Stuff You Should Know - Wetlands! Wetlands! Wetlands!
Episode Date: September 10, 2020It’s time to get jazzed up for some Earth science of the waterlogged variety. Join Chuck and Josh as they tour some of the most interesting ecosystems on the planet and learn why we need to stop des...troying them post haste. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
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We have a book coming out,
and we would love it if you bought it.
That's right, that'd be great.
It's called Stuff You Should Know, colon.
And that's it, just colon.
Okay, I think there's a little bit more to it,
and I'll be the one to say it then.
It's called an incomplete compendium
of mostly interesting things.
And the title's just a flat out lie
because it's all interesting, Chuck.
It is, and it's a really fun book.
We're really proud of it.
It's got great illustrations
from our new friend, Carly Monardo.
It was co-written with us,
with a great guy named Nils Barker.
And the team all came together to produce something
that we're just super, super proud of.
That's right, so you can order it everywhere you buy books,
pre-order now, and we appreciate you.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
["Song of Love"]
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh, and there's Charles and Jerry's over there,
and this is Stuff You Should Know,
the Dripping Wet Edition.
In these wet lands.
What?
I knew that you would not get that.
Is that a seagr reference?
Oh gosh, why do you have to say seagr
when you always mean springsteen?
Was that springsteen?
Yeah, it's bad lands.
Oh, okay.
Baby, these wet lands were born to run?
Sure, run water.
I don't like myself anymore, run water.
That was a great save, Chuck.
Thanks.
So we're talking wet lands.
I have to say, we have to give a shout out
to Tom Peterman, the foul-mouthed wetland biologist
who keeps asking us to do this episode.
Oh, is that where this came from?
It was Tom Peterman's suggestion,
although I had already wanted to do it anyway, so.
Yeah, I mean, we love our Earth Sciences, man.
This one was, I was just smiling from ear to ear,
researching this.
Can you imagine watching a blacksmith forge something
in a wetland, in a flooded woodland?
No, that's nirvana right there.
It really is.
So we're talking wetlands, everybody.
And Dave Ruse helped us put this one together.
That's a good one.
And Dave likes to pop in jokes every once in a while.
And he said, he said, what makes a wetland wet water?
And then he says, in all seriousness,
that's basically that the water has to be largely present
at least some parts of the year in the soil
in such amounts that you would call something wetland.
I mean, think of the name wetland.
It's about as earthy a term as science gets.
Yeah, and he front-loaded this with a few stats.
And I won't go through all of them,
but I'll go through a few that kind of are instructive
as to why I love wetlands so much.
Here's one.
Although wetlands make up only 5% of the land surface
in the United States, they are home to 31%
of our plant species.
Yeah.
Not bad.
One third of America's threatened or endangered species
live only in wetlands.
I would propose that that's slightly misleading.
I think they're endangered because they live in wetlands
and wetlands are endangered, as we'll see.
Think about it, Chuck.
I don't know.
I took it more as...
Like they're all hiding out in the wetlands?
Well...
Because it's a terrible place to hide out.
No, it's not bad because it's got 31% of the plant species.
I mean, it's a pretty rich, biodiverse area to live in
if you're an endangered species.
For sure.
All right.
You said tomato, I say tomato.
Well, we'll have to hear from Thomas Peterman,
the foul mouth wildlife for wetland biologists
who can let us know.
What does he say?
Like, do effing wetlands already?
Yes.
That kind of thing?
Yeah.
I like this guy.
I think that's an exact quote.
Yeah, he's my kind of dude.
So another stat that I thought was pretty interesting
that just kind of needs to form the basis
for the undercurrent of this whole episode is that...
So we keep talking about the US.
There's wetlands found all over the world
of different types and varieties
and different climates and different continents,
every continent except Antarctica.
But in the United States in particular,
we have a long history of filling in
and draining wetlands for other purposes.
So much so that, let's see,
I believe, I don't know how much we've lost,
but in the 1600s, the lower 48 states
were covered with 220 million acres of wetlands,
which is 11% of the total surface area
of the lower 48 states.
And I think starting in the 50s,
we were doing away with wetlands
at a rate of about 60,000 of those acres per year.
Yeah, and it's gotten better since then,
but yeah, in the, boy, up until the Clean Water Act,
it was just like, hey, you know what looked great there?
A resort with like three golf courses
and a bunch of tennis.
That's been such a driving force.
Like it's like looking at land or ecosystems
and being like, are humans making money off of it?
No, well then drain it and repurpose it,
set it on fire and repurpose it,
stop it from burning and repurpose it.
Like if we can't make money off of it,
it can't possibly be useful.
