No Such Thing As A Fish - 121: No Such Thing As The Sword In The Carbon Fibre
Episode Date: July 8, 2016Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss wood-sucking catfish, wizard prison, and Ancient Egyptian butchers. ...
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Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming
to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Schreiber, I am sitting here with Anna Chazinski, Andrew Hunter Murray,
and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite
facts from the last seven days, and in a particular order, here we go.
Starting with you, Chazinski.
My fact this week is that the reason Merlin isn't called Merdin is to avoid confusion
with a twelfth century word for feces.
That's amazing.
Yeah, so the wizard Merlin of Sword in the Stone fame, he would have been called Merdin,
and so the story is that Merlin was originally created in the form we know him by Geoffrey
of Monmouth, who was a sort of Norman Welsh guy in the twelfth century, and he based the
character of Merlin on this Welsh medieval mythical figure called Merdin, M-Y-R-D-D-I-N.
But because he has sort of Norman origins, because he was from the nobility probably,
and so a lot of people were speaking French in his social circles, it was thought Merdin
would be really easily confused with Merd, which is the same as it is today, which is
the word for poo.
It feels like he's missed a chance for a lot of puns and poo jokes, doesn't it?
By changing that name, he's lost a lot of his joke material.
Yes, he does.
Yeah, he could have been the chaucer of his time.
I just don't know if that was the style he was going for.
Okay, do you know that in the 17th century the word Merd was English?
Yes, weird, isn't it?
It was just a common English word for poo, Merd, and then it just kind of disappeared
in the 18th century, and now it's kind of, everyone knows, it's just a French word.
Speaking of people whose names meant feces, Montezuma, of the Aztecs, had a nephew whose
name meant plenty of excrement.
What was his name?
It was Kuidahuaq, and they had guacamole, didn't they, which means testicle sauce.
Testicle sauce, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
And avocado means testicles as well.
Exactly, yes.
So the things that mean testicles, orchid.
Orchid, yes.
I have another Merlin fact, probably my favorite Merlin fact.
He was sorted into a house at Hogwarts.
Neither of these things is real.
Exactly, I thought someone might pick me up on this, but neither of these things are
real.
So on Pottermore, the big JK Rowling website, it was revealed that Merlin was a student
of the school of Hogwarts, and he was sorted into one of the four schools, and he was sorted
into Slytherin.
So Merlin is a Slytherin.
Wow.
This is weird, because you said yesterday that you'd found an amazing thing on Merlin that
you love.
It's the best thing I've ever found, yeah.
So I was reading about him later on, and I found something, and I thought, oh, I bet
this is what Dan's found.
So interesting.
And this really shows how disconnected you and I are because the thing I thought is
that he's so Merlin in the original myth is alleged to have been buried in this particular
place, that sort of a crossover between two rivers, so the River Tweed and a little stream
called Powsail Burn, and in the legends it was written that if ever the Powsail Burn
and the Tweed were to meet at the place of Merlin's final resting place, as in if these
two rivers were to suddenly collide, then England and Scotland would have the same
monarch, and this prediction is in medieval text.
And on the exact day that James the Sixth of Scotland and James the First of England
was crowned in 1603, the banks of the River Tweed broke and it flooded into the Powsail
Burn and they met.
No.
Isn't that weird?
I smell PR happening here.
It might be that I didn't check out when the banks broke, and it might be that they just
broke every single winter, but I definitely know they broke in 1603 on that precise day.
According to whom?
A 17th century Malcolm Tucking character.
Speaking of PR though, I was talking to Greg Jenner, and Greg Jenner who's been on our
show a number of times, historian, Horrible History's official chief nerd, and he was
telling me about a publicity stunt as well, so this was back in the 12th century, the
Glastonbury Abbey Burn Down, and all the pilgrims stopped going to it, so it was soon
after that that the abbot found the body of King Arthur in his grave, and suddenly all
the pilgrims started returning en masse, and so Greg was saying that this is one of the
earliest examples of a publicity stunt where they just needed people to return, so King
Arthur is one of the original publicity stunts.
Yeah, I think what happened was it burned down, and they were like to Henry II, oh can
we have some more money to build it, and he's like oh we don't have any, but maybe, just
maybe if you look closely you might be able to find the body of King Arthur, and they
went okay we'll have a look, and sure enough the very next day they found it.
