In this episode we check out some of the rare species of fruit being sold in this market in Puyo, Ecuador. We explore little known families and some lesser known genera of plants, as well as palm beetles and caffeine replacements like Ilex guayusa.
2025-02-12 04:16:55 +0000 UTC
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I feel like I've had people telling me to read this for the last decade and a half but only recently that I finally crack it open. Here is a copy of it. "One River" about the ethnobotanist Richard Evans Schultes. It's not just about the Amazon, there's an entire chapter about peyote. It's a pretty fascinating read. File is in ePub format which is not that bad for reading on a phone or tablet
2025-02-11 18:46:13 +0000 UTC
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A conversation with Alan Rockefeller about Amazon Fungi, biodiversity, AI, using inaturalist, and a host of other topics.
2025-02-10 20:43:17 +0000 UTC
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2025-02-09 22:28:10 +0000 UTC
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2025-02-09 04:51:32 +0000 UTC
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2025-02-07 14:22:18 +0000 UTC
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Five minutes of Martin Grantham 's Rambling..
Martin is a good friend of mine whom I've known for fifteen years. He's a great botanist, knows plant physiology and Taxonomy and systematics like the back of his hand, and can grow anything. I would frequently drop by his house just to lurk and see what he's got growing, or check on the Psilocybe canescens that loved eating the Banksia "cones" that had dropped out of the tree of Banksia ilicifolia that he had. Occasionally we'd talk about...
2025-02-04 13:54:08 +0000 UTC
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Arachnitis has been on my list of bizarre and unusual plants to see for a few years. It is a plant that parasitizes fungi - a mycoheterotroph - specifically mycorrhizal fungi in the endomycorrhizal fungal genus Glomus (Glomeromycota/Glomeromycetes).
Even more bizarre, the closest relatives of Arachnitis live in Australia, in the genus Corsia.
In this episode we check out Arachnitis, then climb 1800' feet to see some rosulate violets and other weirdos growing in the Alpine zone at ...
2025-02-03 06:26:42 +0000 UTC
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In the foothills of the Andes in Chile's Nuble region we check out some of the keystone plants that compose the Sclerophyll Forest here, like
Gevuina avellana (Proteaceae),
Nothofagus alpina,
Nothofagus dombeyi,
Lapageria rosea (Philesiaceae)
Proustia pyrifolia (Asteraceae)
Drimys winteri (Winteraceae)
Hydrangea serratifolia
Peumus boldus (Monimiaceae)
Legrandia concinna (Myrtaceae)
Lomatia dentata (Proteaceae)
Luma apiculata (Myrtaceae)
and the notori...
2025-01-31 05:59:57 +0000 UTC
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In this episode we spend some time with some of the Viejitos of the Conguillo area at 4800' elevation on top of a cinder cone, with a substrate composed of black pumice. Escallonia alpina, Nothofagus pumilio, Chusquea culeou & Alstroemeria aurea compose the understory.
2025-01-30 01:12:36 +0000 UTC
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Miguel Moya is a naturalist and designer who produces field guides and posters for native plants in Chile. In this episode we talk about the sclerophyll forest, the temperate rainforests of Chile Island, indigenous communities in the Southern region, Araucaria forests, Gomortega kuele, Ancient Gondwanan disjunctions, Citronella mucronata, rare plants of the Santiago area and more.
2025-01-29 18:19:50 +0000 UTC
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Araucaria araucana is the dominant species on the forested slopes of Conguillo National Park in Southern Chile, and in this video we take an inventory of some of the species we encounter here, as well as the pumice substrate they grow on.
Other species featured here are
Prumnopitys andina
Archidasyphyllum diacanthoides
Austrocedrus chilensis
Nothofagus dombeyi
Araucaria araucana
Alstroemeria aurea
Chusquea culeou
Hydrangea serratifolia
Baccharis l...
2025-01-28 03:53:48 +0000 UTC
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2025-01-28 00:46:03 +0000 UTC
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I've been trying to upload this for 3 days but the shitty patreon app won't let me attach photos to posts, so I just did it through Google photos. There's 250 photos of plants in here, somewhere duplicates if you're curious what something might be and it hasn't been captioned yet please comment on it.
2025-01-27 21:30:13 +0000 UTC
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In this episode we talk about Alerce Forests, Ocelot Tarantulas that live in bogs in Temperate Rainforests, Why the Rosulate Form Makes sense in Alpine Habitats, and the extremely weird mycoheterotroph, Arachnitis uniflora.
2025-01-25 20:45:35 +0000 UTC
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2025-01-24 22:15:44 +0000 UTC
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Pilgerodendron uviferum and the Chilean Ocelot Tarantula appear in this episode, as well as the rare Podocarp Lepidothamnus fonkii (surely grew on Antarctica 50 million years ago). Drosera uniflora and Astelia pumila make an appearance, as well. The fern Lomariocycas magellanica (a Blechnum that looks like a cycad) is abundant in this habitat, too.
