Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information on it. - Samuel Johnson
A peek into the world of plants. Here are some trivia, and fun facts about plants, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Plant Care Today’ ‘Colours of Nature’, ‘Your Curious Mind’, ‘David Attenborough’, ‘Wild Facts’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.
The roots and leaves of a plant maintain a constant chemical conversation that most gardeners never consider. Root hairs release hormones that tell leaves exactly how much water is available and which nutrients are flowing upward. This communication happens every moment, creating a feedback loop that keeps the plant balanced.
When you disturb roots during repotting, you break thousands of these microscopic messengers. The leaves suddenly stop receiving their regular updates about soil conditions. Without this information, they begin to shut down systems and drop leaves as a precautionary measure. The plant looks like it is dying, but it is actually waiting.
New root hairs take weeks to regrow and reestablish the communication network. During this silent period, the plant conserves energy and hopes its roots will start talking again. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’
A giant Saguaro cactus can hold over 3,000 liters of water, which is a huge amount for a plant. That makes it one of the desert’s best natural water tanks. When rain falls, the cactus soaks up water fast and tucks it away inside its thick stem. You can picture it like a living barrel that swells when it drinks.
The cactus has special features that help it store so much water. Its skin has vertical pleats that let it expand and hold more when it rains. Its roots spread out wide but stay near the surface to catch brief rains quickly. Spines and a waxy outer layer help keep the water from evaporating in the hot sun.
Because it can keep water for long stretches, the Saguaro is very important in the desert. Birds, bats, and other animals use it for food and shelter. People and wildlife can also rely on the moisture it stores during dry times.
Saguaros grow slowly and live a long time, so protecting them helps the whole desert survive. – A Facebook post by ‘Colours of Nature’
Beneath the forest floor lies an invisible network of roots and fungi. It’s called the mycorrhizal network (sometimes referred to as the Wood Wide Web.) Through this living system, large, old “mother trees” share nutrients, water, and even warning signals with younger, weaker trees.
These giants don’t just grow for themselves. They nurture, protect, and connect the entire forest. When a sapling is struggling, a mother tree can send it extra nutrients.
Researchers have even found decades-old tree stumps without any leaves or means of photosynthesis being kept alive by the forest around them.
Nature is a race for survival, but it’s also built on cooperation, connection, and symbiosis. Nothing in nature can survive on its own! – A Facebook post by ‘Your Curious Mind’
The Dracula simia, commonly known as the monkey orchid, is a remarkable plant native to the cloud forests of Ecuador and Peru. It is famous for its unusual flowers that closely resemble the face of a monkey.
These orchids typically grow at elevations between 1,000 and 2,000 meters, thriving in cool, moist environments. As epiphytes, they grow on trees without harming them, drawing moisture and nutrients directly from the surrounding air.
Their blooms are known to release a scent similar to ripe oranges, which helps attract pollinators. Due to their specific environmental needs—high humidity, stable temperatures, and filtered light—they are challenging to cultivate outside their natural habitat.
With their striking appearance and distinctive fragrance, monkey orchids are a fascinating example of nature’s diversity and are highly prized by plant enthusiasts and collectors. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough
It is one of the rarest mushrooms in the entire world. And when it finally blooms, it doesn't just open... it literally hisses at you and blows a massive cloud of smoke!
Welcome to the incredibly weird world of Chorioactis geaster, famously known as The Devil’s Cigar.
This bizarre fungus is a geographical mystery. It is only found in two highly specific, completely disconnected places on Earth: A few counties in Texas, and the mountains of Japan.
For most of its life, it looks incredibly boring. It sits on decaying cedar stumps as a dark brown, leathery capsule that looks exactly like a burnt cigar.
The Explosion: When the humidity and temperature hit the perfect sweet spot, the fungus decides to reproduce. It doesn't open slowly. The pressure builds until the capsule violently tears open into the shape of a golden, 4-pointed star!
As the tough tissue rips, it releases a distinct, terrifying, highly audible HISSING sound. Simultaneously, the violent pop shoots a thick, brown cloud of fungal spores deep into the air, making it look exactly like a smoking cigar left by a demon in the woods.
Nature has a flair for the dramatic. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Facts’
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