It's amazing how nature has developed such unique strategies to deal with all the pressures of life and the environment. Nature never fails to astonish me with its wondrous creativity.
@@JogBird Ingenuity? Hard to find a word that doesn't insinuate some form of intelligence or actual will, which or course isn't the case in an evolutionary sense.
@David Single The problem here is that the way in which she describes evolution of this plant, is that it intelligently changed its own abilities to adapt to environmental changes. I agree with Ethan Elliott and with Dr. Stephen Meyer. Being from a computer science background, I can definitively tell you that a language and a method of interpreting that language is not something that occurs by accident. I have no problem believing in a creator who knew that His creation would need to adapt to changes in its environment. Creating code to accommodate those changes is completely reasonable. To answer your question about "evil" you must venture outside of science into philosophy. Most scientists are not philosophers and to speak of such, speak outside their field. Here is your answer for the question of evil... Free will. In order for free will to exist, the capacity for evil must also exist. The evil is not created by God, but the providence of free will gives the capacity for evil. That same free will also gives the capacity for love. Love itself can not truly exist without free will, otherwise it becomes a programmed, controlled response - like a robot - which is no longer free will but much more puppetry. The God that you appear to desire is a God who puppeteers rather than a God who allows free will and free agency. Every government that exists creates laws for conduct to give that free will limits that protects for the benefit of the whole. The God of the Bible already has a societal construct. The rules given to Moses were to demonstrate that no human being can live up to "law" because "law" without compassion is cruelty. The compassion comes in where providence is made to both satisfy the law, and to satisfy compassion. That is where the scientific anomaly of this world comes in... Jesus. In order to satisfy law, a society must provide a way to fulfill that law, and provide satisfaction for that law. The absolute, most humane way to do that is to give you a choice. You choose to have your free will limited, by recognizing that God's laws are valuable to mitigate evil and accept that you can never pay your own fine for violation of those societal laws (done by the simple act of belief), or you choose to accept the consequences of evil. In order for free will to continue existing, you must act of your own free will to have that will limited (which it appears is your desire, to have a limited free will). It must be your choice for your limited free will to remain free will. (But of course, this is a philosophical discussion rather than a scientific)
Brassica olaracea comes to mind, with brocolli, cabbage and kale being the same species!! Still rocks my mind after finding that out on that SciShow episode.
That's not sexual dimorphism. It's breeding. Brassica is the dog of the edible plant world; humans have bred it into so many different versions of itself, you'd think they were all different species. Chihuahuas are both male and female; so are St Bernards. And so are kale and broccolini. In fact, they're still monoecious. Because that's not something breeding can actually change. The only thing that's truly weird, is that of all the forms we've bred them into, only cauliflower, broccoli, and broccolini (and hybrids) have edible flowers. Like, how come some brassica flowers are edible and some aren't when they are, in fact, the same species? It's like breeding a cow who's milk we can't use for cheese. It's just weird.
@@alisoncircus Agreed to all, oops sorry for being misleading. I just meant that this variation in individuals reminded me of the crazy variation in individuals in Brassica
I thought this was going to be about cabbage and how broccoli, cabbage, brussel sprouts, cauliflower etc are all the same species, Brassica olericea. This was cool though and I'm not disappointed.
They are different parts of the wild mustard plant that we selectively bred to be what we wanted. Kohlrabi came from the stem Kale came from the leaves Broccoli came from the flower buds and stem Brussel sprouts came from lateral leaf buds Cabbage came from the terminal leaf buds Cauliflower also came from flower buds.
All I could think of when learning about serotiny is imagining a grass type pokémon developing it then developing a symbiosis with a fire type pokémon which aids in its dispersal by starting fires in return for exp. from the fainted grass types.
Since starting to grow native here in the Southeast US, I found that I had to get to know which plants had separate male and female plants when growing straight species (not a cultivar that has male female on same plant when normally they do not). Take for instance American Persimmon, Black Willow, Sassafras, Coontie (native cycad), Muscadine, American Holly, Red Cedar (its actually a juniper)...all these are natives that must have pollination between plants...therefore you cant just go to a native plant store and pick up one and expect to have little coontie babies for instance. And we need more knowledgeable native plant nurseries to step up sexing plants out...and that can be costly when waiting for flowering which can take years in some cases. Oh and...Grow Native! Grow straight species (not cultivars). Do not grow non-native invasives.