And luckily, since the environmental movement
really started in the 70s,
we've realized that that's not necessarily true,
that even if you are just a heartless dummy,
there's still a lot of benefits
that humanity's given from things like wetlands
that seem problematic or non-productive, you know?
Yeah, that was one of Dangerfield's big lines
in Caddyshack, as Al Servic,
was a golf courses and cemeteries.
Two biggest wastes of prime real estate.
That's a good one.
So let's talk about wetlands.
He said that they are only,
some of them are only wet for short periods,
sometimes when there's snow melt or just rain.
Yeah, those are called ephemeral wetlands,
which is a cool term.
That's a great term.
Some are wet all the time.
And the key parts of being a wetland
or the key characteristic is that it's either
permanently or periodically flooded or wet,
and that the soil is got,
it's called hydric soil and is dominated
by anaerobic processes, meaning it loves water
and the plants there love water.
Which is weird because he used another word
that shouldn't really jibe with plants,
and that's called anaerobic,
which means there's very little to no oxygen present.
And we'll explain why later,
but the fact that there are plants means
that those plants have adapted to the wetlands.
Yes, and it makes them hydrophic conditions.
Hydrophytic, and we'll talk about those plants later.
It's another thing I love about wetlands
is just that it really underscores the remarkable evolution
that something will go through to survive.
Very cool stuff.
Very awesome.
Yep, so there's also, so you hit upon something,
like they're not necessarily wet year round, right?
So there's a whole bunch of different types of wetlands
or wetland environments that fill those,
that check those boxes.
One of the ones that most people think of
when they think of wetlands or coastal wetlands,
like marshes, and a marsh is basically like this area
between inland and the ocean.
It's like a transition zone, a buffer zone.
And because of its proximity to the ocean,
it's usually salty or at least brackish,
which is a mixture of saltwater and fresh water.
And one of the ones that really come to mind,
if you're thinking coastal wetlands,
you're thinking marshlands,
and you're thinking tidal marshlands probably,
especially if you're a Pat Conroy fan.
What was the name of her character that he repeats
over and over in a whisper?
I think I remember Chuck, it was Bobby Jim, Bobby Jim.
This is one of those scream at the pod player moments.
I'm sorry, everyone.
Was it in the Prince of Tides?
Yeah, Lowenstein, was that it?
Lowenstein.
You're sure it wasn't Bobby Jim?
I think it was Lowenstein.
Was it his, oh, his shrink's, his shrink girl friend's name?
Yeah, Babs.
Okay, yeah, I don't remember.
I think it was Lowenstein.
All right, so anyway, tidal marshes, yes, Prince of Tides.
They obviously, it's because they're tidal,
they're gonna come in and out with the high and low tide.
And like you said, they're generally saltwater.
And the salt marshes are very nutrient rich,
and they do have a lot of diversity,
but obviously only the kind of things
that can tolerate the salt
as far as plants and animals go.
Which is a pretty short list, really,
because salt is not conducive to life.
Instead, there are some plants
that have figured out how to deal with salt.
But most of the time when you're looking at salt marshes,
you're looking, the plant life is basically grasses
of some sort.
Right.
There's also freshwater tidal marshes,
which they are either connected to the saltwater marsh,
but they're far enough inland
that the saltwater doesn't make its way in there.
So it's a freshwater marsh,
but it's still affected by the tides.
And then I had no idea about this.
And I used to vacation on Lake Erie,
but apparently the Great Lakes are so big
that they have tides themselves.
You didn't know that?
I had no idea.
I even knew that.
And I'm a dumb dumb when it comes to the Great Lakes.
Well, Chuck, I think you got me beat big time.
Well, in this case.
Because I could know a million other things
about the Great Lakes.
And if you knew that one thing and I didn't,
you had me beat.
Yeah, I knew that.
And so that means that they do have those tidal marshes.
The Florida Everglades are another good example.
And boy, Florida just,
there's a lot of different types of wetlands in Florida.
Well, there's a lot of coastline.
Yeah, a lot of coastline and a lot of interior wetness.
Yeah, we have a lot of wetlands around our place
in Florida for sure.
And there's mangroves and all sorts of stuff
that we'll talk about.
Well, we're at mangroves.
I love those things.
So mangroves, I think they at least deserve a short stuff
because they're one of the most amazing plants of all time.
But they're a type of coastal wetland themselves,
a mangrove forest.
Or if you've never seen a mangrove forest,
they have a growth habit for the shrubbery on top
of like the hair that Oompa Loompa has
in the original Willy Wonka, the good one.
And the trunks split out into these cool,
like long roots and legs that stick up out of the water.
And they form this huge tangle,
this riot of like shrub, woody shrub.