Oh wow.
What a weird coincidence, isn't it?
It's amazing.
It took them such a short time as well.
Incredible.
Okay, so this is something that I thought you would like Dan.
So the Holy Grail, which is kind of an Arthurian legend as well, it's based probably on an
adaptation of an old Welsh story about the cauldron of Anwyne, which was owned by a guy
called Bran the Blessed.
No!
Yeah, and he was a giant, a Welsh giant called Bran the Blessed, and if you go into his Wikipedia
page it says, do not confuse him with Brian Blessed.
It's amazing.
Do we know any more about him, or is it just that?
Well, it's on his Wikipedia page, but I didn't read any of it.
And he was real, was he?
No, he was a giant.
Oh my god.
But then is Brian Blessed real, really?
It's the point, that's what I'm making, who appears more real?
Also, do you know what the name of the sod and the stone was?
I'm going to say Excalibur, and you're looking at me like it's wrong.
It's wrong, I'm afraid.
According to Mallory, and according to basically everyone, the sod and the stone doesn't have
a name, and then Arthur loses it, and then he gets Excalibur from the Lady of the Lake,
which is a different sod.
Who eventually traps Merlin for all of eternity, that's how Merlin meets his demise.
In some stone as well, right?
Everything's always been stuck in stone in these days.
They didn't have carbon fibre, they didn't have plastics, they had to use what they had
basically, all they had was stone.
Actually just on Arthurian legend, I think, I don't know if Andy will know this, but
I had no idea about this, and I thought it was really interesting.
So Arthurian legends are referred to as the Matter of Britain.
So this is this whole body of medieval literature, which is called the Matter of Britain, and
there are three matters in medieval times, there's the Matter of Britain, the Matter
of France, and the Matter of Rome.
And these are just the three big bits of literature, so Matter of Britain's Arthur, the Matter
of France is the stories of Charlemagne, and the Matter of Rome is like all some Roman
ancient literature, so the Matter of Rome is absolutely winning.
The guy who named these was a French poet who was called Baudel, and I was thinking
when I was reading this, oh cool, we are one of the three great tripods of medieval literature,
and his description of them was that the Matter of France is characterised by voire or truth,
Rome is characterised by sage-ness or wisdom or knowledge, and the Matter of Britain is
characterised by being vain et plaisant, to mean frivolous, pleasant but completely
false.
Funny you say wise, because that's where the word wizard comes from.
Is it?
Yeah, the whiz part comes from wise, and I think the idea was that maybe in the olden
days wise people could see the future, I think that might be it.
Can I quickly talk about modern day wizards?
Yeah.
OK, so pagans and druids, those are the sort of modern day torch holders of the whole wizarding
world I would say, and interesting news in the world of pagan news, which is that now
pagans, there's about a million in the UK, 300 of whom are in prison, prisoned pagans,
prisoned wizards are now allowed to have a wand in jail.
That's a new ruling that's just been made, because it's respecting their religious beliefs.
So what they have to do is they can go into the yard and get some twigs and bring them
back, and then they kind of just pimp up the twigs a bit, and then that's their wand that
they're allowed to have.
I think I might start a new religion which has a skeleton key as a holy symbol.
This article says they've toned down all of the rituals, because what they're also in
theory should be having is a flaming torch with them as part of the religion, and they've
said, we're cool to let the flaming torch bit go if we can have the twigs.
How many wizards are in prison?
300.
300?
Yeah.
Are they all in the same...
No, it's not as good.
I don't actually think it does show respect for their religion, because what basically
you're saying when you tell wizards that they're allowed to have their wand in prison is that
you definitely don't believe their wand has any capacity to help them.
I have one last thing, which is about modern day wizards, which is there is a school in
California which is open and it's been open for 10 years.
It's the world's only registered wizard academy.
It's got 735 students, half of whom will be in prison in 10 years, and it was set up by
a guy called Oberon Zell Ravenhart, and he himself is a wizard, but the school is up
and running.
You can go to their website.
They have latest news is that the school is now, it's called the Grey School of Wizardry.
They're now on Second Life, so you can attend it on Second Life as well.
They have a list of their staff.
