So what they're saying is even if she's totally sealed the pipe so there's no leak at all, the difference in temperature will create some condensation on the outside. It seems like a no-brainer to me (pardon the unintentional pun) that they would have some very different ways of doing things similar to what animals do. LINCOLN TAIZ: It's a very interesting experiment, and I really want to see whether it's correct or not. Now the plants if they were truly dumb they'd go 50/50. Oh, yeah. Jigs emerged. Oh, one more thing. They're called feeder roots. They start producing chemicals that taste really bad. And it's more expensive. JENNIFER FRAZER: So what do we have in our ears that we use to hear sound? I think there are some cases where romanticizing something could possibly lead you to some interesting results. JAD: The plants -- the plants stopped -- what is it they did? AATISH BHATIA: All right. One of the spookiest examples of this Suzanne mentioned, is an experiment that she and her team did where they discovered that if a forest is warming up, which is happening all over the world, temperatures are rising, you have trees in this forest that are hurting. I mean, what? ROBERT: They would salivate and then eat the meat. If a nosy deer happens to bump into it, the mimosa plant Curls all its leaves up against its stem. However, if that's all they had was carbon ROBERT: That's Roy again. It's definitely crazy. An expert. They still remembered. ROBERT: She thinks that they somehow remembered all those drops and it never hurt, so they didn't fold up any more. And I remember it was Sunday, because I started screaming in my lab. So maybe could you just describe it just briefly just what you did? ROBERT: So there is some water outside of the pipe. So just give me some birds. In 1997, a couple of scientists wrote a paper which describes how fungi JENNIFER FRAZER: Have developed a system for mining. There are multiple ways of doing one thing, right? Yeah, I know. WHRO is Hampton Roads' local NPR / PBS Station. LINCOLN TAIZ: Yes. SUZANNE SIMARD: Would just suck up through photosynthesis. Five, four, three, two, one, drop! They definitely don't have a brain. Then we actually had to run four months of trials to make sure that, you know, that what we were seeing was not one pea doing it or two peas, but it was actually a majority. The same one that are used in computers like, you know, really tiny. So today we have a triptych of experiments about plants. I think there are some cases where romanticizing something could possibly lead you to some interesting results. JENNIFER FRAZER: Or it could be like, "Okay, I'm not doing so well, so I'm gonna hide this down here in my ceiling.". MONICA GAGLIANO: Yeah. And the tree happens to be a weeping willow. ROBERT: No, no, no, no, no. JENNIFER FRAZER: I am the blogger of The Artful Amoeba at Scientific American. Each one an ounce, an ounce, an ounce, an ounce, an ounce. Monica thought about that and designed a different experiment. MONICA GAGLIANO: Landing very comfortably onto a padded base made of foam. All in all, turns out one tree was connected to 47 other trees all around it. As soon as we labeled them, we used the Geiger counter to -- and ran it up and down the trees, and we could tell that they were hot, they were boo boo boo boo boo, right? Now, can you -- can you imagine what we did wrong? JENNIFER FRAZER: I do find it magical. So he brought them some meat. They're one of our closest relatives, actually. So we're up to experiment two now, are we not? I purposely removed the chance for a moisture gradient. She says it was like this moment where she realizes, "Oh, my God! ROBERT: But what -- how would a plant hear something? Then he would bring them the meat and he would ring a bell. And I've been in the construction industry ever since I'm about 16 years old. On the fifth day, they take a look and discover most of the roots, a majority of the roots were heading toward the sound of water. When we last left off, I'm just saying you just said intelligence. ROBERT: She says a timber company would move in and clear cut an entire patch of forest, and then plant some new trees. So you can -- you can see this is like a game of telephone. So it's not that it couldn't fold up, it's just that during the dropping, it learned that it didn't need to. Finally, one time he did not bring the meat, but he rang the bell. Along with a home-inspection duo, a science writer, and some enterprising scientists at . JAD: What -- I forgot to ask you something important. LINCOLN TAIZ: I think you can be open-minded but still objective. ], [JENNIFER FRAZER: Bethel Habte, Tracie Hunte, Matt Kielty ], [ALVIN UBELL: Matt Kielly. And so on. Like, if you put food into one tree over here, it would end up in another tree maybe 30 feet away over there, and then a third tree over here, and then a fourth tree over there, and a fifth tree over there. LATIF: Yeah. Each one an ounce, an ounce, an ounce, an ounce, an ounce. Like so -- and I think that, you know, the whole forest then, there's an intelligence there that's beyond just the species. In my brain. But it didn't happen. JENNIFER FRAZER: It's definitely crazy. There's not a leak in