And they do all sorts of amazing things
to help the aquatic life and us humans as well up on land
just by being present.
Yeah, they're really cool looking.
And this is another good one, sort of like the origami
that if you're able and you're sitting still
to look up a lot of these things as you go.
Because these mangrove forests, it looks like a shrub
that's like, I really wanna be a shrub
but I don't wanna get wet.
So I'm just gonna dip my legs in a little bit.
Yeah, that's really great.
It's just very cool looking.
And again, just the adaptability
that these mangroves really wanna live where they live
even though it's not very suited for them.
And they become suited for it.
Right, if you've been sleeping on mangroves,
welcome to reality.
Well, that's a t-shirt if I ever heard one.
Yeah, it could use a little work
but there's the beginnings of one in there.
You also got your inland wetlands.
These are not coastal.
In this case, we're talking about swamps and marshes
and bogs and fens, F-E-N.
And marshes, a lot of these you'll find near rivers,
near streams, lowland depressions
and they might periodically fill up
depending on rain, what's going on
or different types of flooding that might happen.
And they can be a few inches deep.
They can be several feet deep.
Yeah, most of the non-title inland marshes
are ephemeral wetlands.
So they're dry a lot of the year.
They might fill up seasonally.
They might fill up with the rains.
They might fill up with the nearby river flooding.
It's like my backyard.
And they, oh, really?
Is that right?
Yeah, it doesn't drain well.
I've got to drain this problem.
Okay, to you, it's a problem.
To nature, it's wonderful
because we like things that drain really quickly and dry
and then we can walk on them and the grass is fine.
But there's a lot of like benefits
to things that take their time.
Like there's something called a vernal pool
which is a kind of non-title marsh and ephemeral wetland.
And it's basically just like say a stretch of woods
that's a little bit depressed there
so that when it rains or a river floods, it fills with water.
And because the underlying bedrock or clay is not very porous,
it takes a while for that water to go through.
But that water is also not going further downstream.
So it prevents flooding from being as bad as it could
because a lot of the water collects and stays there.
And it also slowly recharges the groundwater.
And because it does get dry, it can't sustain fish
which makes it a really great nursery
for things like nutes and salamanders and frogs.
Things that fish eat their eggs.
But since there's no fish, this is like a really great place
for them to get a good foothold and a brand new life.
You've also got your prairie potholes.
This is one you should definitely look up.
These are usually in the upper Midwest of the United States.
The Dakotas, Minnesota, maybe Wisconsin.
And these are where ancient glaciers
left these big depressions in the landscape.
And they fill up sometimes during rain,
during the spring, during snow melt.
And they're not small.
Like our prairie pothole, and I got a vision in my head.
But if you look it up online, they're beautiful
and just they're very large though.
And they're kind of interconnected.
Just these big round holes scattered through
like a big open area full of water.
And these are great for migrating birds
because that could be a stopover that they might not have had
had those potholes not been there.
And when they're flying over the Dakotas,
they say, look, I see Van Nostrand's house.
Or buddy, Van Nostrand.
And then there's also, we said that wetlands occur
in all different kinds of climates.
They also occur in the desert.
There's something called Playa Lakes,
which are these depressions that apparently no one
has any idea exactly how they formed.
It could have been from erosion.
It could have been from an ancient sinkhole.
But there are depressions that are deep enough
that when the seasonal rains come,
the water is held in there.
And just like the prairie potholes,
it's very useful for migratory birds to stop over at
and can really plays a huge role in this ecosystem
where there's almost no water.
And now all of a sudden there's water
and it's in this nice little lake.
So let's all go gather there and have a social hour.
But responsibly, six feet apart.
That's right, okay.
I think we should take a break.
And we will talk a little bit about inland swamps
right after this.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show,
Hey Dude, bring you back to the days
of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
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Each episode will rival the feeling
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as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
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All right, so inland swamps, we promise to talk about that.
These are, for my money, some of the coolest areas
in the country because I think I talked about it
at some point, but I took a very special, fun trip
many, many years ago to the Okefenokee Swamp
and did one of those canoe trips where you have to rent.
There's no place to stop in the Okefenokee Swamp.
If you're like, I think I'll camp here.
It's like in the water.
So they had these camping pads built up,
they essentially just decks that are like six feet
above the water and you have to reserve those.
They're not just wide open for anyone
because there's nothing else out there.
So you have to reserve them for specific nights
on these specific pathways or paddle ways.
And me and a couple of buddies did it one year
and we canoed from deck to deck and it was amazing,
like one of the coolest trips I've ever taken.
That is very cool.
Was Ned Beatty with you?
No, but you do wake up surrounded by alligators.
