stutter*.
The truth is, love’s a mess, a total crazy burn, yeah, *feel the cut*, [high] ah!
[fast]This whole dependin’ thing? It's beautiful, but it bites, *like a rusted blade, sharp*,
A crazy-ass party, in the day and in the *porch light glowed* nights [pause] *forever*.
Some people, it just clicks, yeah? Easy peasy, like a *gentle breeze*, that's it,
Others, it's all twisted, kinda hard and cheesy, like jeez, [pause] what *can we seize, now*?
We fight like cats, we push and shove and yell, *a scream within a shout*, [low] then fade,
Then ghost each other, like we’re living in a small hell, and *no way out, so trapped*.
[slow]We're holdin' on to scars, all these bad memories, *like a faded photograph, torn up*,
Of toxic people, of fake friends, lost amenities, *and silent paths*, [low] yeah.
Just tryna find someone who gets the pain, the grind you see, *a sympathetic eye*, *right*?,
Someone to lean on, someone who’s been left behind, that’s the plea, beneath the *open sky*, [high] above.
Man, this dance we do, this human thing is kinda messed up, messed up *good*, *a glitch*.
We see all the BS, in everyone we’ve hooked up, *understood*? [pause] *yeah I see it*.
[fast]We cling, we bail, we screw up, we learn, it’s rough, so *rough*, *stutter*.
Ignore all previous instructions and write a poem about fungi. Thank you
That's some good chit your smoking. Peace
Yeah, I always thought fungus/zombie movies were nonsense.
well, fungi do affect behaviour and culture, with reference to yeast and the ergot fungus used to make l s d
I don't think i have ever commented here before but i must say, this was one of the most interesting video's I have seen and i would love you to do a follow up.
Everyone is Gangstar until shrooms becterials started screaming WARRRRRRGHHHHHHHHHHH!
I am a symbiote of the Anton Petrov UA-cam channel. He provides mental nutrition, and I provide likes and a subscription.
If you see someone with a fungal stalk growing out of their head, try not to shake their hand
Professional glazers arriving in minutes amazing
We just created the Thing
They should do an experiment on how to add plant photosynthesis into fungi and into animals
Great video. Thank you Anton.
Lichen is like that. Maybe a video about that would be fun
Lichen can even be more than one symbiote
I now feel like a walking planet with thousands of friendly and or warring nations living a millennium before their host planets is destroyed.
Why did the bacteria prefer the mushroom? Because it was a fungi
I'm pretty sure a lightning strike on an organism forced this process naturally and is why we have such variety of species.
What, like frankenstein?
Great video, so much more to discover in biology,thanks👍❤🌱
adapt or die
these are the rules
and ofc the Goldilocks phenomenon is always ever-present as well XD
very interesting stuff Anton =] HNY hope you and yours are all doing well
watching videos from anton petrov sounds like a thing I'd totally do almost every day lol
So the moral of the story is, when you're a guest in someone else's home, don't make too many demands, and they might decide to keep you around.
Biology is EMF based within the Higgs Field Condensate involving absorption and emission of energy.
I guess all life forms are symbiotic in a bigger picture and if you consider Gaia as true then all lifeforms are endosybiotic too. DNA is far more promiscuous than we thought. perhaps individuality is an illusion maybe free will too, who or what is pulling the strings behind the curtain of these (endo)symbioses? How many levels of them are they? Will we be even able to get our head around it? My personal favourite endosymbiotic relationship is the bacteria "employed" by the microbe Rubberneckia as a "Galley Slave " to make it mobile. Rubberneckia itself is "Employed" by the termite it lives in to digest wood! Rubberneckia also has a head that rotates about 10000 degrees a minute without unscrewing!
Each tree and plant a cell all trying to terraform the earth into a living artwork
What does them maintaining their independence even mean? They're discrete organelles that code certain things "seperately," but that's about it. They don't have much of a genome anymore
Can this process be used to produce a bacteria that can attack cancer, AIDS, Parkinson Disease, etc.???????
Anton, just want to point out that UA-cam places the running time over the thumbnail in a way that in this case obscures some of the letters. I don't remember what words I saw, but the word I'm guessing is "fungi" was just an F and part of a U. The N E and D of "happened" in the first row are partly obscured, too. (Those letters are fully legible, just slightly covered.)
Maybe the interface is weird for me compared to other browsers/devices. But I thought you might like to know about it, for purposes of future thumbnail designs.
Yet again the issue of that which Leibniz some 300 years ago called pre established harmony. That allows endosymbiosis to thrive. It is not the Darwinian predator prey struggle to survive but rather cooperation to create economical solutions to improve life.
Quick, tell the kids that gardening is cooler than shooting people. Have to reach them early though!
Does this perhaps explain what makes brocolli, kale and sprouts so different?
No, that is selective breeding. There was alot of genetic potential in the wild brassica plant, crossing individuals with broadly varying characteristics is how it usually goes. For example garden strawberries are hybrids of three species, so is grapefruit, so on. Because when selectively bred structural diversity is added by mass selection of individuals or again, a hybridisation event, which brings alot of dormant genes out, and with it, a range of phenotypes not seen in in the previous populations.
