SciShow Tangents - Trees
Episode Date: April 21, 2020This Arbor Day, give your favorite tree the gift they really want: this tree-themed episode of SciShow Tangents. Just put the headphones around its trunk or in a knothole! Follow us on Twitter @SciSh...owTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Stefan: @itsmestefanchin Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @slamschultz Hank: @hankgreenIf you want to learn more about any of our main topics, check out these links![Truth or Fail]Dragon’s Blood Treehttps://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2018/11/socotra-yemen-biodiversity-photography/Dynamite Treehttps://youtu.be/lNlk2V9yFhMhttps://rare.us/rare-news/science-and-nature/sandbox-tree-hura-crepitans/Coconut Fatalitieshttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_by_coconut [Fact Off]Vampire stumphttps://www.cell.com/iscience/fulltext/S2589-0042(19)30146-4https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-07/cp-ats071819.phphttps://www.livescience.com/66025-kauri-tree-superorganism-root-grafting.htmlhttps://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/25/science/tree-stump-alive.htmlGhost redwoodshttps://www.mercurynews.com/2010/11/28/albino-redwoods-hold-scientific-mystery/https://sempervirens.org/discover-redwoods/ghost-redwoods-solving-the-albino-redwoods-mystery/https://ucanr.edu/sites/Redwood2016/files/250645.pdfhttps://ucanr.edu/sites/Redwood2016/files/243400.pdf[Ask the Science Couch]Tree definitionhttps://www.americanforests.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/AF-Tree-Measuring-Guidelines_LR.pdfWillowshttps://oregonstate.edu/trees/broadleaf_genera/willow.htmlhttps://www.thoughtco.com/worlds-smallest-tree-species-1343503Bonsai / Pygmy Forestshttps://www.pubs.ext.vt.edu/content/dam/pubs_ext_vt_edu/426/426-601/426-601_pdf.pdfOther treeshttps://extension.uga.edu/publications/detail.html?number=C944&title=Crape%20Myrtle%20Culturehttp://www.pnwplants.wsu.edu/PlantDisplay.aspx?PlantID=169[Butt One More Thing]Butt rothttps://hortnews.extension.iastate.edu/2007/7-11/root_butt_rot.htmlhttps://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5347109.pdf
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents, the lightly competitive knowledge showcase starring
some of the geniuses that make the YouTube series SciShow happen.
This week, as always, I'm joined by Stefan Chin.
Hello.
Stefan, what kind of drink should I have tonight after Tangents is done?
Ooh, watermelon vodka.
A bold choice.
Makes me think a little less of you.
Oh, no.
What's your tagline?
If I was a rapper, I'd be little barbecue sauce.
Sam Schultz is here with us as well.
Hello.
Sam, what's your tagline?
That's an egg, not a fish.
Sari Riley is here with us as well.
What's your tagline, Sari?
It's foggy in here.
Oh, and I'm Hank Green, and my tagline is four or five eyelashes.
Every week here on Size Your Tangents, we get together to try to one-up,
amaze, and delight each other with science facts.
We're playing for glory, but we're also keeping score and awarding sandbox from week to week. We do what we can to stay on
topic, but we aren't great at that. If the rest of the team deems a tangent unworthy, we will force
you to give up one of your sandbox. So tangent with care. And now, as always, we will introduce
this week's topic with a traditional science poem this week from Stefan.
this week's topic with a traditional science poem this week from Stefan.
Trees cover the earth like some kind of planetary hair,
most with rings that add some girth for each passing year.
For the species Penantia baylissiana, we know of just one plant.
It's rare, but taken all together, you could count over three trillion trees out there.
There are trees whose tissues can survive a deep, deep freeze, and it turns out
trees in forests make a great
carbon sink. Trees provide
useful shade with their dense
canopies, and homes
for flying squirrels
and other little beasts.