It's a little creepy.
Yes, alligators are very creepy.
Like you wake up on that pad and pee off the dock
and they're growling at you.
Yeah, and you do not want to get too close
because they can move faster than you think.
Yeah, they can.
It was a lot of fun, though, but not for the faint of heart
because you don't realize till you get out there,
A, how bad the sun is going to beat you up
because there's no shade.
And B, how tough it is to paddle all day long
without like, let me get out and stretch my legs.
Right.
I mean, there is no getting out.
You just go and go and go.
And by the time you finally reach that janky deck,
it is like might as well be the Plaza Hotel.
Oh, nice.
But what I'm talking about in the case of the Okefenokee,
I thought it was a forested,
or a bottom land hardwood swamp.
You'd think.
From reading this, but apparently it's called
a non-riverine swamp forest.
Right.
And that is a forested swamp that fills up
from non-river sources, basically rain or groundwater.
Right, right.
So what would make a forested swamp
like a bottom land hardwood swamp is a proximity
to a river that floods its banks
or that is just so big, it kind of spills over
into some of the surrounding land
and that surrounding land is swamp.
I wanna look that up though.
I'm not quite sure Dave's right.
Oh, well, it's okay.
So it's either river fed or groundwater fed
or precipitation fed.
And if you're talking bottom land hardwood swamps,
or a river fed swamp, there's usually also a shrub swamp
which is a transition or a buffer zone
between the forested swamp and, you know,
somebody's backyard, which is,
it's just dominated by shrubs, but it's all the same thing.
It's all a freshwater swamp.
Yeah, I think, I bet you anything that Okifinoki
has several different types of these would be my guess.
Cause they were full on lakes that we paddled through.
Yeah.
So that would be my guess.
And I also think if I had a country band,
we would be the bottom land hardwood swamp rats.
Oh, that's a good one.
Not bad.
That sounds like an all-star band, you know?
Oh, sure, yeah.
So another kind of wetland that you're gonna find
all over the place, especially in Europe,
which when I think of bogs and fens, I think of Europe,
but apparently there's plenty of them
in the United States too.
But bogs and fens are kind of their own thing.
Bogs in particular are very unique as far as wetlands go
because not only are they anaerobic,
which by definition wetland is anaerobic soil.
They're like very little nutrient and very high acidity.
I've heard like the kind of acid that is put out by the peat
that's created in the bog has the same acidity,
roughly of vinegar.
Oh, wow.
It's like a, yeah, it's really, really acidic stuff.
And yet some plants prefer it.
Like you can grow cranberries and blueberries in a bog.
Sure.
You can preserve a body from the iron age forward in a bog.
Do we ever cover that, the bog bodies?
I feel like we did.
It might have been one of our video things on YouTube.
Maybe mummies.
Cause I think if I remember correctly,
our mummy episode covered more than just Egyptian mummies.
I think it covered like Inco mummies and-
And the bog people.
I'm sure we did.
We saw some then when we went to our UK trip,
we got to visit some of those cats like firsthand,
like right there in that glass, right?
You know, all you have to do is smash it with a hammer
and it's yours.
You got a bog person.
Yeah.
Or at least whatever you can grab, like a bog ear.
Right, just crumbles in your hand.
But I was looking, I was like, okay, why,
why are the bogs so great for preservation?
Part of it from what I understand is that acidity,
that the bodies are actually pickled.
But another part is the aerobic life is so devoid there.
There's just anaerobic bacteria
and they don't decompose nearly as well as aerobic bacteria.
So the decomposition doesn't set in
and the remains are pickled.
So like you can preserve a body in a really great state
for a very like toland man.
You could, his whiskers are still intact on his face.
Like that was the level of preservation.
And he was sacrificed into a bog,
which is a very specific kind of wet land.
Yeah. And a fan, like I said, it's F-E-N.
It's sort of like a bog in that it is a peat, a peaty wet land.
But they're a little bit different than bogs.
The water supply doesn't come primarily from rain
and it comes from the ground.
So it's not, it's going to be less acidic
because I don't think we mentioned mentioned.
I know it's partially because of the peat,
but the acidity also comes from the fact
that there's acid and rain that gets filling up,
that fills up these bogs.
Right, right. But not the case in a fin.
No, no, because that groundwater is able to kind of
dilute it a little bit.
So they're much more nutrient-rich than a bog is.
So they're going to have a much wider,
diverse range of plants in animal life.
Yeah. And this, I love that this next section from Dave
was called other fun types of wetlands.
Yeah. Mudflats.
Yeah. You got your mudflat.
It's another good country man.
My favorite are seeps.