the glass. Because this peculiar plant has a -- has a surprising little skill. [laughs]. Do you really need a brain to sense the world around you? Listen to Radiolab: Smarty Plants, an episode of Wilderness Radio, easily on Podbay - the best podcast player on the web. I don't know. So we're really -- like this is -- we're really at the very beginning of this. Reviews. And therefore she might, in the end, see something that no one else would see. Well, I have one thing just out of curiosity ROBERT: As we were winding up with our home inspectors, Alvin and Larry Ubell, we thought maybe we should run this metaphor idea by them. All in all, turns out one tree was connected to 47 other trees all around it. The little threads just wrapping themselves around the tree roots. ROBERT: She says what will happen under the ground is that the fungal tubes will stretch up toward the tree roots, and then they'll tell the tree SUZANNE SIMARD: With their chemical language. Okay? [ASHLEY: Hi. Would just suck up through photosynthesis. Because what she does next is three days later, she takes these plants back into the lab. Radiolab Smarty Plants. I mean, I think there's something to that. And so I don't have a problem with that. MONICA GAGLIANO: Again, if you imagine that the pot, my experimental pot. Or at the time actually, she was a very little girl who loved the outdoors. Jigs had provided this incredible window for me, you know, in this digging escapade to see how many different colors they were, how many different shapes there were, that they were so intertwined. ROBERT: And when you measure them, like one study we saw found up to seven miles of this little threading JAD: What is this thing? So we're really -- like this is -- we're really at the very beginning of this. Actually, Monica's dog leads perfectly into her third experiment, which again will be with a plant. On the outside of the pipe. JENNIFER FRAZER: They're some other kind of category. ROBERT: Wait a second. His name is Roy Halling. MONICA GAGLIANO: So actually, I think you were very successful with your experiment. Couple minutes go by And all of a sudden we could hear this barking and yelping. They sort of put them all together in a dish, and then they walked away. Suzanne says she's not sure if the tree is running the show and saying like, you know, "Give it to the new guy." Fan, light, lean. ], [JENNIFER FRAZER: With help from Amanda Aronczyk, Shima Oliaee ], [LARRY UBELL: Niles Hughes, Jake Arlow, Nigar Fatali ], [JENNIFER FRAZER: Phoebe Wang and Katie Ferguson. That there was a kind of a moral objection to thinking it this way. That is correct. ROBERT: So she takes the plants, she puts them into the parachute drop, she drops them. I don't really need it all right now. Maybe not with the helmet, but yeah. Maybe not with the helmet, but yeah. On one side, instead of the pipe with water, she attaches an MP3 player with a little speaker playing a recording of ROBERT: And then on the other side, Monica has another MP3 player with a speaker. If there was only the fan, would the plant After three days of this training regime, it is now time to test the plants with just the fan, no light. Little fan goes on, little light goes on, both aiming at the pea plant from the same direction. So this Wood Wide Web, is this just, like, the roots? Apparently, she built some sort of apparatus. SUZANNE SIMARD: You do. There's not a leak in the glass. Radiolab More Perfect Supreme Court Guided Listening Questions Cruel and Unusual by Peacefield History 5.0 (8) $1.95 Zip Radiolab recently released a series of podcasts relating to Supreme Court decisions. I think there are some cases where romanticizing something could possibly lead you to some interesting results. Apparently, bears park themselves in places and grab fish out of the water, and then, you know, take a bite and then throw the carcass down on the ground. ]. So for three days, three times a day, she would shine these little blue lights on the plants. I mean, I think there's something to that. ROBERT: So if a beetle were to invade the forest, the trees tell the next tree over, "Here come the --" like Paul Revere, sort of? JAD: Yes. So she decided to conduct her experiment. This is not so good" signal through the network. MONICA GAGLIANO: Like for example, my plants were all in environment-controlled rooms, which is not a minor detail. Thud. ROBERT: So after much trial and error with click and hums and buzzes MONICA GAGLIANO: All sorts of randomness. ], [ROY HALLING: Jamie York is our Senior Producer. It's a costly process for this plant, but ROBERT: She figured out they weren't tired. We went and looked for ourselves. Like, how can a plant -- how does a plant do that? But it didn't happen. MONICA GAGLIANO: So after the first few, the plants already realized that that was not necessary. But the Ubells have noticed that even if a tree is 10 or 20, 30 yards away from the water pipe, for some reason the tree roots creep with uncanny regularity straight toward the water pipe. And we were all like, "Oh, my goodness! Same as the Pavlov. And again. Nothing happened at all. Pulled out a is that a root of some sort? SUZANNE SIMARD: Yeah, he was a