Yeah dioecious plants can be troublesome to grow My mom has tried to establish native spicebush but so far all the plants she got from the native plant society have turned out to be male. Is there no way to ID what sex a plant will be prior to its first flowering? Also as a society not only must we learn to plant native plants again but we need to remember that plants aren't just decorations but living things. They aren't just decorations for the latest fad only to be ripped out for the next new annual invasive craze that gets dumped in the ground as a root bound mess. Outside of the vegetative part that makes energy for the plant there is usually just as much if not more underground but that is all out of sight out of mind. It is sad how it took so long for people to recognize that the link between plants and their fungal symbionts can't be neglected centuries after the first documentation of these associations. >_< I hate the landscaping industry so many invasive plants started out this way and there are constantly more arising as the next invasive scourge a decade or two after the peak fad. Crape Myrtles are one of the examples of the next wave already taking over.
Good discussion of dioecious plants, which are more common than many people think. Ash trees, persimmons and Hollies are mong the dioecioua species. My one quibble with this video is not mentioning the plants scientific name in the video itself and not mentioning it's a protea, a very unique and diverse group of plants that cane from the ancient supercontinent of gondwana ... but I digress. ;)
I gave a women 50% off a plant at home depot once cause I couldn't tell her for sure that it wouldn't kill her cat lol. That's what happens when the plumbing guy is covering the seasonal dept. Either way another satisfied customer lol
Protea /ˈproʊtiːə/[1] is both the botanical name and the English common name of a genus of South African flowering plants, also called sugarbushes (Afrikaans: suikerbos). This is the what they are called
(On phone to U.S. Embassy) "...and now I'm being held hostage by these South African pirates", Embassy: "Did you tell them you have Surfshark?" (really surprised) "Yeah I did!" Embassy: "And they didn't let you go?" (still really surprised) "No , can you believe that?" Embassy: "And you gave them the discount code and everything?" "Oh, yep, no that's gotta be it, I forgot about that, I'll just give them that and I'll be on my way home I'm sure" (Hangs up phone) "My apologies my South African mates, I forgot to tell you about the discount code"....
The whole protea family is crazy: you could do a series of these episodes on them, like the pincushion that's a symbiotic relationship with both a bird species, ants and fire! Whole ecosystem in one plant
I"m pretty sure that pineapples were also the result of breeding that acted as a divergent pathway from the original strain (ie canis domesticus, brassica olericea).
I wonder. So correct me if I’m wrong. Asexual reproduction was the first form of reproduction. Then single celled organisms developed the ability for horizontal transfer. Somehow this evolved into sex. So which came first: hermaphroditism or sexual dimorphism?
Doesn't necessarily need a first or last since it could've evoluted at the same time, or a case of convergent evolution developing in different species. There is probs a proper answer to this though.
Ayyyy they're talking about stuff from the same place I am. I've always admired the amazing flora and fauna here and this just increases my appreciation! I'll be sure to keep an eye out for it next time I'm out on a hike.
@David Single I understand, I'm not in love with china either! I just thought your comment wasn't related that much to OP's comment lol . No offense! 😉
Wow, I don't think I've ever been this early for a SciShow video before but interesting video as always. I love watching your videos because I always walk away with a little bit more knowledge than I had before. Your videos never disappoint.
0:43, so...does that means most plants are futanari, oh and by the way a friendly warning, don't search the word futanari if you don't know what it is, that will save you the trouble of trying to unsee/unread stuff later
I tried surfshark 2 years ago, but it didn't work for me. I mean, the free 1 week trial worked perfectly, but after I bought a year subscription, things went downhill fast. Two months in and it didn't work at all. Never could get a connection no matter what I tried and whatever their help centre advised. I still haven't found a vpn that works in my country 😅
@@AelwynMr Far more interesting are species that are in between development from monoecious to dioecious, meaning they tend to vary from individual to individual in the same species.