And of course, humans also
benefit. For us, there's much to
loot. Every part of a tree can be useful from the leaves to the roots. They give us nuts, syrup, rubber, and all kinds of fruit. And sometimes we just need that lumber. Sorry, Groot.
Our topic for the day is trees. You know, planetary hair.
Yeah, that's a challenging idea.
God, I never thought until this moment that I have no idea what a tree is.
So you know a tree when you see one, right?
Yes.
You can look outside and be like, that is a tree.
That is not a tree.
That, as far as I know, is basically what scientists think about trees, too.
They're like, that's a tree.
And it's a plant with a more or less permanent shoot system.
So like the roots and the ground,
that is supported by a single woody trunk.
So woody, like the bark around a tree,
as opposed to herbaceous,
which is like a green stem that you'd see on a tulip
or something like that.
And then there's a lot of debate over the specifics.
Because there are definitely trees
that have more than one trunk.
Yeah.
Some organizations of scientists get really specific about how thick the trunk has to be to count as
a tree or how tall the plant has to be to be counted as a tree like one set of measurements
is it needs to be three inches in diameter at a point four and a half feet above the ground
with a definitely formed crown of foliage
and a mature height of at least 13 feet which excludes lots of like smaller trees so who knows
that seems completely unnecessary yeah like that's not science that's just that's just like
arbitrary classification they're like we're tired of seeing papers from people studying small trees
the more important thing is that it's it's planetary hair
as long as we can agree on that on the scale of the size of the planet they're very small
so they're more like planetary stubble like five o'clock if trees are planetary hair what are the
oceans yeah i'm i don't have any like pools of water on my body ever. It's kind of like your guts, right?
You have pools of stomach acid on the top of your skin.
Right.
We only have one place an ocean can be on our body.
It's just the belly button.
Well, if you opened your mouth,
you could pour some water in there, too.
That's true.
That's a great point, Sam.
Inside of the nose, eye sockets, ear holes.
Yeah.
Yeah, so many options available to us.
Everyone, doc, all of us a point.
No one deserves to benefit from this.
Do you know the etymology of the word tree, Sari?
Yeah, it seems like the word tree or some variation thereof has existed for a while. In Proto-Indo-European, there is a root word,
deru, or druo,
are two root words, I guess.
That means to be firm,
solid, steadfast,
with specialized meanings
of wood or tree
when they're referencing
specifically a wood or tree.
And now it's time for
Truth or Fail.
One of our panelists
has prepared three science facts
for our education and enjoyment, but only one of those facts is real.
The other three have to figure it out either by deduction or wild guess.
And if we get it right, we get a Sam Buck.
If we don't, then Sam gets the Sam Buck.
Sam, what are your three facts?
Close your eyes and think of a tree.
Okay.
What do you see?
One woody trunk that's above 13 feet tall.
With branches and whatever I said, an umbrella of leaves. I see a bunch of leaves, too.
So the odds are that it is tall and green and most importantly, peaceful.
Is it peaceful?
Yeah.
Wouldn't hurt a fly.
But what if I told you that there were some trees out there that were capable of carnage?
These are three trees that dabble in ultraviolence, but only one of them is real.
Ultraviolence.
Okay.
So number one.
The dragon's blood tree is an odd-looking squat tree with a dome-shaped canopy of needles and a dark secret.
Its roots contain a compound that erodes the roots of trees around it. Eventually, those trees fall, and the dragon's blood tree uses the nutrients of the rotting tree to supplement its own diet.
It's nicknamed the vampire tree.
Number two.
The possumwood tree is a giant South American tree with a spiky trunk and a potentially deadly weapon
in the form of pumpkin-like fruit that swells until it explodes,
shooting shrapnel-like seeds at a
speed of 160 miles an hour.
What? What? What?
What? Don't get too close.
The dynamite tree.
Or number three.
The West Coast tall coconut is
a tall, coconut-producing palm
native to India. It looks just like
any other palm tree, but it hides a deadly
booby trap. It produces wedge- any other palm tree, but it hides a deadly booby trap.