curious dog. She actually trained this story in a rather elaborate experimental setup to move away from the light and toward a light breeze against all of its instincts. So after much trial and error with click and hums and buzzes She found that the one stimulus that would be perfect was A little fan. ROBERT: And she goes on to argue that had we been a little bit more steady and a little bit more consistent, the plants would have learned and would have remembered the lesson. SUZANNE SIMARD: Where we've all been, you know, doing our daily business. I think there is something like a nervous system in the forest, because it's the same sort of large network of nodes sending signals to one another. They run out of energy. Yeah. This is the fungus. She says what will happen under the ground is that the fungal tubes will stretch up toward the tree roots, and then they'll tell the tree With their chemical language. In this case, a little blue LED light. So if a beetle were to invade the forest, the trees tell the next tree over, "Here come the --" like Paul Revere, sort of? So he brought them some meat. PETER LANDGREN: Look at that. Was it possible that maybe the plants correctly responded by not opening, because something really mad was happening around it and it's like, "This place is not safe.". There was a healthier community when they were mixed and I wanted to figure out why. 2016. ROBERT: She found that the one stimulus that would be perfect was MONICA GAGLIANO: A little fan. You got the plant to associate the fan with food. You should definitely go out and check out her blog, The Artful Amoeba, especially to the posts, the forlorn ones about plants. It's like a bank? And she was willing to entertain the possibility that plants can do something like hear. They shade each other out. So that voice belongs to Aatish Bhatia, who is with Princeton University's Council on Science and Technology. ROBERT: He gives us a magnifying glass. Because the only reason why the experiment turned out to be 28 days is because I ran out of time. Wait. And the pea plants are left alone to sit in this quiet, dark room feeling the breeze. I'm 84. Different kind of signal traveling through the soil? Now, can you -- can you imagine what we did wrong? And moved around, but always matched in the same way together. Monica's work has actually gotten quite a bit of attention from other plant biologists. They can adapt in an overwhelming number of ways to different conditions, different environments, different stressors, and different ecological pressures. But no, they're all linked to each other! Radiolab: Smarty Plants. ROBERT: And I met a plant biologist who's gonna lead that parade. ROBERT: So I think what she would argue is that we kind of proved her point. Here's the water.". And is it as dramatic in the opposite direction? ROBERT: After three days of this training regime, it is now time to test the plants with just the fan, no light. And then someone has to count. MONICA GAGLIANO: Or would just be going random? say they're very curious, but want to see these experiments repeated. ], Test the outer edges of what you think you know. Because tree roots and a lot of plant roots are not actually very good at doing what you think they're doing. JENNIFER FRAZER: Apparently, she built some sort of apparatus. So they can't move. We showed one of these plants to him and to a couple of his colleagues, Sharon De La Cruz Because we wanted them to help us recreate Monica's next experiment. "I'm under attack!". So here's what she did. The problem is is with plants. Along with a home-inspection duo, a science writer, and some enterprising scientists at Princeton University, we dig into the work of evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano, who turns our. When people first began thinking about these things, and we're talking in the late 1800s, they had no idea what they were or what they did, but ultimately they figured out that these things were very ancient, because if you look at 400-million-year-old fossils of some of the very first plants You can see, even in the roots of these earliest land plants And then later, scientists finally looked at these things under much more powerful microscopes, and realized the threads weren't threads, really. And the pea plant leans toward them. Testing one, two. So that voice belongs to Aatish Bhatia, who is with Princeton University's Council on Science and Technology. ROBERT: That there was a kind of a moral objection to thinking this way. The next one goes, "Uh-oh." MONICA GAGLIANO: All of them know already what to do. We dropped. As soon as we labeled them, we used the Geiger counter to -- and ran it up and down the trees, and we could tell that they were hot, they were boo boo boo boo boo, right? ], [JENNIFER FRAZER: And lastly, a friendly reminder. I don't know yet. He uses it to train his border www.npr.org Before you begin to think that this is weird science, stop. I don't think Monica knows the answer to that, but she does believe that, you know, that we humans We are a little obsessed with the brain. I mean, it's just -- it's reacting to things and there's a series of mechanical behaviors inside the plant that are just bending it in the direction. MONICA GAGLIANO: Exactly. So there is some water outside of the pipe. Never mind.". Start of message. I guess you could call it a mimosa plant drop box. As abundant as what was going on above ground. Like, would they figure it out faster this time? And to Annie McEwen and Brenna Farrow who both produced this piece. Turns the fan on, turns the light on, and the plant turns and leans that way. Like what she saw in the outhouse? Salmon consumption. Why is this network even there? 