Me: Wait, why *are* two of the same plant species completely different? SciShow: This... is plant-based sexual dimorphism. Me: Dear God... SciShow: There's more. Me: No...!
I’ve heard explosions are more deadly underwater and a close friend disagreed. We did some research and found conflicting data. Can you shed some light on this issue?
Forget monogamy, forget the family unit, forget providing, obligation, morality and civility, and contributing to our human culture. Just knock um up and hit the next one, guys - that's the way feminist socialists want their males to be. Society will provide for them and their offsprings.
@@ernestsmith3581 I'm inclined to believe you've never read any feminist academic literature before because what you're saying is very silly. It doesn't sound like something that someone who knows what they're talking about would say.
Yeah.........can u people talk about papaya?? ..... I'm from Southern India, my grandmother used to plant atleast 3 plants every year in our home......like mostly 1 of them will be a Male one.....my grandma used to kill the male plants off (cause they occupy space and take in the sunlight).......pretty sure everyone in my state(😑... Tamilnadu) does that.... Yet, the papayas produce the seeds and the seeds are viable.....
They are. Many derive from Brassica oleracea, which has been cultivated into many many different variations (Cauliflower, Broccoli, Brussel sprouts and more). All from the family of the Brassicaceae, Brassicales. Another fun fact. Papaya is also in the Brassicales order (Papaya = Carica Papaya, Caricaceae) and thus its seeds taste a bit like mustard or cress, which is also in the Brassicaceae family.
It's amazing how nature has developed such unique strategies to deal with all the pressures of life and the environment. Nature never fails to astonish me with its wondrous creativity.
creativity is not the right word
@@JogBird Ingenuity? Hard to find a word that doesn't insinuate some form of intelligence or actual will, which or course isn't the case in an evolutionary sense.
I look at things like this and think, how can there not be a God.
@David Single if they exist they also created Adam and Steve, another 2 pricks who decided to have children knowing a lot of them will go to hell.
@David Single The problem here is that the way in which she describes evolution of this plant, is that it intelligently changed its own abilities to adapt to environmental changes. I agree with Ethan Elliott and with Dr. Stephen Meyer. Being from a computer science background, I can definitively tell you that a language and a method of interpreting that language is not something that occurs by accident. I have no problem believing in a creator who knew that His creation would need to adapt to changes in its environment. Creating code to accommodate those changes is completely reasonable. To answer your question about "evil" you must venture outside of science into philosophy. Most scientists are not philosophers and to speak of such, speak outside their field. Here is your answer for the question of evil... Free will. In order for free will to exist, the capacity for evil must also exist. The evil is not created by God, but the providence of free will gives the capacity for evil. That same free will also gives the capacity for love. Love itself can not truly exist without free will, otherwise it becomes a programmed, controlled response - like a robot - which is no longer free will but much more puppetry. The God that you appear to desire is a God who puppeteers rather than a God who allows free will and free agency. Every government that exists creates laws for conduct to give that free will limits that protects for the benefit of the whole. The God of the Bible already has a societal construct. The rules given to Moses were to demonstrate that no human being can live up to "law" because "law" without compassion is cruelty. The compassion comes in where providence is made to both satisfy the law, and to satisfy compassion. That is where the scientific anomaly of this world comes in... Jesus. In order to satisfy law, a society must provide a way to fulfill that law, and provide satisfaction for that law. The absolute, most humane way to do that is to give you a choice. You choose to have your free will limited, by recognizing that God's laws are valuable to mitigate evil and accept that you can never pay your own fine for violation of those societal laws (done by the simple act of belief), or you choose to accept the consequences of evil. In order for free will to continue existing, you must act of your own free will to have that will limited (which it appears is your desire, to have a limited free will). It must be your choice for your limited free will to remain free will. (But of course, this is a philosophical discussion rather than a scientific)
Brassica olaracea comes to mind, with brocolli, cabbage and kale being the same species!! Still rocks my mind after finding that out on that SciShow episode.
As far as I can tell that was via artificial selection.