It produces wedge-shaped fruits
that are easily jostled loose from the tree,
and the relatively pointy shape of the coconut
combined with the height of the tree
make the falling nests extremely deadly,
injuring and killing many people every year.
Its nickname?
The Jalad, or Executioner Tree.
Ooh!
The Executioner tree.
So we have the dragon's blood tree that erodes the roots of its enemies
and then consumes them.
The possum wood tree, which also is called the dynamite tree
because it shoots shrapnel seeds from its pumpkin-like fruit.
And the executioner tree, which drops heavy scythe-like coconuts down upon people, raining its rain of terror upon us for centuries or something.
I know people get killed by coconuts.
Yeah.
I've heard about that.
But I didn't know, I haven't heard that there are special coconuts that are like axe-shaped.
Yeah, and I can imagine that a coconut seed or coconut, I guess that is the seed, would evolve to be spikier for some reason because that seems like it would help plant it.
The coconut seed dispersal mechanism is to float to a better place so like that's what i think that's why coconuts
exist is so that they can float around and find another place to sit and so i don't i don't
necessarily think that they like to go right where they land because there's no like branches of a
coconut tree or a palm tree so like right there is no good because you're like right next to another
tree already yeah you're just fighting with your dad. I've read a little bit about dragon's blood trees, but I've not heard about this.
But they are extremely weird, so I would not put it past them.
I think they're like reddish on the inside, which is part of why.
Yes, which is part of why they get their name.
And I think people have used them for a variety of medicinal treatments or dyes or something like that.
That has nothing to do with how it destroys other trees, though.
I sort of feel like trees are somewhat likely to end up near trees that are of the same species.
And so it seems maybe weird that it would just like cannibalize everything around it.
It's true.
I mean, in Montana, definitely we have a lot of the same tree over and over again. But in other places
where there's sort of more production, you know, more energy in the environment, there tends to be
more species that are sort of fighting it out. Where's the dragon's blood tree from, Sam?
The dragon's blood tree is from Socotra, which is an island off the coast of Yemen and Somalia.
That sounds like a place where there's plenty of sunlight and water. And then we have
the possum wood tree, which
sounds definitely not real.
Really? This is
the one. This is the one, I think.
I remember hearing that trees can
explode when it's cold.
For way different reasons.
Not on purpose. Seed dispersal is
a thing, so like shooting your seeds out like a snapdragon
is definitely a thing that some plants do.
And they do go fast, but fast enough
and like with enough mass to injure a person.
Seems unlikely.
But, you know, I've never been there.
Well, now I don't know.
If the two science-y people think exploding fruit is not likely.
And the best thing is that if we're all wrong, then Sam gets the points and he needs them.
I need them pretty bad.
It won't really hurt you guys to get it wrong.
I'm going to go with the executioner tree.
Let's go.
Bomb fruit.
Bomb fruits.
Okay. I'm also going go. Bomb fruit. Bomb fruits. Okay.
I'm also going to guess bomb fruit.
Alright, the correct answer was
the bomb fruit.
Oh no! What?
So these can kill you
if they explode in your face.
Yeah, they can hurt you. I don't know.
I couldn't find a lot of first-hand accounts of people
actually getting exploded by one.
I mean, they shoot shoot 160 miles an hour.
Yeah, but if they're like little.
Yeah, but imagine if you're like a chipmunk or something.
You're going to get creamed.
So the possum wood, a.k.a. sandbox, a.k.a. dynamite tree,
they're really spiky looking, and they have exploding fruit.
It can shoot 160 miles per hour
and averages a distance of 98 feet each seed does after it shoots.
Wow.
That sounds like a pretty good way to do it.
You don't need birds anymore.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I'm looking at the seeds,
and they look like I wouldn't want to get hit by one.
No.
And then on top of all that, sap is toxic,
and it's used by fishermen in the area to poison fish.
