Can you do a video on deadly amoebas, how they kill, and how they enter the human bodies. The two main ones I'm wondering about is the brain eating amoeba, Naegleria fowleri and balamuthia mandrillaris which I heard can enter from a cut like on the hand if someone is messing with dirt and I dig a good bit and use my hands to pull things out of the ground covered in dirt
I think it would be interesting if we can make a mycelium/ lichen supercomputer which would self-assemble into a working biological computer we already can create biological lasers and store digital information in the Genome of living organisms I think we might be able to Frankenstein some kind of bio Quantum bit
I actually read that recent research proves that a lichen always has one species of alga and *two* species of fungi. I was surprised nobody noticed in, you know, some 200 years, but I can't see it in these amazing images, either.
Same, that was covered in my biodiversity of plants course, which includes fungi for "historical reasons". We were taught that the secondary fungal symbiont may be the catalyst for the morphological expression of the lichen, so if it's scaly or leafy, etc.
I used to teach the 5th-grade science class how Alice Algae met Freddie Fungus and they took a Lichen to each other. Thanks to recent studies I can't do that anymore without explaining what a throuple is
I remember a chance encounter at a park with a fellow sitting on a rock looking over lichen. "Nice day, what are you looking at?" He told me about the symbiosis of lichen. I'd wondered since how integrated the cells were, thanks for showing such!
@@DirtyDerg Zoomers? we grew up alongside the internet, dude. we _saw_ it go from that to what it is now as we ourselves aged. you're thinking Gen A, cause the oldest Zoomers are almost 30 now
I remember when my local council in England proudly announced that someone had discovered a new type of lichen on a pavement. Sadly, during analysis it was noticed that the ‘lichen’ smelled faintly of mint and was actually chewing gum!
Just goes to show, it's good to independently confirm before sharing with the rest of the class! 🤭 I feel bad for the person who thought they found it though, hopefully it was just a student or something
If this is who I think it is narrating, thank you SO much for a) slowing the narration down and b) laying off all that redundant text. Much more relaxing this way…thanks again, excellent content as per usual.
your narritives and visuals give me a sense of peace while fueling my curiosity in a way no other channel has been able to achieve. i come here to relax and learn about little tiny guys, all while wearing my cozy microcosm crewneck which goes harder than any other sweater i own
Because they can both photosynthesize and break down minerals for food, lichens are one of the first lifeforms to recolonize after disasters like forest fires and volcanic eruptions. Scientists use the appearance of lichens as an indicator that an ecological area is recovering
maybe lichen is kind of like what life was on earth before it got more complex. Similar to how we eventually somehow captured mitochondria and integrated it, there was probably a time when our ancestor organisms were still just symbiotically coming togther.
I developed (ha!) a love affair with lichen when I got a camera with a microscope setting, that lets me take incredibly zoomed-in photos at extremely close range. I discovered an entire garden of lichen growing atop one of the old wooden fence posts of my mom's garden. The closer you get, the stranger and more beautiful they are. And of course, they also frequently play host to my OTHER favorite microorganism, the tardigrade!
Funny, I was thinking about lichen recently. Haven't washed my car in a while and there's something reddish growing on the roof. Was thinking of sending samples of it to James, if he's interested
Our perspective on the world is always limited by the language culture uses to describe it. It's like Godel's incompleteness theorem, there will always be true things about the world that stand apart from language, the framework we use to explain it to ourselves. It's the task of poets and visionaries to create new models, pushing the language of understanding right up to the boundary of what's speakable
That's known as the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (or linguistic relativity). Note that the strong version of that (linguistic determinism) is generally rejected by both linguists and psychologists.
The fascists of the world have long known how to use this for evil. Define your opponents as "untermensch", under men, literally sub-human, and suddenly lots of reasonable people think it's okay to genocide a population, rather than having compassion for their fellow human beings. Within your own experience of reality, you can approach the unspeakable much nearer. As espoused by philosopher and ethnobotanist Terence McKenna, we can at any time reengage with the archaic techniques of shamanism, partaking of plant medicines like mushrooms or ayahuasca to shed all conventions of language. By stepping outside of culture, we get a new perspective on reality and are invited to come up with linguistic models for things no one has seen before and no one will ever see again. On any weekend afternoon, each of us could be our own Magellan, sailing the seas of our own internal landscapes, finding new shores. When we prone the boundaries of our own humanness, engage directly with our connection to the Other, that which is truly alien and has only us as its connection point to the mundane plane, we find how profound and ecstatic our existence on this planet can be. "I lean over meaning's edge, and feel the dizziness of the things unsaid." Because there are things close to the surface that are truly unsayable, showing us through personal, direct experience how literally our language limits us. Just as being wrapped in a body of flesh and blood opens one set of possibilities and limitations to us, culture too wraps us in another layer that filters what's accessible in our sphere. Fortunately, culture can evolve quicker than biology, and we are free at any moment to shed it in search of more fundamental truths.