It includes people called Silvermane, Swift Rabbit, Frogs Dancing, Earth Drum, MA, Apollyonus,
BS, MS, PhD, BS is a bit odd.
And Silverlock.
Were all these people just, they started out as accountants or postmen and they got
so much mockery for their names that they ended up being forced into the wizarding profession,
do you think?
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know who does it.
One more modern wizard who's great is the real King Arthur, who's back.
This is a guy who was formerly called John Rothwell before he realized that he was King
Arthur a few years ago.
He's the battle chieftain of the Council of British Druid Orders.
There's quite a good interview with him in Vice, and the Vice guy asked him things like,
how hard was it to pull the sword from the stone to which he answered, very, very, very
hard.
Sounds legit.
They tried to trick him with that trick question, but he got it straight away.
Not today.
Hang on, hang on.
The whole point of the sword in the stone was that it comes out easily if you're the
King of England.
Oh no.
They did trick him.
They did trick him.
Okay, and it's time to move on to fact number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that tea leaves sometimes flow upstream from the cup to the
pot.
I don't believe it.
If I was ever going to call nonsense on anything, never mind King Arthur, the agree incarnated.
This sounds amazing.
It is incredible.
It was discovered by a guy called Sebastian Bianchini in 2008.
He was at the University of Havana, and he was pouring hot water from a pot which was
just water into a cup which had some tea leaves, some matte tea leaves.
As he poured it, he had his nice cup of tea, and then he looked in the pot, and there were
tea leaves there, and he didn't understand why, and he went to a physicist at the University
of Havana, and they did some experiments, but then they never published their findings
because they thought everyone would laugh at them.
It seems true.
It seems like it's a real thing.
This is one of those things that you could actually demonstrate.
You could just demonstrate, why would people laugh?
But they think probably it was a trick, and he had some tea leaves in there all along.
So like a Derren Brown style.
You'd never be able to make any tea, because the leaves would constantly be fleeing into
the pot.
So it's not all of them, it's some of them, and it's due to this thing called the Marangoni
Effect, which is a mixture of surface tension and a little bit of capillary action.
Surface tension basically, we're talking about pure water and not pure water, and the particles
want to travel up towards the pure water, and people didn't think it could happen with
something as big as tea leaves, but actually it can happen.
And yeah.
How big a leaf are we talking?
We're talking this stuff is called mate tea, and it's usually like little, they're like
almost like little bits of sawdust, aren't they?
Yeah, yeah, it's really small, it's very crumbled up, smaller than normal tea leaves.
But actually, when things are on quite small scale, they can do things that don't normally
happen for bigger things.
So like for instance, capillary action only really works for really small kind of thin
tubes, which is that water goes up the tube against gravity, and that wouldn't happen
on normal tube, but it happens with very thin tubes, and that's how plants can get the water
from the ground into the leaves.
Yeah, okay.
Did you read the guy who commented, someone who commented at the bottom of this study,
and he said, this article reminded me of when I once made the mistake of expectorating into
a toilet, and the result was an immediate acrid taste in my mouth, apparently the chemicals
in there had travelled several feet up my stream of saliva.
But that was a theory that...
Unbelievably disgusting.
It is quite disgusting, but the scientists acknowledged that that could be a possibility,
although it said that it might be quite unlikely that chemicals could flow that way backwards.
So are we saying that when you go to the loo, in some ways the loo goes to you?
Yeah.
I mean, it's not very much, it's not all of it.
It's not like you come out of the toilet and the toilet is completely empty of water.
I'm so bloated after that.
Well, isn't there that thing that all men are scared of, that Amazonian fish, where the
rumour has always been that it will swim up your urine stream?
We should quickly explain that, shouldn't we?
It's a candero, it's like a mini little catfish, I think it's in the catfish family.
And the theory is you would be in the water and you'd be urinating and it gets attracted
to the urine stream and then it follows it and then goes into your penis and sticks its
spines out and gets stuck there and can be extremely painful.
And there's been one or two stories in the medical literature of it happening, but most
people think probably it's not true.
Yeah.
And I have to say, you say a little fish.
I've seen one in the Natural History Museum, that's not a little fish.
Remember when we went to, yeah, that was, I mean, no, but that's big, like it's not
like that.