These are just gorgeous little pieces of nature,
if you ask me.
It's, if you have a spring that comes up out of the ground,
it spills over into the ground.
So the surrounding ground is wetland
and it's called a seep.
That's right.
It's where gnomes like go and shower.
Yeah. And it's not, like you said, it's a spring.
So it's not like a creek.
No.
It's actually coming up from the ground.
You ever drink from a natural spring?
I did when I was a kid and I think my mom fired
the babysitter that like took us to drink from a spring.
Yeah. Who she was like, what are you doing?
It was either a spring or like a river in Ohio.
No, either way. It's two very different things.
Kyoga River, then you're in bad shape.
It was on fire while we were drinking.
But I mean, we have creeks, if you're listening,
you've never been to Atlanta.
Atlanta has creeks all over the place.
Like all of the in town neighborhoods
just are riddled with creeks.
They're just sort of out of view.
But like we have a creek, you know, 120 feet from our house.
Sure.
Which might have something to do with our drainage.
Who knows?
And it's spring fed?
No, it's just, you know, just a part of the Atlanta,
probably all comes from the Chattahoochee at some point.
Sure.
So Chuck, if that creek behind your house
started meandering in a different direction
and left a body of water where it originally flowed,
it would be an oxbow lake.
But if you were in Australia
and you were calling it this proper aboriginal name,
you'd call it a billabong.
A billabong.
Which I had no idea.
What does that have to do with surfing?
Oh, I think they just probably co-opted the name
and it became more associated with surf and surf gear
than it's true meaning.
That doesn't seem right.
No, let's take it back.
But that's what an oxbow lake is in Australia
among the aborigines.
It is a billabong, which is great.
A billabong, that was some like,
along with OP was one of the prime T-shirts to have
when you were a kid in the 80s.
Oh yeah.
If you were cool.
I love this amazing OP long sleeve blue shirt
that I wore with my parachute pants.
Yeah, those were the best.
My British Knights.
I remember those long sleeve OP shirts.
Yeah, they were good.
Gorgeous.
So Chuck, one of the things we've been talking about
is the kind of, the characteristics
that make a wetland, a wetland.
And it's not just the fact that the soil table
or the ground is either flooded
or almost completely flooded up to the surface level
with water.
That's not the entirety of it.
Like different wetlands are characterized
by how that water gets to it.
Like we said, some kinds of swamps are fed by groundwater.
Others are fed by precipitation.
Some are tidal.
So there's a whole group of scientists out there
that are called wetland hydrologists.
And what they study is how that water gets into a wetland
to create a wetland.
What happens to it while it's there
and then where it goes
and how all these things kind of interact
to form this very unique ecosystem.
Yeah, and we talked early on about the kind of soil.
Hydric soil is saturated with water.
And so if it's saturated with water,
it's not gonna have nearly as much oxygen.
And usually oxygen and soil
are in these little tiny air pockets.
Remember we talked about it in our soil episode.
Yeah, exactly.
And in the case of a wetland,
then those air pockets are gonna be filled with water
or just collapsed all together.
And then you've got your anaerobic condition.
But if you're a plant, you need CO2 and oxygen.
And you'll get a little bit of that
from photosynthesis in the leaves.
But the roots are like, what about me down here?
I need oxygen too.
And if it was an aerobic soil,
like we talked about in the soil podcast,
the roots can get it from those air pockets.
But in wetlands, they have to really, really adapt
to become hydrophytic or water loving plants
in some pretty amazing ways.
So I just have to say that this is like a lifelong mystery
solved and solved in like the simplest way possible.
Like it's anaerobic because there's water there
instead of air.
The air can't be in there because of the waters there.
Ipsofacto anaerobic.
I just think that's brilliantly simple.
Did you get that intuitively?
Cause I never did.
I always thought it was something mysterious.
Like we're talking about a whole different type of soil
or something else.
No, I think I got it.
Okay. Well, it was, I've been around for 44 years
and wondered it until just now.
Well, I'm 49.
So I might have learned that in the last five years.
So the plants that we're talking about,
like you said, the roots still need oxygen.
So they've said, okay, well, I really like it here.
I like this wetland area.
This is a pretty amazing place to live.
I'm gonna change so that I can stay here.
And some of the ways that plants have adapted,
well, one good example is a cat tail, right?
Cat tails are pretty much synonymous with marshlands.
Yeah, they're beautiful.
They're that long, thin stem with like a big fat thing
on top, like a hot dog that's ready to be roasted
on the fire.
Yeah, I grew up with those.
I don't know if it was a Southern thing,
but they can be decorative items in the home.
And I grew up, I feel like,
with a lot of cat tails in vases and stuff.