It was artificial selection by humans who cultivated it in different ways in different civilizations
That's not sexual dimorphism. It's breeding. Brassica is the dog of the edible plant world; humans have bred it into so many different versions of itself, you'd think they were all different species. Chihuahuas are both male and female; so are St Bernards. And so are kale and broccolini. In fact, they're still monoecious. Because that's not something breeding can actually change.
The only thing that's truly weird, is that of all the forms we've bred them into, only cauliflower, broccoli, and broccolini (and hybrids) have edible flowers. Like, how come some brassica flowers are edible and some aren't when they are, in fact, the same species? It's like breeding a cow who's milk we can't use for cheese. It's just weird.
@@alisoncircus Agreed to all, oops sorry for being misleading. I just meant that this variation in individuals reminded me of the crazy variation in individuals in Brassica
I think they're actually in the same genus at least as mustard as well.
I've often wondered if this means putting broccoli on mustard isn't kosher.
I thought this was going to be about cabbage and how broccoli, cabbage, brussel sprouts, cauliflower etc are all the same species, Brassica olericea. This was cool though and I'm not disappointed.
I had the exact same thought ! Great minds, ya know 🙃
Just realized I spelled it wrong. Brassica oleracea. Doh.
They are different parts of the wild mustard plant that we selectively bred to be what we wanted.
Kohlrabi came from the stem
Kale came from the leaves
Broccoli came from the flower buds and stem
Brussel sprouts came from lateral leaf buds
Cabbage came from the terminal leaf buds
Cauliflower also came from flower buds.
I thought the same thing
All I could think of when learning about serotiny is imagining a grass type pokémon developing it then developing a symbiosis with a fire type pokémon which aids in its dispersal by starting fires in return for exp. from the fainted grass types.
Since starting to grow native here in the Southeast US, I found that I had to get to know which plants had separate male and female plants when growing straight species (not a cultivar that has male female on same plant when normally they do not).
Take for instance American Persimmon, Black Willow, Sassafras, Coontie (native cycad), Muscadine, American Holly, Red Cedar (its actually a juniper)...all these are natives that must have pollination between plants...therefore you cant just go to a native plant store and pick up one and expect to have little coontie babies for instance.
And we need more knowledgeable native plant nurseries to step up sexing plants out...and that can be costly when waiting for flowering which can take years in some cases.
Oh and...Grow Native! Grow straight species (not cultivars). Do not grow non-native invasives.
Yeah dioecious plants can be troublesome to grow My mom has tried to establish native spicebush but so far all the plants she got from the native plant society have turned out to be male. Is there no way to ID what sex a plant will be prior to its first flowering?
Also as a society not only must we learn to plant native plants again but we need to remember that plants aren't just decorations but living things. They aren't just decorations for the latest fad only to be ripped out for the next new annual invasive craze that gets dumped in the ground as a root bound mess. Outside of the vegetative part that makes energy for the plant there is usually just as much if not more underground but that is all out of sight out of mind. It is sad how it took so long for people to recognize that the link between plants and their fungal symbionts can't be neglected centuries after the first documentation of these associations. >_<
I hate the landscaping industry so many invasive plants started out this way and there are constantly more arising as the next invasive scourge a decade or two after the peak fad. Crape Myrtles are one of the examples of the next wave already taking over.
not only have you become an excellent presenter, you also have the slickest slide into a sponsor segue. please stay! good vid!
Does this mean Redwood trees also have parental care, since they also wait for fire before disbursing the seeds from the cones?
They might. I suspect they do not have sexual dimorphism though.
Also happens in Banksia in Australia. Many fire resistant plants also have serotony as an adaptive measure.
So Cal here, we have an entire ecosystem based of fire reproduction
Good discussion of dioecious plants, which are more common than many people think. Ash trees, persimmons and Hollies are mong the dioecioua species. My one quibble with this video is not mentioning the plants scientific name in the video itself and not mentioning it's a protea, a very unique and diverse group of plants that cane from the ancient supercontinent of gondwana ... but I digress. ;)
On break from the garden center at my work... Plants are cool :)
Lol
True
I gave a women 50% off a plant at home depot once cause I couldn't tell her for sure that it wouldn't kill her cat lol. That's what happens when the plumbing guy is covering the seasonal dept. Either way another satisfied customer lol
@whesley hynes are you a bot or a crazy person?