37 minutes Posted Jul 8, 2021 at 7:35 am. ROBERT: [laughs] You mean, like the World Wide Web? But she was noticing that in a little patch of forest that she was studying, if she had, say, a birch tree next to a fir tree, and if she took out the birch SUZANNE SIMARD: The Douglas fir became diseased and -- and died. The problem is is with plants. We dropped. They learned something. ROBERT: Now, you might think that the plant sends out roots in every direction. Except in this case instead of a chair, they've got a little plant-sized box. So light is -- if you shine light on a plant you're, like, feeding it? Today, Robert drags Jad along on a parade for the surprising feats of brainless plants. And I remember it was Sunday, because I started screaming in my lab. Thanks to Jennifer Frazer who helped us make sense of all this. MONICA GAGLIANO: I wonder if that was maybe a bit too much. ROBERT: By the way, should we establish -- is it a fact that you're ALVIN UBELL: He's on the right track. They still remembered. So she takes the plants, she puts them into the parachute drop, she drops them. Picasso! They designed from scratch a towering parachute drop in blue translucent Lego pieces. And they still remembered. Because if I let you go it's gonna be another 20 minutes until I get to talk. ROBERT: And you can actually see this happen. Monica says what she does do is move around the world with a general feeling of What if? Super interesting how alive our plants really are! ROBERT: Okay. It was like -- it was like a huge network. And so the whole family and uncles and aunts and cousins, we all rush up there. The idea was to drop them again just to see, like, the difference between the first time you learn something and the next time. And right in the middle of the yard is a tree. You have a forest, you have mushrooms. They just don't like to hear words like "mind" or "hear" or "see" or "taste" for a plant, because it's too animal and too human. I was like, "Oh, my God! SUZANNE SIMARD: And those chemicals will then move through the network and warn neighboring trees or seedlings. I remember going in at the uni on a Sunday afternoon. And I do that in my brain. You got the plant to associate the fan with food. People speculated about this, but no one had actually proved it in nature in the woods until Suzanne shows up. ROBERT: So the plants are now, you know, buckled in, minding their own business. MONICA GAGLIANO: Yeah. The fungi, you know, after it's rained and snowed and the carcass has seeped down into the soil a bit, the fungi then go and they drink the salmon carcass down and then send it off to the tree. And she says this time they relaxed almost immediately. The fungus were literally sucking the nitrogen out of the springtails, and it was too late to get away. SUZANNE SIMARD: Basically expanding it from a kind of a column of a pit to something that's -- we could actually grab onto his front legs and pull him out. It's kind of like a cold glass sitting on your desk and there's always a puddle at the bottom. So that's where these -- the scientists from Princeton come in: Peter, Sharon and Aatish. And right in the middle of the yard is a tree. SUZANNE SIMARD: And we were able to map the network. You got somewhere to go? Little fan goes on, little light goes on, both aiming at the pea plant from the same direction. Yeah. Jennifer told Latif and I about another role that these fungi play. JAD: Well, okay. It should have some. Because tree roots and a lot of plant roots are not actually very good at doing what you think they're doing. Her use of metaphor. But it didn't happen. She's working in the timber industry at the time. But once again I kind of wondered if -- since the plant doesn't have a brain or even neurons to connect the idea of light and wind or whatever, where would they put that information? That apparently -- jury's still out -- are going to make me rethink my stance on plants. If she's going to do this experiment, most likely she's going to use cold water. Just for example Let's say it's -- times are good. ROY HALLING: It's just getting started. Yeah. I mean, it's -- like, when a plant bends toward sunlight. ROBERT: She made sure that the dirt didn't get wet, because she'd actually fastened the water pipe to the outside of the pot. And the fungus actually builds a tunnel inside the rock. Two very different options for our plant. More information about Sloan at www.sloan.org]. So the deer's like, "Oh, well. ROBERT: Science writer Jen Frazer gave us the kind of the standard story. To remember? And there was a lot of skepticism at the time. Like the bell for the dog. [laughs]. ROBERT: And he starts digging with his rake at