Okay, so that in wasps nests.
Yeah, hornet's nest, yeah.
So cat tails have this thing called erinicima.
No, I've got erinicima.
Erinicaima.
Erinicaima.
I think I got it.
Anyway, they're like these channels
that basically direct air from the leaves and the stem
and every other part of the cat tail down to the roots.
So here you go, roots, here's some oxygen,
fresh from the leaf.
Yeah.
So that cat tail can have as much roots as it wants
down in this anaerobic soil.
It doesn't matter, because it's getting its oxygen
from the air through the leaves.
Yeah, one of my favorites is the speckled alder.
You just look up a picture of that
and they have these enlarged pores called lenticils.
And they allow for the passage of oxygen directly
into that wood.
And if you look up a picture and you see those,
you go, oh, that's what those are.
That's what those are for.
They look like someone took a knife
and they're just tiny little horizontal slits
all up and down the alder.
I got you.
And it's, they're breathing basically.
Yeah, that's creepy as heck, but it's really neat.
Little mouths, little slitty mouths.
So the grasses that we talked about growing in salt marshes,
just like an iguanas sneezes out excess salts
as part of digestion, things like cord grass
that grow in these salt marshes.
They actually excrete salts through their leaves
so they can sit there and intake all the nutrients they need
from this selenic environment
and still not get overloaded with salt.
It's just pretty amazing that they can do that.
Yeah, and then to me, maybe the most amazing,
and this is where the mangroves kind of come back in,
although the mangroves apparently utilize all these
to stick around, but the bald cypress,
they grow in those forested swamps
where there's always water
and they are deciduous conifers
and they grow this root structure that they call a knee.
It's a pneumatophore, but like a knee on your leg
is how it's spelled.
And they just sit above the waterline and take in oxygen
and that's what those, I guess mangroves, mangroves.
There's a soul train joke in there somewhere.
That struck me as like a terrible jam bands name.
The mangroves, God, you're right.
That plays somewhere in Florida probably.
Probably.
But the mangrove uses, like I said, a lot of these tricks.
And I think certainly when you see those roots,
they're using those knees.
Yeah, which is basically it's a way to get oxygen
from the surrounding air down to the roots.
The mangroves do it, the bald cypresses do it.
Mangroves have all those adaptations.
Different species, they can do things like excrete salt,
they can draw oxygen in from the environment.
They have channels where they can pump oxygen
from one part of the plant to the other.
The one that gets me though, I'm just fascinated by bogs.
So we said that they're, it's an acidic,
anaerobic, nutrient depleted environment.
And yet there's still plants that live there.
And one of those plants, one kind of plant
is carnivorous plants.
They get their nutrients not from like the soil,
but from eating bugs.
Yeah, those are cool.
So they can just live there,
like a pitcher plant or a Venus flytrap
or something like that.
Yeah, those are neat, nature.
Wasn't Venus flytrap one of the DJs on WKRP?
That's a great DJ name.
Yeah, he was a great DJ.
All right, so let's take our final break
and we'll talk about why wetlands are important
and what you can do to help them do their thing.
Right after this.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
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Okay, Chuck.
Okay, Chuck, so just the fact that wetlands are as amazing
as they are means that they should be saved.
But there's also like a lot of benefits that we figured out.
Like you said, the 50s to the 70s were really rough time
for wetlands in the United States
because we were filling them in for cropland,
for real estate, and even previous to that,
we filled in a lot of marshland in the US
and built cities over them.
Like DC was built largely on marshland.
The fact that mosquitoes tend to live in wetland areas,
kind of justified filling in a lot of the wetlands
because we were dealing with malaria at the time.
So it made a lot of sense.
Get rid of the mosquitoes habitat,
you get rid of the mosquitoes.
And it worked, but we've paid a heavy price for it
because over time we've realized
these wetlands provide some really important benefits
to the local ecosystems
and in turn humans who live around them.
Yeah, I mean, helping flood conditions is a big one.
They are big, big natural sponges when it comes down to it.
And flooding would be way, way worse.
And we still have floods obviously,
but it'd be way worse if we didn't have wetlands.
They'd be far more destructive
if they weren't around to soak in that excess water
and then kind of slowly trickle it to the water table below.
And the same is obviously true of hurricanes
and big storm surges.
The wetlands basically operate
as big storage tanks for water.
Yeah, I saw somewhere, I can't find it now,
but like, oh, there it is.
An acre of wetlands can hold up
to about a million and a half gallons of water.
Just one acre.
So you got to think like that water's staying put there
and it's not flooding some human habitation instead,
which is a good reason to keep wetlands around
just for that buffer area
or to slow down the surge, like you were saying.