2025-01-22 04:43:49 +0000 UTC
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Illegal Trespassing and a Botanical Inventory of the Mapocho River in downtown Santiago, Chile during the summer season in late January reveals a host of exotic invasives as well as a few native plants, like Lithraea caustica, Beilschmiedia miersii, Cryptocarya alba, and Quillaja saponaria.
Despite the color, the river is remarkably clean and devoid of sewage, mostly containing runoff from the high Andes to the East.
2025-01-22 04:39:39 +0000 UTC
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Nico Lavandero is a Chilean Botanist who has described 8 new species of plants in Chile and is in the proc of describing many more. In this podcast we talk about a diversity of subjects, from Chile's 1974 Forest Law that incentivized the destruction of native forest for pine plantations, why plants take on dwarfed rosulate growth forms at high altitude in the Andes, Alerce forests, a growing awareness of native plants in Chilean culture, the marvelous abundan of agua con gas, and much more.<...
2025-01-21 17:18:23 +0000 UTC
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2025-01-21 05:29:32 +0000 UTC
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Some photos from yesterday, at 38° S, 4800' (1200 m) on a cinder cone. Araucaria here estimated at around 1,000 years old. Nothofagus pumilio, dombeyi and antarctica were present here, too. Sadly we did not find Arachnitis, the bizarre mycoheterotroph. The genus Escallonia is big down here though, a sister order to Asterales. Racomitrium moss dominated the more exposed areas, growing on barren black pumice.
2025-01-16 12:22:40 +0000 UTC
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Pilgerodendron uviferum is another rare and threatened Gondwanan conifer, found in much wetter areas than Fitzroya. It's basically a bog plant. We found it at the Northern end of its range here near Osorno, along with Azorella diversifolia (Apiaceae) and a forest of Nothofagus pumilio.
Pilgerodendron is dioecious, like Fitzroya, and is most closely related to other members of Cupressaceae that today grow in Tasmania and New Zealand. There are surely fossils of it buried beneath t...
2025-01-15 01:27:22 +0000 UTC
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A few photos from today East of Curico, Chile, in a climate that feels remarkably similar to California.
2025-01-10 02:00:40 +0000 UTC
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We're headed to Chile to film, from Santiago South to the Alerce Forests of Puerto Montt. If anybody has any requests, leave them here. And thank you to everybody for the support, I'm grate as hell for it
Joey
2025-01-08 02:45:49 +0000 UTC
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Thelypodiopsis shinnersii (syn. Mostacillastrum vaseyi) is a rare annual mustard that's seemingly much more rare than previously thought, most likely due to the same old culprits of habitat destruction and invasive grasses.
It was put on my radar by a friend who spotted it growing in Harlingen, Texas and couldn't figure out what it was. I don't know of many native Brassicas in the region either, and the ones I do know certainly were not this. I looked on SEINET and found only a few her...
2025-01-06 03:49:24 +0000 UTC
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Austin Miller runs Birdsong Landscapes, a native plant landscaping company and Natural History page based out of Southwest Ohio. In this episode we talk about continents as ecosystems, the natural history of Ohio, the Hopewell Culture and the Eastern Agirculture Complex, injecting native plant awareness into popular culture, lawn-killing, freshwater mussel diversity in Eastern North American rivers, vigilante-killing Bradford pears, hotricultural atrocities, feral pigs, the biosphere as a "li...
2025-01-03 20:22:18 +0000 UTC
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In this episode we talk with Jared Westbrook, a geneticist with the American Chestnut foundation, about the issues with the transgenic American chestnuts that have been produced in the last decade or two, as well as what might be The best way to move forward with the process of creating a blight resistant American chestnut tree and reintroducing it to Eastern American forests.
For more info on the work of this foundation or to become a member, please visit
2025-01-02 17:40:39 +0000 UTC
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In this episode we sit down with Kyle Elmore of the youtube channel @popmilk for a two hour talk about herping (lurking for reptiles and amphibians), creating habitat, passionately obsessing over milksnakes, why Indigo Snakes are so chill, self-education, embracing the living world as a side-hobby, coping with habitat loss, naming milk snakes,, the glory of tin, getting bit by copperheads, being attacked by africanized bees, teaching organic chemistry, and more.
Check out Kyle's ...
2024-12-31 19:34:06 +0000 UTC
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In this episode we check out Indigo Snakes, Milksnakes, and more.
2024-12-31 11:44:44 +0000 UTC
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Ad-Free Episode of the Ruined Christmas Episode of the Podcast
2024-12-30 20:06:37 +0000 UTC
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