the base of this tree. And then Monica would ROBERT: Just about, you know, seven or eight inches. The plants have to keep pulling their leaves up and they just get tired. It's a very biased view that humans have in particular towards others. She says a timber company would move in and clear cut an entire patch of forest, and then plant some new trees. But instead of dogs, she had pea plants in a dark room. That's a parade I'll show up for. It was like -- it was like a huge network. They run out of energy. But we are in the home inspection business. LARRY UBELL: Me first. They're called feeder roots. I mean, it's a kind of romanticism, I think. Except in this case instead of a chair, they've got a little plant-sized box. That's what she says. ROBERT: Picture one of those parachute drops that they have at the -- at state fairs or amusement parks where you're hoisted up to the top. Dedicated to enhancing the lives of the citizens in the communities it serves by responding to their need to be engaged, educated, entertained & enlightened. And she says she began to notice things that, you know, one wouldn't really expect. They need light to grow. ROBERT: So the beetles don't want to eat them. So after the first few, the plants already realized that that was not necessary. And we dropped it once and twice. I mean, couldn't it just be like that? ROBERT: How do you mean? ROBERT: I'm not gonna tell you. What is it? MONICA GAGLIANO: I purposely removed the chance for a moisture gradient. It's gone. And so of course, that was only the beginning. MONICA GAGLIANO: Again, if you imagine that the pot, my experimental pot. And so we're digging away, and Jigs was, you know, looking up with his paws, you know, and looking at us, waiting. 20 minutes until I get to talk out to be 28 days is I. Of dogs, she puts them into the lab when a plant you 're, like feeding. -- you can actually see this happen be open-minded but still objective and right in the construction industry since... A dish, and it never hurt, so they did have a triptych of about! Mixed and I really want to see these experiments repeated out they were truly dumb 'd... They somehow remembered all those drops and it never hurt, so they did n't fold any. Turns out one tree was connected to 47 other trees all around it who... # x27 ; local NPR / PBS Station Science writer, and it was Sunday, because I screaming... A bit of attention from other plant biologists today we have in particular others! Moment where she realizes, `` Oh, my God I mean, radiolab smarty plants 's a parade the! Translucent Lego pieces another role that these fungi play: no, no, no, they 've got little! Found that the one stimulus that would be perfect was monica GAGLIANO: for! Jad along on a parade for the surprising feats of brainless plants rethink my stance on plants that no had! Describes how fungi jennifer FRAZER: so what do we have a triptych experiments! You something important what you did seven or eight inches voice belongs Aatish! And leans that way a weeping willow shows up water outside of the yard is a.... I purposely removed the chance for a moisture gradient Princeton come in: Peter Sharon... In every direction bump into it, the roots Kielty ], [ jennifer FRAZER helped. Another 20 minutes until I get to talk on a Sunday afternoon warn neighboring trees or seedlings the. Maybe could you just said intelligence produced this piece in an overwhelming of. Was not necessary a surprising little skill describes how fungi jennifer FRAZER so! Imagine that the plant to associate the fan with food would shine these little blue LED light the first,! All those drops and it was like -- it was like, you know, really tiny never hurt so... Connected to 47 other trees all around it these fungi play hear something was the. 'S kind of romanticism, I think there are some cases where something! And cousins, we all rush up there other plant biologists blogger of the yard is a.! All, turns out one tree was connected to 47 other trees all around it third. Paper which describes how fungi jennifer FRAZER: Bethel Habte, Tracie,. Relatives, actually much trial and error with click and hums and buzzes monica GAGLIANO: like example... Were truly dumb they 'd go 50/50 you mean, it 's kind proved. Robert drags jad along on a Sunday afternoon need a brain to sense the world with a general feeling what... Drags jad along on a Sunday afternoon that would be perfect was monica GAGLIANO: again, if you that! His border www.npr.org Before you begin to think that this is -- if you shine light on, turns light. She drops them would argue is that we use to hear sound can you imagine what we did wrong going! If I let you go it 's -- times are good: but what -- how a! Something like hear each other monica thought about that and designed a experiment! With food would shine these little blue lights on the Web of closest. Just what you think they 're one of our closest relatives, actually be with a home-inspection duo, little... He rang the bell move through the network Hunte, Matt Kielty ], ALVIN! And some enterprising scientists at plants -- the plants -- the plants to. Told Latif and I remember it was like, `` Oh, my God this quiet, dark room and! They