So it's a very mean and useful tree.
Is there any truth to the other facts?
Well, the dragon blood tree is a cute little dome-shaped tree that lives in Socotra.
It's an island full of endemic species, kind of like the Galapagos Islands.
And this tree is one of them.
It's considered vulnerable by the IUCN, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.
And they're trying really hard to protect it. And roots they maybe exist i don't know but that was kind of an inversion of
the fact that trees that are dying or stressed out can send nutrients to the trees around it
via the mycorrhizal network yeah the wood wide web yeah the wood wide web i'll just say that
instead so they're like opposite vampires they They're friendly vampires. It's really
especially sad that the
Dragon's Blood tree is vulnerable because of how
when you cut it down, it literally bleeds.
You'd think that people would be like,
let's stop. Too sad about it, yeah.
That seems too mean.
And then the West Coast Tall Coconut
Tree is just a normal, really tall coconut
tree. And I looked up the stats of
death by coconut
and it's more of an urban legend than anything hawaii's first recorded death by coconut happened
in 1973 and i think that looked like the only one recorded but more coconut deaths than you'd think
were situations where a trained monkey who was trained to gather coconuts accidentally threw a
coconut too hard onto the head of the person who had cleaned it.
There were three of those on Wikipedia.
Okay.
So, like, it wasn't that, like, they were just walking by.
It was like, we knew a coconut was going to fall.
There was a person there waiting for the coconut.
It's like when your kid throws you a ball without, like, making eye contact first,
and it just, like, whaps you in the cheek. All right.
Next up, we will take a short break.
Then we will be back with the fact off
welcome back everybody sam buck totals totals. Sari has zero.
Sam has zero.
I have negative one.
And Stefan is in the lead with a positive one.
Because we were all punished for our earlier conversations.
Now get ready for the fact off.
Two panelists have brought science facts to present to the others in an attempt to blow their minds.
Each of the presentees have a Sam Buck to award
the fact that they like the most, and we will
decide who goes first. Is it going to be Sari
or is it me with a trivia question?
Who's got that question? A tree named
Hyperion was discovered in 2006
and is considered the tallest
tree on Earth. How tall is
it? What unit do we have to give our
answers in? Guess in
meters to two decibel places.
Oh, wow.
All right.
137.86 meters.
I'm going to say 100.00 meters.
Hank wins, but barely.
The answer was directly in between at 115.85 meters.
Oh, wow.
I almost got the decimals right, though.
So that is thrilling.
Yeah, it's true.
You should get extra points for that, but you don't.
So I guess it's time for me to go first.
Do you guys want to hear about a tree?
Yeah.
Okay.
A couple of years ago, two professors from Auckland University of Technology were hiking
around New Zealand when they saw something that I wouldn't think would be surprising. It was the
stump of a tree. To me, that would look like a dead stump. But to them, it did not. Even though
it did not have other foliage, it was not able to do photosynthesis. They were not normal people. They were ecologists.
And so they looked closer and they could tell that the stump was alive. Now, living tree stumps have
been observed before. So it's a dead tree, no branches, no leaves, but it is alive. And it is
not clear how they survive. So these Auckland ecologists decided to investigate how this works
by attaching sensors that measured the movement of water and sap through the stump, but also through
its two nearest living tree neighbors. And they found that during the day, the big living trees
were moving lots of water and sap around, as you would expect. And the stump wasn't moving stuff
around. But during the nighttime, that switched. The stump would take in water and sap around, as you would expect. And the stump wasn't moving stuff around. But during the nighttime, that switched.
The stump would take in water and sap, while the living trees had less activity.
Now, researchers know about these underground networks that connect trees through symbiotic
fungi, which we already talked about because it's awesome.
I like to call these networks the wood wide web.
You could also call it the mycorrhizal fungi networks
or something. But they share nutrients. They share carbon. They also share information between trees.