Sounds like Lowe's
Broccoli, collard greens, purple cabbage, mustard, kohlrabi, etc. are also the same species (Brassica oleracea).
That’s all due to human tinkering and domestication though.
South Africa and its amazing plants, incredible.
My Rooibos tea and I strongly agree.
She pronounced the last word of every PHRASE louder than all the other WORDS. Once I noticed THIS, it became difficult to IGNORE. LOL. :D
That is a strange CADENCE.
Huh I actually didn't NOTICE, thanks for pointing that OUT. Now I can't unhear IT.
The nurse will be passing out your meds momentarily.
I think it's actually quite CUTE
You ruined this video for me
Protea /ˈproʊtiːə/[1] is both the botanical name and the English common name of a genus of South African flowering plants, also called sugarbushes (Afrikaans: suikerbos). This is the what they are called
Off topic, but loved seeing the host keep old traditions alive with the Jingle Dress Dance.
Male Conebush plant: Check out those sweet cones!
Female Conebush: Check out the branches on that one!
You should do an episode on pecan trees and how there are two types that need to be around in order for them to get pollinated
(On phone to U.S. Embassy) "...and now I'm being held hostage by these South African pirates",
Embassy: "Did you tell them you have Surfshark?"
(really surprised) "Yeah I did!"
Embassy: "And they didn't let you go?"
(still really surprised) "No , can you believe that?"
Embassy: "And you gave them the discount code and everything?"
"Oh, yep, no that's gotta be it, I forgot about that, I'll just give them that and I'll be on my way home I'm sure"
(Hangs up phone)
"My apologies my South African mates, I forgot to tell you about the discount code"....
The whole protea family is crazy: you could do a series of these episodes on them, like the pincushion that's a symbiotic relationship with both a bird species, ants and fire! Whole ecosystem in one plant
What about stuff like juniper bush vs juniper tree? We have a few like this in Canada. Same fruiting bodies but otherwise very different.
You know what’s even crazier, we are all the same species.
and looking at her, and viewing TopTenz, i wonder if her dna would come back related to Genghis Khan? 1:200 chance, planet wide, yeh know
Well it's not so surprising when you realise that Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito are also the same species.
@Eastern fence Lizard LOL Indeed they are.
Lol
Im from South Africa and any hike anywhere in South Africa is fun and you will learn alot.
I won't deny that but thre is one hike in the free state that will leave you wishing you hadn't gone there
@@Kholanee if you wanted to make someone ask, you have succeeded. Please tell me more, so I can skip it if the opportunity ever presents itself.
@@lili_dee I had no intention of making any ask anything
What more do you want me to say
@@lili_dee oh and if you are asking me what the hiking trail is called then its
SPOREKRANS hiking trail
@@Kholanee that's all I wanted to know 😊 thanks for the heads up.
Proteaceae are amazing.
I"m pretty sure that pineapples were also the result of breeding that acted as a divergent pathway from the original strain (ie canis domesticus, brassica olericea).
Science: Dioecious plants are rare.
Hippy: cannabis is dioecious. What ya know about that?
Sience: Need more studies.
Do you have a specific artist or shop where you get your beautiful earrings?
...... who cares
@@Psycro Lainey Bug does
@@Psycro obviously I do, which is why I asked. That's how questions work!
They are made of dried bison colon. Natives like to use every part of the animals. Something about sacred spirit something.
@@LaineyBug2020 oh wow I just saw the zoomed in view, and those are some very nice earrings wow.
I wonder. So correct me if I’m wrong. Asexual reproduction was the first form of reproduction. Then single celled organisms developed the ability for horizontal transfer. Somehow this evolved into sex. So which came first: hermaphroditism or sexual dimorphism?
Doesn't necessarily need a first or last since it could've evoluted at the same time, or a case of convergent evolution developing in different species. There is probs a proper answer to this though.
yay! another Rose video! :))
I am acquainted with a male mulberry tree, and am permanently disappointed in its lack of interest in producing mulberries.