No, it wasn't.
You know that whale in the front lobby?
Yeah.
It wasn't that one.
Okay.
Then I misread the label.
No, it's about an inch or two.
Yeah.
I know, but still, the idea of that going A up a stream, which, you know, it's not, it's
like a teapot stream urine, it's not a thick, well, mine's not like a thick.
This was apparently the only means of preventing it, according to one piece of 19th century
medical literature, because this room has been around for about 200 years that they'll
do this.
The only means of preventing it from reaching your bladder, where it causes inflammation
and ultimately death is to instantly amputate the penis.
This isn't when you get your visa to go to the Amazon, you have to have it done as it
prevented it.
Yes.
Just a shot in your arm and let's just, let's just get that off, shall we?
I'm pretty sure that this has completely been debunked as an idea.
The candiru.
It's going, going from you standing on the bank and having a pit.
So the idea is it could, let's say, it could possibly happen while you're bathing.
Exactly.
Perhaps.
And it just follows the warmth of the water or whatever.
But the idea that you're standing on the side of a river peeing down and then it jumps
like a sabonet to your penis, I'm pretty sure that kind of doesn't sound.
I was reading about the first ever book written about tea.
It's an old Chinese text and it's the first ever collection of a book on tea.
It's called Cha-ching, it's genuine, the Chinese word and Qing, which I actually don't know
what that word is, but.
Oh, but the Ai-ching is a fortune telling book, isn't it?
Yes.
Oh yeah, maybe it was fortune telling through Tee-leaves book.
You know India, how they, what the mythology of how tea came about in India is.
What?
Did it get found by a goat herd or is that coffee maybe?
No.
About 1,900 years ago and it was a priest named Bodhidharma and he was, he was trying to
connect with Zen Buddhism and the idea that he was going to do that was seven years sleepless
contemplation of Buddha.
He found himself in the fifth year, getting quite drowsy and needed to cure that and so
he quickly grabbed some leaves off a tree and started chewing on them and he thought
this is fantastic.
And that just got him through that extra two years.
He really perked him up for that final push.
And in China they have an idea that it was an emperor called Nanshien who was, as well
as being the emperor, he was a scholar and herbalist and while he was out, out in the
field on maybe I guess a walk or something, he was having a hot cup of water and some
leaves blew into his cup and he smelled it and went, oh, that smells quite nice.
I love it, it's so interesting.
Pretty much everything has an origin myth where it's discovered by, it's, it's, by
Buddhism, which just seems to be the humans have this innate preference for that kind
of discovery rather than someone who really knew what they were doing and had studied
the field and was working really hard on it for years.
Because we all want to believe that we could do it.
So the, the British introduced tea to India, which sounds lunatic or rather they popularized
it in India.
So it was already native, but it was not a thing that was grown in large quantities.
It wasn't big, but then in the 19th century, Britain needed an alternative to the Chinese
tea monopoly.
And so that's why India is now this great tea nation.
Because we got it in the 17th century, I think, was it Charles II's wife, I think, came over
and brought tea and then everyone thought it was like this terrible, well, there was
a lot of misogyny and xenophobia.
Basically, it was a foreign thing that women drank and also it was, it gave women a reason
for getting together and men obviously thought that was a terrible thing.
It's the lambrini of its day, basically.
Lambrini was discovered, actually, when...
Lambrini was walking across a field with some carbonated water and a passing bird dropped
a rotten grape into it.
So can I just bring it back to your main headline fact for a second?
So you haven't seen a video of this being done.
I couldn't find one.
Surely we should be doing that.
We should be filming that or getting someone listening to like, let's see this.
Let's see.
OK.
So it's specifically mate tea, which is this South American tea, which is, it's quite
a big thing over there, isn't it?
You've been to South America.
Yeah, I've got a few friends who live there and it's pretty much all they do.
I'm amazed they get any work done there.
But yeah, there's a really strict ritual around mate tea, which is that the way you drink
it is you fill up a kettle of boiling water and then you pour it onto all these herbs
and you keep on topping it up and up so you can keep drinking your one mate tea for hours.
But two very important things you have to do and people get extremely angry if you don't
do them when it's usually you hand it around.
So it's a real sociable thing.
