Episode 129: The blurry line between animals and plants
Publisher |
Katherine Shaw
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Natural Sciences
Science
Publication Date |
Jul 22, 2019
Episode Duration |
00:22:11
This week we're looking at some really strange animals...or are they plants? Or both? We'll start with the sea anemone, then learn about a sea slug that photosynthesizes like a plant (sort of), then learn a little about whether algae is a plant or an animal...and then we're off and running through the wild world of carnivorous plants--including some carnivorous plants of mystery! Thanks to Joshua Hobbs of A Degree in Nonsense for the suggestion, and to Simon for the article link I've already managed to lose! A sea anemone and some actual anemones. Usually pretty easy to tell apart: The sea onion looks so much like an onion I can't even stand it. This is an ANIMAL, y'all! Venus flytrap sea anemone and actual Venus flytrap. It's usually pretty easy to tell these two apart too.   The eastern emerald elysia, a sea slug that looks and acts like a leaf: Giant kelp. Not a plant. Actually gigantic algae. Algae is neither a plant nor an animal: The corpse flower (left) and the corpse lily (right). Both smell like UGH and both are extremely BIG: The pitcher plant can grow very big: Maybe don't go near trees with a lot of skulls around them: Puya chilensis (the clumps in the foreground are its leaves; the spikes in the background are its flower spikes): Show transcript: Welcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I’m your host, Kate Shaw. This week we’re going to explore the sometimes blurry line between animals and plants. Joshua Hobbs of a great new podcast A Degree in Nonsense suggested a type of carrion flower that smells like rotting flesh to attract insects, and friend of the pod Simon sent me an article about carnivorous plants. Our very first Patreon bonus episode was actually about carnivorous plants, so I’ve expanded on that episode and added lots of interesting new content. Buckle up, folks, because we’re going to cover a whole lot of ground today! Oh, and Joshua also says, quote, “I never had a pet growing up, but recently gained an interest in animals. Now after getting into your podcast and animal YouTube channels, I've got my first pet, a little corn snake named Arnold!” So welcome to podcasting, Joshua and Arnold! Let’s start by looking at an animal that resembles a plant. The sea anemone looks so much like a plant that it was named after an actual flower, the anemone, but the sea anemone is related to jellyfish. Most sea anemones attach to a rock or other hard surface most of their lives and don’t move much, although they can creep along very slowly—so slowly that snails are racecar drivers in comparison. Many species have a body shaped like a plant stem and colorful tentacles that resemble flower petals. But those tentacles aren’t just to look pretty. The sea anemone uses them to catch prey. The tentacles are lined with stinging cells that contain venom, just like many jellyfish have. The venom contains neurotoxins that paralyzes a fish or other small animal so that the sea anemone can eat it. So how does something that looks like a plant eat a fish? The sea anemone has an interesting body plan. What looks like the stem of a plant is called the column, and in some species it’s thin and delicate while in other species it’s thick like a tree trunk. It sticks to its rock or whatever with an adhesive foot called a basal disc, and on the other end of the column is what’s called the oral disc. Oral means mouth. The actual mouth is in the middle of the oral disc, surrounded by tentacles. The mouth is usually shaped like a slit, which if you think about it is sort of how people’s mouths are too. The digestive system is inside the column. But there is no other opening into the body. The mouth is it. So like jellyfish, the mouth takes in food but it also expels waste, so, you know, not precisely a mouth like ours. When the sea anemone wants to eat, it uses its tentacles to push the food into its mouth. You know the movie Finding Nemo?
This week we're looking at some really strange animals...or are they plants? Or both? We'll start with the sea anemone, then learn about a sea slug that photosynthesizes like a plant (sort of), then learn a little about whether algae is a plant or an animal...and then we're off and running through the wild world of carnivorous plants--including some carnivorous plants of mystery! Thanks to Joshua Hobbs of A Degree in Nonsense for the suggestion, and to Simon for the article link I've already managed to lose! A sea anemone and some actual anemones. Usually pretty easy to tell apart: The sea onion looks so much like an onion I can't even stand it. This is an ANIMAL, y'all! Venus flytrap sea anemone and actual Venus flytrap. It's usually pretty easy to tell these two apart too.   The eastern emerald elysia, a sea slug that looks and acts like a leaf: Giant kelp. Not a plant. Actually gigantic algae. Algae is neither a plant nor an animal: The corpse flower (left) and the corpse lily (right). Both smell like UGH and both are extremely BIG: The pitcher plant can grow very big: Maybe don't go near trees with a lot of skulls around them: Puya chilensis (the clumps in the foreground are its leaves; the spikes in the background are its flower spikes): Show transcript: Welcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I’m your host, Kate Shaw. This week we’re going to explore the sometimes blurry line between animals and plants. Joshua Hobbs of a great new podcast A Degree in Nonsense suggested a type of carrion flower that smells like rotting flesh to attract insects, and friend of the pod Simon sent me an article about carnivorous plants. Our very first Patreon bonus episode was actually about carnivorous plants, so I’ve expanded on that episode and added lots of interesting new content. Buckle up, folks, because we’re going to cover a whole lot of ground today! Oh, and Joshua also says, quote, “I never had a pet growing up, but recently gained an interest in animals. Now after getting into your podcast and animal YouTube channels, I've got my first pet, a little corn snake named Arnold!” So welcome to podcasting, Joshua and Arnold! Let’s start by looking at an animal that resembles a plant. The sea anemone looks so much like a plant that it was named after an actual flower, the anemone, but the sea anemone is related to jellyfish. Most sea anemones attach to a rock or other hard surface most of their lives and don’t move much, although they can creep along very slowly—so slowly that snails are racecar drivers in comparison. Many species have a body shaped like a plant stem and colorful tentacles that resemble flower petals. But those tentacles aren’t just to look pretty. The sea anemone uses them to catch prey. The tentacles are lined with stinging cells that contain venom, just like many jellyfish have. The venom contains neurotoxins that paralyzes a fish or other small animal so that the sea anemone can eat it. So how does something that looks like a plant eat a fish? The sea anemone has an interesting body plan. What looks like the stem of a plant is called the column, and in some species it’s thin and delicate while in other species it’s thick like a tree trunk. It sticks to its rock or whatever with an adhesive foot called a basal disc, and on the other end of the column is what’s called the oral disc. Oral means mouth. The actual mouth is in the middle of the oral disc, surrounded by tentacles. The mouth is usually shaped like a slit, which if you think about it is sort of how people’s mouths are too.

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