I didn't realize that mulberry trees were this way. All along I thought I was just "missing" the fruiting of certain mulberry trees! 🤣
Ayyyy they're talking about stuff from the same place I am. I've always admired the amazing flora and fauna here and this just increases my appreciation! I'll be sure to keep an eye out for it next time I'm out on a hike.
It’s all about the cones!! Ben Wyatt proved correct once again!!!
And the thing is that plants are not aware of doing any of this. It’s just biochemistry in action.
I love that there is now a second host on this channel who presents intelligent information in an intelligent way.
And she has a nice voice to.listen too
@David Single sure, but what does it have to do with OP's comment, or the video? And I think you meant "supporting"!
@David Single I understand, I'm not in love with china either! I just thought your comment wasn't related that much to OP's comment lol . No offense! 😉
Nobody:
South Africa:
Hey boy, I see you have bushy branches, yellow flowers and much smaller leaves..
Well check out these cones!!!
Ugh
Wow, I don't think I've ever been this early for a SciShow video before but interesting video as always. I love watching your videos because I always walk away with a little bit more knowledge than I had before. Your videos never disappoint.
Watching from my home in South Africa
Hi from the US.
Samsies!
Brussel sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, kale, kohlrabi, and cabbage are all the same plant
Plant parents are adorable
Marijuana is a great example
Northern lights cannabis indica
0:43, so...does that means most plants are futanari, oh and by the way a friendly warning, don't search the word futanari if you don't know what it is, that will save you the trouble of trying to unsee/unread stuff later
Hmmm...wonder what other plant does this? #420
#TeamDioecious
Yes, indeed.
You beat me to it bud. 👌
at 2:26, BUT, which came FIRST.? the seeds, the fire or the female storing more energy.??????????????
Something tells me we have yet to see the plants final form.
@marie sandal
DBZ reference.
Serotiny? Does this have anything to do with Prunus serotina?
No, those are wild black cherry trees. I have 5 saplings to plant.
You should do a show on the Fynbos of the Cape region in South Africa.
I tried surfshark 2 years ago, but it didn't work for me. I mean, the free 1 week trial worked perfectly, but after I bought a year subscription, things went downhill fast. Two months in and it didn't work at all. Never could get a connection no matter what I tried and whatever their help centre advised. I still haven't found a vpn that works in my country 😅
Looks like proteas or fynbos
Kiwi fruit trees are male and female too.
Cannabis as well
So are many tree species in european forests. Is not super uncommon.
And hops, holly, nettle, bay laurel, ... not the rule, but that rare either!
@@AelwynMr Far more interesting are species that are in between development from monoecious to dioecious, meaning they tend to vary from individual to individual in the same species.
@David Single Is it so difficult to not bring politics into everything?
The same applies to pistachio trees where in which they are diecious. But I believe male pistachios tend to be bigger than tge females between them
Males have longer branches, females have big cones... I'm not the only one who noticed this right?
Man, South Africa has crazy cool plants
I mean... the whole variety of Protea are delightful and beautiful.
Check out Crime Pays but Botany Doesn't's Australia videos, a sea of Proteaceae.
Me: Wait, why *are* two of the same plant species completely different?
SciShow: This... is plant-based sexual dimorphism.
Me: Dear God...
SciShow: There's more.
Me: No...!
LoL pot growers be like: yup
Yup
yup
used to yup
A plant that adapted to fire 🔥❓Evolution is 🤯
Dope 💪🏾💯
Plants that take care of their young? Interesting.
You know that your watching a professional broadcaster when they touch their fingertips multiple times without looking.
🇱🇷 write my manager regarding making millions in B..T..C
Does Surfshark protect from a Sharknado, too?
That segway was a startling stretch. Why!?!?!
Big whoop. Shaq and Danny Devito are the same species AND gender.
No one ...... EVER
Sci Show: Hey did you know in a far away place there are two plants that are the same species?
Terrific botanical videos Sci Show!