I also saw that we found out the same thing
goes for beaver dams that they build.
They're like a temporary artificial wetland
and they provide a lot of the same functions
that natural or other, I guess naturally occurring
or growing wetlands provide too.
And I think we should do a whole episode on beavers, okay?
No, totally.
I'm way into beavers.
So water filtration is another,
I'm getting you back for the origami thing.
So water filtration is another big service
that wetlands provide.
I don't remember where we talked about this,
but we talked about it recently,
where the water, oh, I think it was water treatment plants.
The water's brought in and it's got all the sediment
and gunk and muck and it's cloudy and turbid.
And then it slows down, they slow it down,
like running it through some grates or whatever.
And as it slows down, the sediment
that is making the water turbid and polluted and everything
has a chance to settle the bottom.
Well, wetlands provide that same function naturally.
So when you have a bunch of like polluted water
basically come through there,
that it slows down when it hits all those mangrove roots
or tree trunks or whatever it is.
And it gives it a chance for that sediment
to fall to the bottom.
It gets sucked up by the tree roots
and store it in the trees.
Or the microbial life can break a lot of that stuff down too.
And there's definitely a limit to where you can very easily
overload the wetlands ability to filter the water.
But if you gave it like a manageable supply,
that is a major service that it does,
is it cleans our water.
They call wetlands the kidneys of the earth.
Yeah, and they've even done studies
where they tried to, I guess sort of monetize
what an area of wetland might do
if it were a treatment plant.
And there's one in South Carolina
called the Congaree Bottomland Hardwood Swamp.
These are just all country bands.
For sure.
They said that that is basically equivalent
to about a $5 million water treatment plant
just sitting there being a wetland doing its thing.
Thank you, nature.
Pretty amazing.
I saw that beavers provide the dams that they build
that end up being temporary wetlands.
Somebody estimated it's worth about a hundred grand
if a human tried to build an artificial one, which we do.
That if you just let beavers do their thing,
they will do the same thing for free.
That's right, you don't have to pay them a hundred grand.
Nope.
There's also because there's so much going on in a wetland,
there's so much life.
They kind of form like these metropolises
for all sorts of different types of animals
on all the way up the food chain,
including plants, animals, microbial life, worms, fish,
larger predators like dolphins and alligators.
And all of them are sitting there providing food for us.
If you like gator tail,
buddy, you better preserve those wetlands.
Yeah, Dave points out here
that the commercial fishing industry in the US,
75% of the fish and shellfish harvested here
had fish that at least had a temporary home in the wetlands.
And that recreationally, if you're a recreational fish person,
fisher person, then 90% of the US fish catch
is at least the breeding ground lies in the wetlands
for those fish.
And the same thing goes for birds too.
They're enormously important habitats for birds,
some permanent, but also migratory too,
because if you're flying along and you're a bird
and you are a water bird and you need a place to land,
not only are you looking for water,
but you might really enjoy a swamp
because it offers protection from predators.
It offers a port in the storm.
It's just an all around valuable thing for birds too.
Yeah, I mean, imagine flying from Canada to Texas,
and you're going over Oklahoma, you're a little tired.
You look down, you see one of those,
which ones were those?
The prairie plies?
No, the prairie potholes.
Prairie potholes?
Yeah.
Oh man.
What a sight.
Aren't you describing a scene
in Jonathan living in St. Segal?
Probably so.
So the point is we need to take care of our wetlands
because they are a threatened, diverse,
very useful place all over the world,
especially here in the United States.
And if they are threatened and if things happen,
there are going to be all kinds of bad things,
you know, vegetative damage, the plant life
just being maybe wiped out altogether.
Storm surges being way worse, flooding being way worse.
Especially helps to see the value in them
if you consider them a buffer zone
between us and the hardest ravages of nature.
Yeah, and like you mentioned, pollution, there is a limit,
but they do absorb and mitigate levels of water pollution
and they just can't take too much of us, you know?
Right, exactly.
Which man, if there's anything that characterizes humans
in the 20th and 21st centuries, it's too much of us.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
What can we do though?
Well, apparently-
Besides donating to wetland projects,
we can definitely do that.
You can definitely do that.
There's some good ones out there.
I believe Ducks Unlimited is one of them.
The Wetlands Initiative, Natural Resources,
Defense Council, Wetlands International.
But apparently in the United States,
something like 75% of wetlands are on privately owned property.
And in the United States, we have, I mean,
private property is one of like the fundamental tenets
of American society.
So if you say, I wanna fill in this wetland
and kill off these beavers, you're allowed to do that.
Whether that's a good idea
and whether that's gonna affect other people,
that's a different story.