So trees will know things that are like information gathered by other trees. But this
hydraulic connection that the researchers found is weird because it's not clear like what the
living trees are getting out of this. So it's not like they're not doing it when the when the trees are photosynthesizing but like the the trees appear to
be keeping the stump alive now this might be that the stump just grafted onto the other tree roots
and then when it died it just hung there like a lazy tree vampire, or maybe the stumps serve some kind of connection
as part of this like super organism
that protects all of them from, you know,
possible threats or droughts or something.
I think that it's a lazy vampire,
but this other theory is much more beautiful.
No, it's like a tree hospital.
But wait, are stumps,
at what point is the tree dead if you cut it down?
Right then, the stump would still be alive.
But if the stump doesn't have any way of photosynthesizing,
the stump would, theoretically, you would think, die pretty quickly.
Yeah, unless it's in tree hospital.
Yeah, because it's going to have a bunch of nutrients stored in the roots
that it could try to make another go of it, which they often do.
But if that fails fails then it is
just a stump okay here's a dumb question if you're a tree and you have leaves and you have roots
are both of them giving you nutrients in a different way and you need both those different
kind of nutrients here's the rough like understanding of what's going on a lot of
transpiration so there's photosynthesis happening in the leaves, and there's also water evaporating out of the leaves. That evaporation is what draws nutrients through the whole tree. So the water and stuff that it gets from the roots has to be then drawn up through the whole tree, and photosynthesis can't happen without that water.
Okay.
So yes, they're both necessary.
You can't have tree without some way of getting nutrients and water,
and you can't have tree without some way of photosynthesizing that stuff.
Unless you're a lazy vampire tree.
Yeah, because it's still alive.
But it's just like taking nutrients from other trees in my cursory reading of it
for my fact off fact
the people that
they're interviewing
were talking about
looking at what the
fungus is getting out of it
instead of what the
trees are getting out of it
and like
it seems like
the trees are being
nice to each other
but really
the fungus have
just like too much
to gain to let any
of the trees die
I don't know exactly
how the fungus are benefiting
except that I think that they get some stuff
from the tree roots.
Yeah, and I guess they can't go above ground
and look at the cut down tree and be like,
oh, this one's cut down.
We can't help this one anymore.
It's just in disguise.
They don't know that it's a vampire tree.
They're just like, well, there are these roots here.
And they have not actually dug up the tree roots to see how they're grafted together.
So they're only looking at what's happening based on flow of water and sap.
Do you know what information, other than just nutrients, is being shared?
Like you said, the trees are learning things and then sharing the knowledge, like a tree
library.
Yeah, this is a thing
that I have heard people
who know what they're talking about
tell, say.
And so they,
but I do not know what it is.
If it's just like,
this tree found some water
or if it's like a fern gully situation
where the trees are talking to each other
about the timber harvesters.
That's what I saw
is that they can pass alert pheromones
to each other. That makes sense because other plants do that too. That's what I saw, is that they can pass alert pheromones to each other.
That makes sense, because other plants do that, too.
Like, when grass is cut, the smell of freshly cut grass, I think, is an alarm pheromone.
That's like, ah, we're being cut.
Not that grass can, like, get up and run or anything, but that is some sort of plant communication as well.
Just preparing each other for the inevitable.
Prepare!
You, too, will die. Okay, so we got my vampire trees. communication as well. Just preparing each other for the inevitable. Prepare! You too will
die. Okay, so
we got my vampire trees. Okay, so
my fact is actually sort of similar
but with a different ending. Redwood
trees in the genus Sequoia
are known for being super old, super
giant, evergreen trees.
Some that are even 8 or 9 meters
in diameter. They grow in places like
along the coast of California in the U u.s in vast forests and can sprout in several different ways like
from seeds or growing from the stumps or roots of a parent tree and tucked into these forests
of giant trees are ghost redwoods which only exist in the numbers of like tens or a few hundred
around the world and ghost redwoods only grow from a few inches to a couple meters tall
because they're albino.