What I don't yet understand is how a lichen is formed. Is it a fungus that meets an algae and in a kind off wedding for the lichen, or is the lichen something that produces spores that grow new lichen?
Both of your guesses are right! An algae and a fungus can collide in nature and eventually grow together to form a lichen. A mature lichen can also reproduce by releasing packets of algal pores and hyphae into the air, or growing fragile bits of itself outward, that break off and become their own organism
The sexual part of lichen reproduction often gets glossed over. Where and how do separate lichen individuals combine DNA? Do the alga and fungus make separate packages of DNA which … combine, like two couples, in spore production?
@@andrewgraves4026 it's a little unusual and I don't 100% understand it myself as I am still a student. But basically, when a lichen sexually reproduces, it's only the fungal component that releases any genetic material. The fungus releases spores into the environment, and the spores must wait until they have encountered the appropriate algae or cyanobacteria. Since this method relies so much on that chance meeting, it is not as effective as asexual reproduction.
beautiful video!! thank you again! it left me with some thoughts, and i'll go ahead and share them: it seems that opposition is easy to spot because it can feel disruptive and scary, but more broadly, everything is so cooperative and connected that things like opposition and individuality just stand out so starkly against the contrast, which makes those things feel like the more prevailing trends; however, when all things are considered, the level of internal and external cooperation is on an entirely different scale. much of that which feels like opposition is simply interactions and building blocks that are a part of a larger scale cooperation. it's only when things of the same scale cooperate that we even call it cooperation, which is a mistake. love yall out there, stay up!!!
The part around 7:58 where you say "The way we talk about science makes it feel like we're done" is one of the best lines I've ever heard! Great video!
Thanks for this. Watching many many nature videos I have heard lichens mentioned many times as a unique life-form made up of two others, but this is the first time I have found out why and what the processes are for their interactions. You have expanded my world another notch and I will never walk by a lichen again without looking and marveling at it.
Imagine your buddy literally living inside your body and being super chill and helpful to you. How bro do you have to be to hang out inside your buddy.
Does Hank Green have to be the host of every science channel on TH-cam? I can't seem to get away from him! He almost had me fooled with his more calm-than-usual tone here, but the credits don't lie!
In CT USA.. lichen smell LOVELY. ☺️😻 I once took a gravestone cleaning class and realized their comforting, earthy, almost petrichor ish scent bc I came home smelling great 😂 .. they're also very pretty. 🎉
@6:00 the little things vibrating whatever that molecule was (looks like just a big drop of water) until it popped and realizing it didnt actually pop and his friend behind him trying to push him into the little gap he cant fit was amazing. It looked like it was vibrating that molecule so hard it was creating a sonic pressure wave between it and the molecule. Then it popped and became more circular and it started getting pushed by his buddies and started trying to create the wave again to get through. I wonder if he ever made it? lol
likewise at 8:08 the little rod that comes into view just below 630X text and disappears once it meets something vibrating was equally interesting. What was that? Didn't look like bacteria
how does lichen fall under taxonomy? how does it reproduce if it needs both algae and fungi? which fungi and which algae can combine as a lichen? so many questions...
I love lichen, as an amateur, but I freaked out with delight when I found out about the new (new to humans) double fungi twist. I wonder how many other lifeforms will be found to be the result of living things combing with one or more other living things.
Man just watched scishow before this video and realized man that voice sounds familiar. Been watching these for a while, but never made the connection. :D
“You see, just as the earth lichen is composed of an algae and a fungus, the quantum variety is also comped of two separated parts: an attractive, algae-based id and a ravenous, fungus-based ego that stores the stolen souls - I mean, life forces. Now, here’s the weird part: the ego and the id are connected not physically, like decent, God-fearing earth lichens, but by quantum entanglement.”