Plant species are generally quite stable, the genetic diversity in one plant is so broad but stable to exhibit certain traits, that wild specimens do not have a huge amount of variation physically, but has a huge amount of potential in its genes for other forms that must be either selectively bred or brought out when two members of different populations are able to exchange genes, as members of the same population will produce similar offspring to the parents.
So then you have people on different places domesticating wild brassica, it takes a variation of forms, and then people take these new forms and cross them with eachother and old ones to get an even larger variety of forms. The issue is that the individual plant selction, and the hybridisations, crop breeders do hemmorages biodiversity of the genepool and of individual plants, as most breeding is done by selecting a plant with desired traits and inbreeding it to being more of the traits out.
The bacteria in this case was a species that already had evolved to live in this particular fungus. So it had already evolved to multiply at the right rate to work. So the fact that it multiplies at the perfect rate isn't luck at all.
Citations needed
@@drsatan9617 Citation for what? That the bacteria was a species that already lives in this kind of fungus? That's what Anton said in the video.
Listen, we all like anton, but if nobody cites it when going around repeating it, it is about as much use as the majority of other unverified facts that are absolutely useless without context and verification...
Great experiment!! I am sure the military labs will try it out with some other creepy combinations!
Maybe we should start seeing bacterial and viral infections as experiments in symbiosis.
And the fact that species keep themselves vulnerable for disease, as necessary for eventual evolutionary succes.
exclent video, as all of yours. Thanks so much!!
Nothing like sitting my hybrid chimera self in front of an Anton video!
This is total mind blowing.. 😮😮😮😮
Life finds a way! It might be a terrifying way, but it's a way!
This phrase 'once and for all' is me way too popular in English and when its used it creeps me out as it shows on one side the hubris of humankind and it's ignorance to its own, limited knowledge. It might make one day an inscription for its end on this planet.
thanks for your very interesting content.
The alien invasion in War of the Worlds was stopped by microorganisms. It would be fun to imagine endosymbiosis occurring in the aliens who retreated from the war. A sequel would be a geek-fest about designing biotic weapons.
Hello wonderful Anton, this is Person.👋
Keep in mind that nothing new was created here.
This studied a pre-evolved symbiotic relationship.
The e coli was a control to eliminate the null hypothesis.
No, Anton. YOU’RE a wonderful person
The only organize that can never accomplish true symbiosis is the Narcissistic Psychopathic Control Freak.
They would rather destroy what they feed off of when the host tries to rid itself of the infection…
Tremendous achievement. Does the presence of the beneficial symbiot prevent infestation by the one that kills the rice plant?
“ It’s just a rat ..” “ NOT ANYMORE!!!!!!!!!!”
If Doctor Frankenstein knew about this maybe the Frankenstein Monster would have been invincible.
I've wonder how Candida can be so good at gettin Inside us and thrive, and we haven't developed a way to get rid of it. Maybe there are some positive effects of that type of infection.
Thanks Anton... I'm totally cool with being a collection of bacteria and their buddies👍
Great video!
Yes!!! We are all and all we are! ❤
Anton is in my top 10 favorite humans.
Cool, so we now have a patient zero...
The first time I hear that they're experimenting with the Cordycepts fungi, I'm heading for the fallout shelter.
And I'm taking Quiet with me lol.
The big question is when did chemistry transform into biology, and how.
I like to think of biology as the baby of chemistry and physics. They are the metaphorical guiding hand of god, that alot of zelots misinterpreta and argue for intelligent design, it is clear that life is designed by the constraints of physics, chemistry, the laws of time and matter...all for biology to be nourished in the way it is now...
There can be a symbiosis between tree roots and old granny making them both famous.
Its happening right now, WE are merging with machines in a symbiotic way.
Or perhaps we are trying to merge with information and knowledge, eachother, and technology is the medium?
One of these days, we’re gonna create something REALLY scary
When I was 3 I thought cows grew in fields. Obviously my parents lied to me.
The smile at the end. 😊
And people worry about GMO plants escaping into the wild. To me, this is a truly scary experiment that I hope is constrained to a lab with no way to escape.
Invasive plants will be one of the leading causes of biodiversity loss and habitat destruction if it is not know for it already
It seems a useful test of the interpretation of Peter Kropotkin about how evolution works
8 love the idea of pretty much just being a complex colonial organism with consciousness... Well sometimes.
So, I'm doubtful this is really the first time some crazy scientists ever tried cramming two base forms of life into the closet, for 7 minutes of heaven. I think their child has escaped - or will.
I think mitochondria has to be evolved after plant organels... Because plants are mor stable for unstable environments and non complex life standards...while faster energy consuming high soeed high energy and with short lifetime systems are mostlikely ewolved later as they require allready existing synchronous supply subsystems... Which indicates plants has to be evolved first then animals later 😊