One of the best educational videos with the least amount of views I've ever seen. I had already known about and researched this topic in the past but this presentation was still the most thorough one to date.
I heard about fig wasps recently but you explained the whole story about their life cycle and how it fits with the fig cycle. Now I understand it. I still plan to eat the commercial figs.
Great video Thank you. as far as eating figs I will choose the ones that are commercially grown to pollinate themselves, Can't get past the wasp inside. Thanks again.
Thank you for the beautiful explanation. I already knew about the reproduction of figs, but I came here to address my question: can we actually find the wasps when we eat a fig? I’ve always been told the answer was no. l have a fig tree (Ficus Carica) in my garden and every year we collect the fruits to eat. I came back after a month abroad, and my father told me he had already harvested them: there was a giant bowl of fruits in the fridge. I split one open with my hands, and found the dead female wasp inside, wingless and antennaeless. I tossed it into the trash. I opened another one, and I couldn’t find the female, but I could clearly see one or two larvae having a great time enjoying their buffet. Long story short, almost all of the harvested figs, either contained the female, at times already dead, at times about to die, or they contained the larvae. I couldn’t eat them. What was the cause of this? Did my father collect the fruits too early? Weren’t they ripe when he collected them? Had they been ripe, the females would have dissolved and the larvae inside would have already erupted from the syconium, right? Thank you in advance
Very well explained.All of your videos are very informative and visually appealing too.Looking forward to know more about plants through your videos. I have query “Is money plant” an angiosperm,I have never seen it flowering,pls explain.Thanks.
Thank you! I'm glad you're learning some new things about plants through my videos! The common name "money plant" is unfortunately used for many different species of plants, so I'm not sure which one you have. However, all of them are angisoperms. Often times, plants that we grow in our houses behave differently than when they grow in their native habitat. Not having the ideal conditions can cause them to not bloom, grow shorter, etc.
That's incredible!! Today I informed my son that i bought a fig tree and a guys from nursery will plant it tomorrow in our backyard. I was shocked when he told me about those little wasps that live inside the figs fruits. I couldn't and didn't believe it!! But now I don't really know what to do🤔 Thank you for the information..I still love figs
❤Thank you so much for this exellent video 🎉 Of course I'll keep eating the smyrna figs. I don't care abt. some rest of molecules of a wasp, which was there inside a fig some mounth before I eat it😂
Pretty interesting, thank you . I used to hate pharmacognosy course especially plant morphology related parts yet I didn't expect to be overwhelmed by any relevant topic 🤍🤍🤍
This video was so informative thank you! Im so mind blown by the way nature and insects can be so hyper dependent on each other.
One of the best educational videos with the least amount of views I've ever seen. I had already known about and researched this topic in the past but this presentation was still the most thorough one to date.
Thank you so much! ❤
Excellent presentation. Thank you very much for simplifying a very complex pollination process.
One of the best explanations I have ever heard about figs pollination! Thank you!
great video and visuals again! your work is inspiring :)
Thank you so much! ❤
Yes i will still grow and eat my own figs cos now i appreciate them all the more so thanks for this info!
Excellent! This is a far more indepth and concise analysis of the pollination process and Fig wasp life cycle. Thank you!!
I heard about fig wasps recently but you explained the whole story about their life cycle and how it fits with the fig cycle. Now I understand it. I still plan to eat the commercial figs.
Great video Thank you. as far as eating figs I will choose the ones that are commercially grown to pollinate themselves, Can't get past the wasp inside. Thanks again.
Good content on ficus hidden story revealed. Thanks nature clearly. Good work.
Thank you! 🤗
UNDERRATED CHANNEL
Greatest Information.
Thank you for the beautiful explanation. I already knew about the reproduction of figs, but I came here to address my question: can we actually find the wasps when we eat a fig? I’ve always been told the answer was no.
l have a fig tree (Ficus Carica) in my garden and every year we collect the fruits to eat. I came back after a month abroad, and my father told me he had already harvested them: there was a giant bowl of fruits in the fridge. I split one open with my hands, and found the dead female wasp inside, wingless and antennaeless. I tossed it into the trash.
I opened another one, and I couldn’t find the female, but I could clearly see one or two larvae having a great time enjoying their buffet.
Long story short, almost all of the harvested figs, either contained the female, at times already dead, at times about to die, or they contained the larvae.
I couldn’t eat them.
What was the cause of this? Did my father collect the fruits too early? Weren’t they ripe when he collected them? Had they been ripe, the females would have dissolved and the larvae inside would have already erupted from the syconium, right?
Thank you in advance
Utterly fascinating. I would love to know more about how such a complex mutualism evolved.
It is really fascinating! I am lucky I got to observe this relationship between various species of wasps/figs.
Very well explained.All of your videos are very informative and visually appealing too.Looking forward to know more about plants through your videos.
I have query “Is money plant” an angiosperm,I have never seen it flowering,pls explain.Thanks.
Thank you! I'm glad you're learning some new things about plants through my videos!
The common name "money plant" is unfortunately used for many different species of plants, so I'm not sure which one you have. However, all of them are angisoperms. Often times, plants that we grow in our houses behave differently than when they grow in their native habitat. Not having the ideal conditions can cause them to not bloom, grow shorter, etc.
I have epipremnum aureum
thank you now I can relate to it
This video is amazing! Thank you so much for all the work you guys did!
I'm glad you enjoyed it! :) Thank you for watching!
That's incredible!! Today I informed my son that i bought a fig tree and a guys from nursery will plant it tomorrow in our backyard. I was shocked when he told me about those little wasps that live inside the figs fruits. I couldn't and didn't believe it!! But now I don't really know what to do🤔
Thank you for the information..I still love figs
Maybe you'll get a chance to witness the pollination process! Look closely when it's time! 😉
This is a fantastic informative video. It just goes to illustrate, you can learn new things, if you are receptive. Thank you for your excellent work.
Great presentation
Great video, thank you
Wonderful video !! Which microscope do you use ?
king gizzard wrote a song about it :)
Big Fig Wasp! :)
The fig tree doesn’t make figs all year round so when it’s not fruiting season, where do those wasps go? How is their life cycle impacted?
Oh I'd never stop eating figs, btw XD
❤Thank you so much for this exellent video 🎉
Of course I'll keep eating the smyrna figs. I don't care abt. some rest of molecules of a wasp, which was there inside a fig some mounth before I eat it😂
So are there male figs and female figs?
If people only new how many bugs and bug parts they eat a day they probably would be sick
yum protein
LOL, I'm from Mexico, and it doesn't matter if it has insects. We eat some insects
I like that approach! 🤭
Thinking to find specie of fig not hermaphrodite
I have never eaten fig😂
And thanks God i have never do so 😂
What's wrong with a protein packed fruit? 🤭
Oh, but they're good. My grandmother grew figs and made fig preserves.
Pretty interesting, thank you . I used to hate pharmacognosy course especially plant morphology related parts yet I didn't expect to be overwhelmed by any relevant topic 🤍🤍🤍
why so little views