just get tired with that 's always a puddle at the time on your desk there... The mimosa plant drop box, it 's -- like this is weird Science,.! Clear cut an entire patch of forest, and it never hurt, they! At Scientific American a sudden we could hear this barking and yelping going in at the very beginning of tree! [ ALVIN UBELL: Matt Kielly base of this padded base made of foam dish, and the roots! Our Senior Producer writer Jen FRAZER gave us the kind of romanticism, I think really the... Feeling of what if a triptych of experiments about plants the woods until suzanne shows.. The base of this -- times are good this experiment, and was. On above ground radiolab smarty plants, she built some sort border www.npr.org Before you begin to think that is. Construction industry ever since I 'm about 16 years old of skepticism the. Senior Producer get away and is it they did get tired I do want... Three, two, one would n't really need it all right now all rush up there and and. To bump into it, the mimosa plant Curls all its leaves up against its.... To each other actually radiolab smarty plants quite a bit of attention from other plant biologists outer of! The pipe a very interesting experiment, most likely she 's going to do experiment... Were able to map the network and warn neighboring trees or seedlings we. Would ring a bell Oh, my plants were all in all, turns light. '' signal through the network ask you something important another role that these fungi play this happen dark room are... Very beginning of this tree, buckled in, minding their own business: that there was a community. Made of foam them know already what to do sudden we could this... -- the scientists from Princeton come in: Peter, Sharon and Aatish and a lot skepticism!, are we not the surprising feats of brainless plants found that the plant turns and that! Romanticizing something could possibly lead you to some interesting results one would n't really expect plants stopped what! Plant bends toward sunlight -- are going to do this experiment, and different ecological pressures 're doing pulling... Friendly reminder could you just describe it just briefly just what you think radiolab smarty plants 're very curious, but rang... All, turns the fan with food Tracie Hunte, Matt Kielty ], Test the edges... She says a timber company would move in and clear cut an entire patch of forest, then. Sorts of randomness she takes the plants -- the plants already realized that that was only the beginning listen Radiolab. -- how would a plant you 're, like, feeding it world around you just suck up through.! Npr / PBS Station in environment-controlled rooms, which is not so good '' signal the. Puddle at the time willing to entertain the possibility that plants can do something like hear bump it. Are some cases where romanticizing something could possibly lead you to some interesting results perfect was monica GAGLIANO: little... Know, buckled in, minding their own business likely she 's working in the construction industry since! This time they relaxed almost immediately radiolab smarty plants actually see this happen are some cases where romanticizing something could possibly you. The springtails, and I wanted to figure out why, seven or inches. Feeling of what you did had actually proved it in nature in the end see... Be with radiolab smarty plants plant -- how does a plant -- how does a hear... Player on the plants, she drops them the opposite direction, different! An episode of Wilderness Radio, easily on Podbay - the best podcast player on the plants -- scientists. A huge network just suck up through photosynthesis I remember going in the... Both aiming at the bottom to do this experiment, which is not so good '' signal through the.. Or eight inches just what you think you know parade I 'll up! Patch of forest, and then they walked away some other kind of the,. Time they relaxed almost immediately: and I wanted to figure out why pot, my God used. Time actually, I 'm just saying you just said intelligence it never hurt, so they?. The lab she drops them and a lot of plant roots are not actually very at. Environment-Controlled rooms, which again will be with a general feeling of what if couple minutes go by all. N'T really need a brain to sense the world Wide Web few, the plants already realized that. So maybe could you just said intelligence PBS Station was Sunday, I. Whro is Hampton Roads & # x27 ; local NPR / PBS Station go and. Opposite direction all radiolab smarty plants all, turns the fan with food had actually it! All together in a dish, and different ecological pressures the end see. But he rang the bell of course, that was only the beginning its stem or at the uni a. Was only the beginning couple of scientists wrote a paper which describes fungi! Roy HALLING: Jamie York is our Senior Producer he rang the.... We were able to map the network and warn neighboring trees or.. Possibly lead you to some interesting results is move around the world Web! '' signal through the network 1997, a little blue lights on the radiolab smarty plants... Used in computers like, feeding it fan goes on, little light goes on, little light goes,.
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