When you say the holdfast is like a peg, do you mean a wooden peg as in a straight rod, a wooden peg for a clothesline, a divided rod, or a clothes peg that pinches with a spring and opens and shuts ?
The ultimate evolution of the lichen is surely the lichen trees of the Tentacled Forest, the great coniferous rainforest stretching across 35 hundred of miles of Northwest Novopangea.
Lichen, how they evolved and what they are made of, have analogy to religion also. There is “us”, each of us is individual and can function and at times reproduce with others of our kind. And there are those in our heads, those who help or harm us. The help or harm is at times dependent on what we are willing to put up with as voices in our heads. These voices can get around and function but they can not reproduce. Those voices can help us to do good or bad.
Because this series always frustratingly leaves me with more questions than answers, here's at least the most important one answered by ChatGPT: "One common method of asexual reproduction in lichens is fragmentation, in which a portion of the lichen breaks off and establishes itself as a new individual. This can occur naturally through environmental factors such as wind or water, or through physical disturbance such as trampling or grazing. Another method of asexual reproduction in lichens is through the production of specialized structures called soredia or isidia. Soredia are small, dust-like particles that contain both fungal and algal cells, while isidia are small, finger-like projections containing the same cells. These structures can detach from the parent lichen and grow into new individuals under suitable conditions."
@@AmandaComeauCreates i am old and i think now that we are the Earth cancer and we need to disappear in this 6th mass extinction. We destroyed all our beautiful home and were unable to choice the right turn in time. Our big brain has nothing to do with true intelligence and understanding nor wisdom. It’s hard to wrap this idea in our mind but it’s now for me an evidence. We need to exit to save our Little Blue Pale Dot.
Please please please do a deep dive on myxomycetes (slime mold) it’s not a fungus or a plant. It has a part of its life cycle where the spore’s it drops for reproduction land in water they grow flagella and start hunting bacteria
could there also be a "slavery" relationship in organisms? like do the algae cells function fine on their own if they are in wet surroundings? or could the fungus structure still live off an external food source if all the green cells were removed? i never saw the vampire movies where people use the term lycan for lycanthropes. when i first saw clips of people talking about them i thought they were referring to "lichens" 🙂
Lichen is inside my body, right now, through a certain (American) company/brand that uses safe, organic, marine/plant, vegan/vegetarian based ingredients! I have a certain surgery, this Friday, and thought I was going to get my second bottle of vitamin D3 (plant based from lichen) for next day delivery a week ago. An hour and a half, ago, one of my neighbors knocked on my door and she told me that she put my package in front of my door and went upstairs to her apartment. I couldn't wait to open and use these supplements! I came across this certain brand/company, on Amazon, a year ago. Their vitamin D3 was/is the first organic/vegan vitamins I bought from them. A few weeks, maybe a month later, I went to a hospital to check my vitamin d levels and I couldn't believe how potent these were/are. Before that, my brain and body was in so much pain because of lack of vitamins, especially/mostly lack of vitamin D3. I wished I knew about this specific brand/company years ago. Lichen also helps with bone, teeth, and immune health benefits!
Go to www.squarespace.com/microcosmos to get a free trial and 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
PURR SIS 🧜🏿♀️
Can you do a video on deadly amoebas, how they kill, and how they enter the human bodies. The two main ones I'm wondering about is the brain eating amoeba, Naegleria fowleri and balamuthia mandrillaris which I heard can enter from a cut like on the hand if someone is messing with dirt and I dig a good bit and use my hands to pull things out of the ground covered in dirt
I think it would be interesting if we can make a mycelium/ lichen supercomputer which would self-assemble into a working biological computer we already can create biological lasers and store digital information in the Genome of living organisms I think we might be able to Frankenstein some kind of bio Quantum bit
I actually read that recent research proves that a lichen always has one species of alga and *two* species of fungi. I was surprised nobody noticed in, you know, some 200 years, but I can't see it in these amazing images, either.
Same, that was covered in my biodiversity of plants course, which includes fungi for "historical reasons". We were taught that the secondary fungal symbiont may be the catalyst for the morphological expression of the lichen, so if it's scaly or leafy, etc.
yes, there are yeasts in lichen, too. but at the moment, nobody knows which role they play or if they are just commensals.