It's a very much a community thing drinking mate and you when you hand it to someone,
you have to look them in the eye because that's part of your saying, I'm giving this to you
and you have to give it to them with a straw pointing towards them.
So it comes with this metal straw and if you don't give it to them with a straw pointing,
you're kicked out of the country.
No, it sounds like it's from bitter experience.
Just on tea.
So I think a lot of people think that you shouldn't re-boil a kettle.
If you boil the water once, you should use that to make tea.
And then the water is sort of no good for making tea after that.
And if you re-boil it, it's bad.
And the theory is that all the oxygen leeches out of the water.
But the thing is when you boil a kettle, it leeches off the first time you boil a kettle.
So whenever you make a tea, you don't have a choice.
You have to make it without all that lovely bonus oxygen.
OK, do you know what I do now?
If I have a shirt that needs ironing, I start boiling a kettle.
And as it reaches boiling point, I take the lid off and all the steam comes up.
But because you've taken the lid off, it never fully boils.
So the kettle's confused.
It thinks it's still boiling.
So it keeps going.
So I steam my entire shirt and it steams really quickly.
You can do a whole shirt in about a minute.
I haven't done it on my shirt today.
I'm looking at your shirt and I'm dying.
It's very crazy.
At that time, it's so crazy today.
Listening at home, Dan is massive.
There's one wrinkle now, basically.
Why don't we put teabags in the kettle as it boils?
That's always confusing.
Because someone might want coffee.
Why would you put teabags in the kettle?
Because I noticed that the British love to leave in a pot tea and let it mull.
And I reckon the intense boiling that's going on would absolutely make it just the most intense tea.
You could rewrite the book on tea.
You could be cha-ching the sequel.
There was a famous quote by Einstein where he said that his best ever idea was to put an egg in his soup while it was cooking
so that his egg and his soup could cook at the same time.
See, me and Einstein are on the same thinking level here.
Shut up, you're shoving a shirt into a kettle which has got a teabag in it.
Over it, over it, I'm holding it over.
All Dan needs in his house is one kettle and it does everything.
Yeah, exactly.
If I need to make some toast, I just put it in the kettle.
I don't need a hot water bottle, I just hugged the kettle.
OK, it is time for fact number three and that is my fact.
And my fact this week is that butchers in ancient Egypt wore high heels.
OK.
And I think I'm pretty sure it's correct to say that that's the oldest example of high heels that we have in history.
Why would they wear high heels?
Because apparently it was to do with the slaughtering of the animals.
So when they were killing all the animals, they would find that the floor would be blood drenched.
They didn't want to get their feet completely stained.
So the high heels just made it a more pleasant walking process for them.
So yeah, and but then people did wear high heels back then outside of butchers.
But I think butchers were known specifically that was the footwear of the job.
Yeah, it wasn't you saw someone in heels and you went up, that's a butcher.
No, exactly.
But you might for a second think you'd make a good butcher.
Because you know how to rock those heels.
Yeah, and men and women wore them obviously back then.
Well, I thought that they had been invented in the ninth century, right, in Persia.
Yeah, I thought that as well, which is where and the reason they were invented there,
I think it might have been a separate invention was so that men could fire arrows while on horseback.
It was Persian archers.
And basically, if you wedge your feet into these stirrups using a pair of high heels,
you can stand up in the stirrups and you can fire more steadily from there while you're riding a horse.
You know, the the Persians are responsible for a huge period of terrible art in Egypt.
Yeah, so the Persians, the Persians took over at about 525 BC, or at least during 525 BC.
They were they were running Egypt.
And so what they did was all the artists who were in Egypt, who were doing all the all of the caskets,
all the wall art and so on, they basically deported them.
So it just left Egypt with terrible artists and that you can see all these examples,
this whole period of just bad art where people are trying to now be the artists
and they're just getting it really just slightly cartoonishly wrong.
Are you sure they didn't just go there?
They wanted to give the Egyptians a bad rep.
So the Persians did a whole bunch of kind of fakes, really crappy drawings.
Look how bad these guys are.
They also played board games.
I didn't know that.
And Tutankhamun, there's even that period, those drawings,
where you can just see them playing board games.
Really? Yeah.
What do we know what?
Yeah, we do.
We know the names of the games.