(for those interested in the plants of South Africa, I have two playlists on my channel)
Sounds interesting. I'm not really big on plants but I'm always down to learn so I'll definitely check it out, thank you.
I’ve heard explosions are more deadly underwater and a close friend disagreed. We did some research and found conflicting data. Can you shed some light on this issue?
So, no shout out to Crime Pays but Botany Doesn’t?
I'm a big fan, his Australia videos are full of Proteaceae.
Where I am it's 4am , I just had an anxiety attack decide to go on TH-cam ...
2:33 i feed weirdly degraded lol
Love your earrings sis
"this isn't even my final form"
Uh, you do know Netflix are cracking down hardcore on VPN users, right? Like, suspending accounts cracking down.
CN you do an episode on silver sword.
They look like Proteas
Gender is only a concept but sexual dimorphism is real.
Every video I've clicked on in the past few days has an ad for the cryprocard.
I got premium, really enjoy youtube now why better.
@@pancakes3ful I might have to go that route.
@@Ntmoffi you might be better off getting an ad blocker, then it's more than TH-cam that's adless
If you go for a hike anywhere in South Africa, you need more protection than Surfshark...
Shhht.... you are chasing away the vict... *cough*...tourists.
Explain how cabbages and brocolli are the same plant.
Oh man look at the cones on that one
Today I ate a gwapple, a hybrid between a guava and an apple.
Such a pleasant voice more videos from this beautiful person please
Simp
"As long as men can spread pollen.. they're good" Why do I feel like this is a social comentary?
Gender inequality has deep roots...
Forget monogamy, forget the family unit, forget providing, obligation, morality and civility, and contributing to our human culture. Just knock um up and hit the next one, guys - that's the way feminist socialists want their males to be. Society will provide for them and their offsprings.
@@ernestsmith3581 I'm inclined to believe you've never read any feminist academic literature before because what you're saying is very silly. It doesn't sound like something that someone who knows what they're talking about would say.
@@General12th What humans say and what they do are often quite at odds with one another.
Are you kidding me? The kind of protection you're likely to need in South Africa isn't something I think surfshark is going to provide.
Disclaimer, using a VPN while on vacation might be a crime, as those sites are probably blocked for a legal reason.
Looks like mighty thistle from BOTW
Like giving evee a different evolution zone.
South African here for the view 😄
Oh. I thought it was going to be about broccoli/cabbage/brussel sprouts/cauliflower/etc...that "same species"
That's because of us, think dog with that one.
Yes, that's true, but it doesn't make it less interesting
Likening that to parental care is likening dating strategy as parental care.
Yeah.........can u people talk about papaya?? ..... I'm from Southern India, my grandmother used to plant atleast 3 plants every year in our home......like mostly 1 of them will be a Male one.....my grandma used to kill the male plants off (cause they occupy space and take in the sunlight).......pretty sure everyone in my state(😑... Tamilnadu) does that.... Yet, the papayas produce the seeds and the seeds are viable.....
*laughs in brassica*
That transition to the ad was cancer.
This may be a load of crap, but I once heard that kale, broccoli and Brussel sprouts (iirc) are one and the same species
They're all a sort of cabbage
They are. Many derive from Brassica oleracea, which has been cultivated into many many different variations (Cauliflower, Broccoli, Brussel sprouts and more). All from the family of the Brassicaceae, Brassicales. Another fun fact. Papaya is also in the Brassicales order (Papaya = Carica Papaya, Caricaceae) and thus its seeds taste a bit like mustard or cress, which is also in the Brassicaceae family.
Leeks, pearl onions, and elephant garlic are all the same plant.
Sounds like humans, except for the less branching part.
who travels then spends time binging netflix?
Woah South Africa isnt so bad that you need a VPN to protect you here🥴
With local population, VPN wouldn't be needed, but one should consider a gun.
🇱🇷 write my manager regarding making millions in B..T..C
Is that a voltfruit?
Omg that was a tedious link
Do onions really help in hair growth?????
So much like humans, they may look different, but they're the same things deep down... :P
Guessing before the video: the plants are different genders.
Edit: correct.
Thanos makes a wicked stew from those.