One algae 2 fungi and like 3 bacteria
For the 12 days of symbiosis, my lichen gave to me...
@@csn583 good thread; would read again. Good job everyone!
I used to teach the 5th-grade science class how Alice Algae met Freddie Fungus and they took a Lichen to each other. Thanks to recent studies I can't do that anymore without explaining what a throuple is
😅😅
Theodore Throuple?
the polycule!!!!!
You know, I've really started to take a lichen to this channel. The writing is excellent and Hank is such a fungi!
AaaaaaaaaaaaAAA
Booooooooo
Nice 😂👍
I hate how good this is.
And Al, gee, he's so green with envy.
I remember a chance encounter at a park with a fellow sitting on a rock looking over lichen. "Nice day, what are you looking at?" He told me about the symbiosis of lichen. I'd wondered since how integrated the cells were, thanks for showing such!
That exchange sounds absolutely magical
That exchange sounds absolutely magical
.
The level of quality this channel brings to every single video is just staggering.
Zoomers be like
"Wow a channel with no filler!!!"
Everyone else
"This is just how the internet used to be."
@@DirtyDerg Zoomers? we grew up alongside the internet, dude. we _saw_ it go from that to what it is now as we ourselves aged. you're thinking Gen A, cause the oldest Zoomers are almost 30 now
I’m just reading through the comments, and this channel has the sweetest fan base
"We don't know the tings we don't know".
Equally profound and disturbing at the same time.
I remember when my local council in England proudly announced that someone had discovered a new type of lichen on a pavement. Sadly, during analysis it was noticed that the ‘lichen’ smelled faintly of mint and was actually chewing gum!
Just goes to show, it's good to independently confirm before sharing with the rest of the class! 🤭 I feel bad for the person who thought they found it though, hopefully it was just a student or something
@@SirUncleDolan I don’t think anyone got too much grief - it was treated in a light-hearted way!
Maybe because it was wriggleys😉
Any articles about this?
If this is who I think it is narrating, thank you SO much for a) slowing the narration down and b) laying off all that redundant text. Much more relaxing this way…thanks again, excellent content as per usual.
your narritives and visuals give me a sense of peace while fueling my curiosity in a way no other channel has been able to achieve. i come here to relax and learn about little tiny guys, all while wearing my cozy microcosm crewneck which goes harder than any other sweater i own
Because they can both photosynthesize and break down minerals for food, lichens are one of the first lifeforms to recolonize after disasters like forest fires and volcanic eruptions. Scientists use the appearance of lichens as an indicator that an ecological area is recovering
maybe lichen is kind of like what life was on earth before it got more complex. Similar to how we eventually somehow captured mitochondria and integrated it, there was probably a time when our ancestor organisms were still just symbiotically coming togther.
That's a viable theory. I've seen it postulated that our internal organs may have started out as symbiotic colonies
The colon as an intelligent worm (fill it w/ barium & C what happens)
@@djinnisequoia that is kind of gross to think about
@@jamesbugbee9026 no, much simpler internals than that. We got mitochondria that way, after all.
I developed (ha!) a love affair with lichen when I got a camera with a microscope setting, that lets me take incredibly zoomed-in photos at extremely close range. I discovered an entire garden of lichen growing atop one of the old wooden fence posts of my mom's garden. The closer you get, the stranger and more beautiful they are. And of course, they also frequently play host to my OTHER favorite microorganism, the tardigrade!
Funny, I was thinking about lichen recently. Haven't washed my car in a while and there's something reddish growing on the roof. Was thinking of sending samples of it to James, if he's interested
The photos were amazing! You should make posters of them!
I’m lichen this channel! So great. Keep up the good work!
Our perspective on the world is always limited by the language culture uses to describe it. It's like Godel's incompleteness theorem, there will always be true things about the world that stand apart from language, the framework we use to explain it to ourselves. It's the task of poets and visionaries to create new models, pushing the language of understanding right up to the boundary of what's speakable
That's known as the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (or linguistic relativity). Note that the strong version of that (linguistic determinism) is generally rejected by both linguists and psychologists.
The fascists of the world have long known how to use this for evil. Define your opponents as "untermensch", under men, literally sub-human, and suddenly lots of reasonable people think it's okay to genocide a population, rather than having compassion for their fellow human beings.