So we don't know the rules.
They still debate the exact rules over some of the some of the games,
but there's like Jackal versus Dog.
There's a there's a game that has a name.
Sharknoydol versus Otter Class.
Should we do a bit on Butchers before we move on?
Yeah, sure. Yeah.
So according to the Butchers Guild website that I was reading,
the earliest kind of butchery that they have was from a Florida sinkhole
from 12,000 years ago, and it was a butchered giant sloth.
Wow. Yeah.
And also what so it's hanging in a little shop window somewhere in a sinkhole?
How do we know it's been?
I reckon they will have found bits of cutting on the bones.
Wow.
Because if you have butchered carcass,
you can see where they've cut deliberately to get this piece of meat away.
But it didn't say on the website, so I'm not 100 percent sure.
And also in that sinkhole, they found a sharpened stick and a tortoise.
Do we think the tortoise was the one that butchered the sloth?
Did you know I didn't realize that one of the theories of how toot and
car moon died was that he got eaten by a hippopotamus?
Yeah, that's an actual.
No, I don't think that is right, is it?
Well, no, no, that he got killed by he got killed, but he didn't get eaten
because he's buried in a very unconventional way.
So he was the hippopotamus on the end of his body.
No, he's just he's missing his heart.
It looks like something's committed some kind of horrific injury to him,
whereby it's consumed his heart.
They put him in jars unless there's something where his heart used to be,
saying the hippo took this.
I think he was embalmed without his heart anywhere.
So usually the heart would be there and the heart was missing.
And it's obviously, including you jump to the heart's missing.
Is it a hippo took it?
What sort of freaky vampire hippo is this that can with surgical
precision move someone's heart and doesn't go back for more like the evil guy
from Temple of Doom, but a hippo.
This is one of the ancient Egyptian ballgames they play was Hungry Hungry
hippos.
Look, the source does specify a handful of Egyptologists believe this.
I've seen it in a bunch of places.
Yeah, it's thought because hunting big animals like that was popular.
And there are pictures of cartoon Karmuna doing things like that in his tomb.
And hey, that's it's a theory, guys.
It's a good theory.
I just have one last thing I was reading about laundry men of ancient Egypt.
They would take all the clothes from people's houses.
Then they would leave little tokens that they would draw the picture of the
clothes they took on leave it with you.
So it's like, we have these items and make sure that they come back.
What did they do after all of Egypt's good artists were removed?
You couldn't tell which item they'd drawn.
Yeah, exactly.
But they would go down to the Nile and they would wash all their clothes.
And one of the hazards of being a laundry man back in ancient Egypt was that it was
likely that you were going to be eaten by a crocodile because they hung around on
the bank so much.
They must have been delighted when kettles were invented.
You don't see any creased shirts in any hieroglyphs.
OK, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is Andy.
My fact is that there is a fish called the Amazonian wood eating catfish.
But it is unable to digest wood.
OK, it is a catfish, though.
It is a catfish.
Yeah, it was discovered a few years ago in about 2010.
And we've known for a while that there are loads of catfish which sort of suck wood.
The candero.
They're called succumouth armored catfish and they scrape wood with their teeth
to get organic material off it.
So they like algae and bacteria and things that have found clinging to wood in rivers.
But this new fish literally eats the wood and it digests
the biological material on the wood and living inside the wood.
And then it excretes the wood four hours later.
So it has the most painful bathroom visit about twice a day.
So it absorbs all the organic products and the tiny animals that live on the wood.
And it has special spoon shaped teeth as well.
And it's just I think it's amazing that this thing eats wood and then gets rid of all the wood.
Apparently it's really hard to fish for them because they don't go for bait.
But a lot of fishing rods are made out of wood so you could hold on to them.
Throw the opposite way.
You're right.
Yeah.
Do you know how you do catch them?
You listen out for them because they make this rasping noise, which is them
going on the wood that they're eating.
Yeah.
But this is the weird thing.
We can't digest wood.
But I think the reason for this I might be wrong about this, but I think it is
that we don't have organisms in our gut which produce the enzyme cellulase, right?
So wood pulp is cellulose.
And if you have the enzyme cellulase, you can digest it.
So my question is if we did inject somebody with those organisms
which do produce cellulase, would we be able to digest trees?