And for plants, that's basically a death sentence
because their pigment chlorophyll is what makes them green
and allows them to photosynthesize.
So these ghost redwoods can't photosynthesize.
They have waxy needles, weak wood, slow growth,
and are basically parasites since they have to grow from a parental trunk and get all their nutrients from the still
photosynthesizing parent tree. It doesn't seem very evolutionarily favorable to support an
energy-sucking small ghost tree. And sometimes these ghost trees do starve to death, but they
always grow back afterward.
Wait, wait, wait.
That's not what happens when I starve to death.
They starve to death.
That's not death, Sari.
Okay, they starve to almost death
that they croon back to nothing
and then they go,
well, here's a new ghost tree.
Is it a new?
I don't know.
It happens infrequently enough
that it could just be the same mutation growing from the same spot or it like recedes to a little nub and then regrows.
But they could provide a different kind of protection.
needles of a redwood and the white needles of an albino redwood for their chemical composition and found that the ghost redwoods had more than twice the concentrations of toxic heavy metals
as the green ones. So they acted as a sort of like safe for these toxins and sequestered them away
as a protective measure. His idea is that they could be a sign of adaptability
to either natural damaging factors
or even human pollutants that have been introduced into the environment
because these large trees just grow a little ghost
and then shove all the bad stuff in it.
Are they purposefully giving the little trees the heavy metals?
Is that what's happening?
That's like the best guess so far.
We're not 100% positive why they exist, but that would give a favorable reason for them.
So like if the concentrations of heavy metal become too high in the parent tree, they would siphon it off along with the nutrients.
But then because that part of the tree is definitely going to die because it can't sustain itself, that would give it an opportunity to get this stuff out of my body forever.
It's like pooping for trees.
It's like pooping into a cyst that is genetically different from you.
Okay. Or a serious fact that there are albino trees that stick off of big redwood trees and they contain heavy metals and are maybe a way of sequestering those toxins away from the tree.
Or me, I had a stump that was dead, but it turned out it was alive and it's just a lazy vampire.
Or possibly it's in tree hospital or possibly it is part of the super organism of the forest.
Wait, is this anything?
Triage?
No.
Yes.
Sam, Stefan, are you ready to vote your votes?
Yeah, this is a hard one.
Three, two, one.
Sari.
Hank.
Do we split it?
Yeah, you split it.
That's nice.
I'm not negative.
It's time to ask the science couch.
We've got a listener question for our couch slash blanket fort slash chair of finely honed scientific minds.
This is from at fell of he.
What is the world's smallest full grown tree species?
Well, it's exactly 13 feet tall is what I learned.
Some kind of bonsai?
Oh, yeah.
Bonsai trees are definitely trees because of how that's right there in the word.
And you look at it and say, that's a tree.
This question is actually deceptively very tricky because unlike saying like the blue whale is the biggest species,
deceptively very tricky because unlike saying like the blue whale is the biggest species smallest full-grown tree species makes me want to ask a lot of questions like naturally full-grown
i feel like that's what the question is getting at and bonsai aren't naturally that big like
they're not selectively bred to be small they're just a big tree species that is pruned and shaped and like
carefully manipulated into art which is a miniature tree so technically yes if you count that as like
a full-grown tree in that it looks like a mature tree and could probably propagate more through cuttings or
through something else. But that has a lot of human influence. Without human influence and
just natural influence, there are things called pygmy forests. And there are some in California,
and then there are some in the Philippines. They're all over the world. And it's where
the soil is poor enough. So usually this means really low water retention and really acidic.
It's just like a horrible place to live.
And so trees grow really slowly and are essentially stunted in their growth.
And so you have a bunch of these pygmy variations of the same trees that are only five or six feet tall.