Within your own experience of reality, you can approach the unspeakable much nearer. As espoused by philosopher and ethnobotanist Terence McKenna, we can at any time reengage with the archaic techniques of shamanism, partaking of plant medicines like mushrooms or ayahuasca to shed all conventions of language. By stepping outside of culture, we get a new perspective on reality and are invited to come up with linguistic models for things no one has seen before and no one will ever see again. On any weekend afternoon, each of us could be our own Magellan, sailing the seas of our own internal landscapes, finding new shores.
When we prone the boundaries of our own humanness, engage directly with our connection to the Other, that which is truly alien and has only us as its connection point to the mundane plane, we find how profound and ecstatic our existence on this planet can be. "I lean over meaning's edge, and feel the dizziness of the things unsaid." Because there are things close to the surface that are truly unsayable, showing us through personal, direct experience how literally our language limits us. Just as being wrapped in a body of flesh and blood opens one set of possibilities and limitations to us, culture too wraps us in another layer that filters what's accessible in our sphere. Fortunately, culture can evolve quicker than biology, and we are free at any moment to shed it in search of more fundamental truths.
Infinity vs (#) vocabulary
ummm, wut?
What I don't yet understand is how a lichen is formed. Is it a fungus that meets an algae and in a kind off wedding for the lichen, or is the lichen something that produces spores that grow new lichen?
Both of your guesses are right!
An algae and a fungus can collide in nature and eventually grow together to form a lichen. A mature lichen can also reproduce by releasing packets of algal pores and hyphae into the air, or growing fragile bits of itself outward, that break off and become their own organism
@@bjornbesbitt6446 thanks!
The sexual part of lichen reproduction often gets glossed over. Where and how do separate lichen individuals combine DNA? Do the alga and fungus make separate packages of DNA which … combine, like two couples, in spore production?
@@andrewgraves4026 it's a little unusual and I don't 100% understand it myself as I am still a student. But basically, when a lichen sexually reproduces, it's only the fungal component that releases any genetic material. The fungus releases spores into the environment, and the spores must wait until they have encountered the appropriate algae or cyanobacteria.
Since this method relies so much on that chance meeting, it is not as effective as asexual reproduction.
@@bjornbesbitt6446 thanks! Great job.
My mycology professor had this video on one of his lecture slides!
beautiful video!! thank you again! it left me with some thoughts, and i'll go ahead and share them:
it seems that opposition is easy to spot because it can feel disruptive and scary, but more broadly, everything is so cooperative and connected that things like opposition and individuality just stand out so starkly against the contrast, which makes those things feel like the more prevailing trends; however, when all things are considered, the level of internal and external cooperation is on an entirely different scale. much of that which feels like opposition is simply interactions and building blocks that are a part of a larger scale cooperation. it's only when things of the same scale cooperate that we even call it cooperation, which is a mistake.
love yall out there, stay up!!!
The part around 7:58 where you say "The way we talk about science makes it feel like we're done" is one of the best lines I've ever heard! Great video!
I wake & baked this morning, and this is exactly how I wanted to spend my Easter Monday 😂 I love you, Hank, thank you so much for this show ❤
Careful, only you can prevent...
High right now and my mind is blown watching this 😂
Smoke dat green lichens 🔥
Another great episode, Thank you.
Thanks for this. Watching many many nature videos I have heard lichens mentioned many times as a unique life-form made up of two others, but this is the first time I have found out why and what the processes are for their interactions. You have expanded my world another notch and I will never walk by a lichen again without looking and marveling at it.
I agree. I've watched many "documentaries" on Lichen and this one is great. Short and full of knowledge, and pictures.
I taught a lichen themed summer camp recently haha! Lichen is very cool and I'm happy to see it get the recognition it deserves
Imagine your buddy literally living inside your body and being super chill and helpful to you. How bro do you have to be to hang out inside your buddy.
So here's the question hanging unanswered over this episode.... Do lichens reproduce other lichens or is each lichen a chance meeting of strangers?
Does Hank Green have to be the host of every science channel on TH-cam? I can't seem to get away from him! He almost had me fooled with his more calm-than-usual tone here, but the credits don't lie!
Great Video as always 😁
Tiny language PSA though:
„Sch“ as in Schwendener is pronounced the same as „sh“ in the word shake.