I think you would.
You'd be able to do it just in like a probiotic.
You wouldn't have to inject it into anyone.
Why have we done this?
I bet you've got you know, there's gross looking smoothies.
You sometimes bring up the obvious.
I bet there's cellulase in one of those.
Try chewing on a twig after that.
I think really you could do.
But actually it's easier to get the calories out of a cream cake
than it is to get it out of a stick, even if you do have cellulase.
Yeah, I'm sure.
Is there any species of tree that we do eat?
I know properly it's not a tree, but it kind of looks like one.
But we did used to eat bark, didn't we?
Well, our ancestors used to eat bark.
So they discovered this quite recently.
So gorillas and also chimps sometimes chew on bark.
OK, so are really far back ancestors.
Super far before humans were actually a thing.
It was another hominid.
I think it was the astrolipithecus sediba,
which is a two million year old ancestor of humans.
And they recently found some with bark stuck in its teeth.
And so, yeah, we used to chew on that.
This is another toot and car moon hippo heart mystery, isn't it?
That sounds more like they invented the toothpick.
What a brilliant rival theory.
You should write to the archaeologists.
Some tribes might use sticks for cleaning their teeth, wouldn't they?
I think they have things you can chew on.
Yeah.
Isn't cinnamon made out of bark?
Cinnamon sticks.
Don't we get aspirin from powdered bark?
Do we?
Originally, yeah.
So we're eating a lot more wood than we realized.
I like, you know, ants can't,
most ants can't really digest solid food
because they've got that really tiny waste.
They've got like smaller waste than Marilyn Monroe.
So they have to liquefy their food before they digest it.
Really?
I didn't know any of that.
What?
Ants can't digest lumps of food because...
No, I can imagine they can't eat like a donut
because it's bigger than that one.
But are you saying they can't have any kind of solids?
They liquefy it.
So the way that they liquefy it is they feed it to their larva first.
So their larvae can digest solid food, can eat solid food.
So what ants do is they have the larvae
and they will put it into their larvae's mouths
and the larvae will eat this food
and their stomachs will, or their bodies will release the enzymes
required to break it down into a more palatable, smoothie type form.
And then they'll regurgitate it and give it to their parents.
So they're using the larvae like a blender?
Yeah.
And also, and also like a plate
because some of the larvae, the larvae don't even eat it.
Some of the larvae just secrete the enzymes
onto the top of their stomachs.
So the worker ants come back with solid food,
drops a bit of food onto the larvae's stomach.
The larvae knows it just has to lie there, let it digest,
and then the ant comes back a bit later
and eats it off the larvae's stomach.
Catfish stuff?
Yeah, yeah.
So catfish can, they can hunt in the dark
by detecting the changes in acidity in water
because their whiskers have got this special kind of sensor for acid.
So you can tell if something's a bit more acid or a bit less acid
and they can find things using that.
Just one more thing on a really cool species of wood-eating creature
that's also underwater is a crab.
So there's this kind of crab, which the only thing it can eat is wood
and yet it lives at the bottom of the ocean
so it can live up to 1.5 kilometers underwater, right in the ocean.
Well, there are not many trees.
Not a lot of trees at all.
So there is nothing in its habitat that grows that it can possibly eat
and it has to rely on wood falling into the water.
Yeah, I mean, that is...
Yeah, it doesn't matter that you grow up in an environment
where there's nothing for you to eat.
I don't know how annoying that would be.
So they have to literally just wait for trunks to find their way
and then suddenly that's their meal as a community for the next.
Yeah.
Or often trees break down as they get further and further into the sea
so you'll get little scraps of wood.
Or a shipwreck.
Yeah, some of them do live on shipwrecks.
Yeah.
Oh, that must be bliss when a huge shipwreck.
Titanic was the best moment in their history.
Not really made out of wood.
Not when it was.
There's an upside-down catfish.
What?
What?
It's... they're found in central Congo
and they're notable because they swim upside down
because they feed on insects on the surface of the water.
So they kind of just kind of backstroke their way through
and just grab them off the surface.
And there are even ancient Egyptian paintings of them upside down.
But now I think maybe it was just a banter on my way up.
Catfish.
OK, that's it.
That's all of our facts.
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