And people can walk through and be above the tree
line because the soil is so poor that they're struggling to grow. And those are naturally,
those are grown to the best of their capacity. But if they were somewhere else, they would be big,
right? Yeah, but if they're somewhere else, they would be big. Now, if you think of a tree living
where it can and then growing to its maximum height some people think that the dwarf willow
salix herbacea is the smallest tree in the world because it can grow one to six centimeters in
height and so that's like very very short definitely below the 13 feet definition
but other some people look at it how is it a tree that's the thing people some people look at it. How is it a tree? That's the thing. People, some people are like, it's a woody, like has sometimes has a singular stem.
And so they're like, that's basically a trunk.
But then other people are just like, that is a bush.
It's a shrub.
It is a woody shrub.
And there's no way I'm accepting that as a tree.
This dwarf willow is part of a genus of plants called salix, which as a group have both shrubs, like sprawling, branching, woody shrubs and willow trees.
Like the characteristic, by a pond, trunk goes up, long strands come down.
And so there are some people who are like, this is more like a tree than a shrub.
And then there are other people like, no, it obviously fits in the shrub category.
So it's either a tree or a shrub because it is a willow.
And people are like, but it only has one trunk.
So I guess it's a tree.
Shrubs are really muddy in the water, this whole situation.
What the heck is a shrub?
Yeah, plants are confusing.
I feel like a shrub is when there are multiple branches. So instead of a single trunk, like close to the ground or out of the ground,
there are potentially lots of little branches.
I just wanted to give a shout out to the word shrub, which is great.
It's just really good.
But yeah, so this is a really long and sprawling answer to say I don't really know.
There are other trees that are between like four to six feet tall.
There are other trees that are between like four to six feet tall.
So a Japanese maples can grow naturally about that big before they just level off.
And there are a couple other tree species like that, that fully grown.
They just sort of level off at six feet.
Don't know why.
They're just sort of happy there.
Yeah, that's what I did.
If you want to ask your question to the Science Couch,
you can follow us on Twitter
at SciShow Tangents
where we tweet out topics
for upcoming episodes every week.
Thank you to
at PaulPlaysGames2,
at PrettyEmpic,
and everybody else
who tweeted us your questions
this episode.
Final scores.
I'm tied with Sam with zero
and Sari and Stefan
tied for the lead
with one sandbox. Which means that Sari and Stefan tied for the lead with one sandbox.
Which means that Sari is still in the lead,
and now, Sam, you're in third, and I am in last.
Yeah, I kind of needed a big win today.
If you like this show and you want to help us out, it's very easy to do that.
You can leave us a review wherever you listen.
That's very helpful and lets us know what you like about the show.
You can also tweet out your favorite moment,
because that just makes us feel good.
And finally, if you want to show your love for SciShow Tangents,
just tell people about us.
Thank you for joining us.
I've been Hank Green.
I've been Sari Riley.
I've been Stefan Chin.
And I've been Sam Schultz.
SciShow Tangents is a co-production of Complexly
and the wonderful team at WNYC Studios.
It's created by all of us
and produced by Caitlin Hoffmeister and Sam Schultz,
who is also our editor.
Our editorial assistant is Deboki Chakravarti.
Our sound design is by Joseph Tuna
Medish. Our beautiful logo is by
Hiroko Matsushima. And we couldn't make any of
this without our patrons on Patreon. Thank you.
And remember, the mind is not a vessel
to be filled, but a fire
to be lighted.
But one more thing.
Trees can suffer from an infection called butt rot, which is pretty much what it sounds like.
Apparently, the butt of the tree is the base of the trunk, so I guess roots are legs, and it's when certain fungi invade the
stump through injuries and make the butt really spongy, dying tissue, which disrupts the stability
of the tree and can even kill it. Are butts named after tree butts? What came first? Where does our
butt come from? I think human butts came from.
Where did that word come from?
Oh, God.
Now I've typed butt etymology into Google,
and it will remember that forever.
Oh, it's from...
Maybe we should save it for our butt episode.
Yeah, we should save it for our butt episode.
Stay tuned.