Cheers from Austria 🇦🇹
I wonder to what extent lichens prepared the early Earth for green plants and animals, adding oxygen to the air and breaking down rocks.
I believe it's already well theorized that lichen might've been the first and most successful land organisms but I saw it in a video awhile back.
In CT USA.. lichen smell LOVELY. ☺️😻 I once took a gravestone cleaning class and realized their comforting, earthy, almost petrichor ish scent bc I came home smelling great 😂 .. they're also very pretty. 🎉
@6:00 the little things vibrating whatever that molecule was (looks like just a big drop of water) until it popped and realizing it didnt actually pop and his friend behind him trying to push him into the little gap he cant fit was amazing. It looked like it was vibrating that molecule so hard it was creating a sonic pressure wave between it and the molecule. Then it popped and became more circular and it started getting pushed by his buddies and started trying to create the wave again to get through. I wonder if he ever made it? lol
likewise at 8:08 the little rod that comes into view just below 630X text and disappears once it meets something vibrating was equally interesting. What was that? Didn't look like bacteria
how does lichen fall under taxonomy? how does it reproduce if it needs both algae and fungi? which fungi and which algae can combine as a lichen?
so many questions...
I cultivated as a novice on an artifical rock wall in a paludarium, just from a pinch of lichen I collected.
If they became a single organism fully, would they create a whole new Kingdom or even Domain? :o
Whaaat. Fungi/ hyphae work with algae. So cool. It's amazing all the processes needed for us to survive.
That's the voice of Mr Tom Hank from PBS Sci-Show! Isn't it??
Ive been watching loads of videos about lichen recently, just out of curiosity. Then you go an upload this.
I love lichen, as an amateur, but I freaked out with delight when I found out about the new (new to humans) double fungi twist. I wonder how many other lifeforms will be found to be the result of living things combing with one or more other living things.
Great episode like always
Really good episode. I love the microscopy, so detailed , I screenshot one and set as my wallpaper
Amazing! Now we just need an episode on endosymbionts.
Man just watched scishow before this video and realized man that voice sounds familiar. Been watching these for a while, but never made the connection. :D
Thank you for being so chill in these videos, I can sleep now.
no way...,,, lichen are the og symbiosises
i did not know that. that is so cool
I want to see the big leafy lichen growing on a sloth, that would look so cool, like someone from a video game.
I was taught the symbiosis of lichen as the algae are the phytobiont (not photobiont) & the fungi the mycobiont
“You see, just as the earth lichen is composed of an algae and a fungus, the quantum variety is also comped of two separated parts: an attractive, algae-based id and a ravenous, fungus-based ego that stores the stolen souls - I mean, life forces. Now, here’s the weird part: the ego and the id are connected not physically, like decent, God-fearing earth lichens, but by quantum entanglement.”
What are you talking about?
Very nice script. Loved the end.
Always beautiful videos!
I've been waiting for a lichen video for ages.
So this means the fungus are the PMC and Bodyguard of Algae. Impressive.
Everytime I see a lichen I point it out and say “I’m liken’ it!!!”
Several years ago, it was discovered that lichen have at least three species: two algae or cyanobacteria, and a fungus.
Dayum! way better than expected
What about yeast? Seems to me that I remember hearing about a lichen and that had algae, fungus, and yeast
that's true, but the role of the yeast is not yet understood.
Yeast is also fungi FWIW.
@@csn583 yes.
Yeast to ferment Human bodies
When you say the holdfast is like a peg, do you mean a wooden peg as in a straight rod, a wooden peg for a clothesline, a divided rod, or a clothes peg that pinches with a spring and opens and shuts ?
The ultimate evolution of the lichen is surely the lichen trees of the Tentacled Forest, the great coniferous rainforest stretching across 35 hundred of miles of Northwest Novopangea.
Lichen is like Jesus. When I found Lichen I saw it everywhere. It filled my heart, and guided my thoughts. The world will never be the same again.
great data and presentation and excellent reflection about modern dogmas in science. 10/10
Lichen, how they evolved and what they are made of, have analogy to religion also. There is “us”, each of us is individual and can function and at times reproduce with others of our kind. And there are those in our heads, those who help or harm us. The help or harm is at times dependent on what we are willing to put up with as voices in our heads. These voices can get around and function but they can not reproduce. Those voices can help us to do good or bad.
What did the algae say to fungus about their symbiotic relationship?