So if you own private property with a wetland on it
and you're doing just fine with that wetland,
leave the wetland alone.
It's very important.
Yeah, I guess this is where it gets a little tricky
in definitions because in plenty of places,
there are restrictions on building near water like this.
Sure.
I guess I just don't know like,
you can't build in a flood zone.
You can't, I mean, it depends on where you are,
but in Atlanta you can't.
And then with all these creeks and streams in Atlanta,
they have what's called stream buffers.
Sure.
50 foot, 75 foot, 100 foot.
And I think 25 is the lowest.
And for these, you have to get variances to do anything,
which your neighborhood has to approve.
And I talked to a guy that apparently anything over,
anything under 75 feet is pretty tricky to get approved.
So I don't know if they're wetlands or not,
but there are restrictions on stuff like that.
Okay, so that brings up the next point of what you and I
and everybody else can do,
which is vote for people to local elected office
who part of their platform is protecting wetlands.
Like all of those buffer zones, all those variances
and all those prohibitions,
those came from Atlanta city councils over the years
that decided that wetlands needed protecting.
You don't find those everywhere,
but once they get put in place,
they usually don't get repealed very easily.
So if you make preserving wetlands part of like
what you're voting for, that would have an impact for sure.
Yeah.
And whatever you're voting for, just vote, okay?
Vote, especially if they can just say that.
I know everyone, the presidential elections are always
the big sexy votes,
but the local politics matters even more almost sometimes.
Yeah, I vote for all of it.
Take an interest in your society, okay?
Well, you got anything else about wetlands?
Nope.
No, neither.
This is a good one.
I'm pretty happy with it.
And since I said that, everybody,
it's time for listener mail.
Yeah, I'm going to call this
the first SY5K.
Oh, yeah.
Did you see these?
Yes, man, congratulations to everybody who took part.
Yeah, so what happened was some stuff you should know,
listeners got together and put together a 5K,
stuff you should know 5K.
And we got periodic updates from Aaron Huey Miesel,
or Miesel, not sure how you pronounce it.
I'm going with Miesel.
But this is the final email about how it went.
Hey, guys, want to let you know that the SY5K is over.
It was so nice to look at everyone's pictures
and hear what episodes of stuff you should know
they listened to, because that was the idea.
Imagine some people might have fudged that
and listened to Mark Maron or whatever.
That's not like, they're disqualified.
I think a lot of us have suffered
from a lack of human connection at this time.
And the silly little virtual event
gave us something to bond over.
I don't think I would have tried this
with any other group of people.
The stuff you should know Army is wonderful
and it speaks volumes in regard to you guys.
The tone that you set in your podcast,
interesting and funny, carries over into your fan base
and has created a little lovely corner of the internet.
I totally agree, Aaron.
And the same can be said of the movie Crush Page.
Very, very good people, not snipy or rude
and going after each other on Facebook,
which is kind of what Facebook seems to be all about.
Oh yeah, it's like a garden paradise over there
on the SYSK Army page.
Yeah, that's great.
Now, I'm not suggesting that you made these people wonderful,
but the average stuff you should know Army member
is like that.
Interesting, funny and willing to participate
in a virtual 5K with a complete stranger.
And they love stoop waffles.
I even bought 13 stuff you should know stickers
to send out to some people as prizes.
It's just a little thing,
but everyone that I've been in touch with
has been exceedingly kind.
This is what we need right now,
these small human connections.
The podcast I'll listen to and laugh with,
a walk, run, bare chase to do virtually
with a bunch of near strangers
and stuff you should know sticker to put in your fridge
or on your laptop.
If you get a chance, go to the event page
and scroll through some of the posts,
they're delightful.
Like the woman who did our 5K at three months postpartum
and crushed it.
Nice.
Or the dad who pushed his adorable daughter
and her stroller on the 5K
while listening to his favorite episode, which was spam.
We had first timers.
Yeah, that was a good one.
We had first timers, people recovering from injury,
runners and walkers, so many smiles and stuff,
you should know t-shirts.
Sign off for now,
but just writing to tell you it's a success.
We might even do it again with love
and that is again from Aaron Huey Mazzell.
And that is great.
Aaron, thank you for doing this.
And that really does speak to the quality of our listeners
in every single way.
Indubitably.
Yeah, thanks a lot, Aaron.
It's good to hear from you.
And everybody who participated in the S-Y 5K,
you are the champions, our friends.
Even if you listen to Mark Marin,
but maybe not what Chuck just said.
That's it.
Okay, well, if you want to get in touch with us
like Aaron did and do something interesting,
we want to hear about it.
You can write to us in an email
to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s, called
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye-bye-bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.