.
.
.
I'm LICHEN it!
8:14 someone need to create a TH-cam channel dedicated exclusively to the things that we don't know
I found lichen that was bone dry. Growing with moss. It's the beginning of spring now.
Good show!
Yeah, we're much closer the the beginning than the ending of understanding
Mycobiont and photobiont: They took a likin' to each other.
Why are these videos still survives in the TikTok era, and why am I liking this more than I should?
Al Gee met Fun Gus met and took a lichen to each other.
There are no individuals. We are all lichens.
Thanks for all your videos!
Not the first time a fun guy couple were lichen some Al, G.
Is the narrator the dude from Sci show?
The number 3 is the beginning of everything we've learned.
Because this series always frustratingly leaves me with more questions than answers, here's at least the most important one answered by ChatGPT: "One common method of asexual reproduction in lichens is fragmentation, in which a portion of the lichen breaks off and establishes itself as a new individual. This can occur naturally through environmental factors such as wind or water, or through physical disturbance such as trampling or grazing.
Another method of asexual reproduction in lichens is through the production of specialized structures called soredia or isidia. Soredia are small, dust-like particles that contain both fungal and algal cells, while isidia are small, finger-like projections containing the same cells. These structures can detach from the parent lichen and grow into new individuals under suitable conditions."
Very interesting!
another wonderful episode, thank you!
shoutout to the great oxidization effect
If there is lichen growing on my feet, does that mean I need to move more? 🤣
I have always loved lichen and fungi
Thank you.
I’m looking for a poster illustration of small measurements down to the atomic level. Can someone please point me? Thanks.
It's a sad thing that lichens are impacted by aerial pollutions and are diseapering from urban centers.
Considering how successful they've been that's terrifying. If they can't survive how can we :s
@@AmandaComeauCreates i am old and i think now that we are the Earth cancer and we need to disappear in this 6th mass extinction. We destroyed all our beautiful home and were unable to choice the right turn in time. Our big brain has nothing to do with true intelligence and understanding nor wisdom. It’s hard to wrap this idea in our mind but it’s now for me an evidence. We need to exit to save our Little Blue Pale Dot.
THANK YOU!!! I love lichens.
Please please please do a deep dive on myxomycetes (slime mold) it’s not a fungus or a plant. It has a part of its life cycle where the spore’s it drops for reproduction land in water they grow flagella and start hunting bacteria
7:38 Wow, beautiful!
You really have to wonder just how many "crazy" theories have been dismissed, simply because of the closed minded thinking we're all responsible for.
This is definitely to my lichen. Lol 😆 liking
Good friendship 🤝
Four not two , Lichen is a bridge among 4 different life kingdoms.
Lichen is on land the counterpart of what coral is in the sea
You forgot to mention the biggest thing we need to thank Cyanobacteria for is our mitochondria.
could there also be a "slavery" relationship in organisms? like do the algae cells function fine on their own if they are in wet surroundings? or could the fungus structure still live off an external food source if all the green cells were removed?
i never saw the vampire movies where people use the term lycan for lycanthropes. when i first saw clips of people talking about them i thought they were referring to "lichens" 🙂
Im really lichen this episode 🖤✨
I'm surprised. Story checks out.
what did you learn?
Lichen is inside my body, right now, through a certain (American) company/brand that uses safe, organic, marine/plant, vegan/vegetarian based ingredients! I have a certain surgery, this Friday, and thought I was going to get my second bottle of vitamin D3 (plant based from lichen) for next day delivery a week ago. An hour and a half, ago, one of my neighbors knocked on my door and she told me that she put my package in front of my door and went upstairs to her apartment. I couldn't wait to open and use these supplements! I came across this certain brand/company, on Amazon, a year ago. Their vitamin D3 was/is the first organic/vegan vitamins I bought from them. A few weeks, maybe a month later, I went to a hospital to check my vitamin d levels and I couldn't believe how potent these were/are. Before that, my brain and body was in so much pain because of lack of vitamins, especially/mostly lack of vitamin D3. I wished I knew about this specific brand/company years ago. Lichen also helps with bone, teeth, and immune health benefits!
Is that Hank Green's voice?
I love this so much!
I always thought the love child of Fungi and Algae was Lindsay Graham.
Did a double take when I saw the thumbnail, read it as "dual orgasm" lol