トランスクリプトEnglish

The 2,400-Year-Old "Infinite Food" System (That Was Banned)

19m 15s2,581 単語421 segmentsEnglish

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In 475 BC, a Chinese fish farmer named

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Fan Lee wrote something that would

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change how civilizations fed themselves

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for the next 2,000 years. His treatis,

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the Yang Yu Jing, described a method so

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efficient that a single installation

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could produce more protein per square

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foot than cattle ranching, more

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nutrition per acre than any industrial

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farm. And once you built it, it would

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feed your family for decades without

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buying feed, without permits, without

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depending on anyone.

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Fanley's methods survived the wars,

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dynasties, and empires because the

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knowledge was too valuable to [music]

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lose. But in America, most people have

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never heard of backyard pond

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aquaculture.

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Even though it has fed more humans

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throughout history than any other

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protein system on Earth, that silence is

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not accidental. Today, we are building

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family's regenerative ecosystem in your

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backyard. By the time you finish, you

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will have a self-replicating protein

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factory that feeds itself, manages

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itself, and produces more food than your

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family can consume. And in 10 years,

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when your neighbors are worried about

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food prices and supply chains, you will

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walk out to your pond and feel a calm

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that no amount of money can buy. But

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first, you need to understand what

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happened to this knowledge.

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Around 3,500 BC, during the Neolithic

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period along China's Yellow River,

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farmers noticed something after seasonal

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floods receded. Fish, specifically carp,

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were trapped in low-lying areas. If they

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dug those depressions a little deeper

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and reinforced the edges with clay, the

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fish stayed. They thrived. They

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reproduced, and they could be harvested

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whenever food was needed. This was not

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farming yet. This was observation,

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partnering with what the land already

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wanted to do.

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by the Shang dynasty around 1,600 BC.

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Oracle bone inscriptions reference

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fishing in the garden, which

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archaeologists now recognize as managed

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fish ponds integrated into agricultural

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plots. The wealthy kept ornamental ponds

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with golden koi. Peasants maintained

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working ponds with common carp. Both

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systems fed people, but only one

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required permission from authorities.

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Then during the Tang dynasty in the 7th

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century AD, something unexpected

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happened that revolutionized aquaculture

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forever.

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The emperor's family name was Lee, the

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same name as the common carp, Liu.

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Out of respect, or perhaps superstition,

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the emperor banned the farming of common

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carp across the entire empire.

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Farmers faced a crisis. Carp had been

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their primary protein source for over a

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thousand years. But instead of starving,

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they innovated. They began raising

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multiple species in the same pond. Mud

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carp that fed on bottom sediments.

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Silver carp that filtered algae in the

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middle water column. Grass carp that

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consumed plants at the surface. Big head

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carp that ate zup plankton. Each species

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occupied a different ecological niche.

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There was no competition, no waste, just

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a stacked, self-regulating ecosystem

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that was more productive than anything

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that had come before.

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This accidental policy created the

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world's first true polyulture system. By

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the time European travelers were

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documenting Chinese innovations in the

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1200s, village fish ponds had become so

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common that chronicers described them as

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a a defining feature of the landscape.

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Some of these ponds were centuries old,

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still producing thousands of pounds of

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protein every year, and nobody was

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adding feed. The ponds fed themselves.

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That closed loop ecosystem, the one

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family documented in his treaties and

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the Tang dynasty perfected through

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necessity, never made it to America in

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any meaningful way. When European

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settlers arrived, they brought cattle,

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pigs, and chickens, animals that

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required constant feeding, fencing, and

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labor. The idea of an edible pond that

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managed itself seemed too simple, almost

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primitive. But it was not primitive. It

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was elegant biological engineering.

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By the time the 20th century arrived,

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backyard ponds in America were

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considered decorative, not functional.

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Koi ponds for the wealthy. Ornamental

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fountains. Nothing that actually fed

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anyone. The knowledge had been buried.

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But in the 1960s, during early concerns

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about food security, a few researchers

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remembered at Orin University in

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Alabama, fishery scientists led by HS

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Swingle began studying those old Chinese

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methods. They built test ponds, some as

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small as 1,000 square ft, about the size

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of a modest above ground pool. They

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stocked them with native species like

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channel catfish and bluegill using

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techniques borrowed from ancient

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polyulture systems. The results were

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undeniable.

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Orin researchers documented yields of up

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to 350 lb of fish from ponds of just

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1,000 square ft when managed with basic

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fertilization.

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To put that in perspective, a quarter

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acre of cattle pasture produces about

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200 lb of beef per year and requires

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constant feeding, veterinary care, and

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infrastructure.

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These small ponds produce nearly double

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the protein using a tenth of the space

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with almost zero inputs.

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The studies were published, cited by a

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handful of permaculture enthusiasts, and

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then the momentum stopped. No government

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subsidies, no extension office programs,

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no agricultural colleges teaching it at

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scale. Because the moment you install a

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productive pond in your backyard, you

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stop buying meat from the industrial

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system. And the industrial meat system

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in America, valued at $200 billion

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annually, has no incentive to promote

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backyard protein production.

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But the knowledge survived the same way

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it survived the cultural revolution in

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China, the same way it survived the fall

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of Rome. Because once you understand the

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biology, the ecosystem builds itself.

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Here is how it works. The pond is not

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just fish. The fish are only one piece

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of a four-part

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living system.

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First, you have the ducks. In

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traditional Chinese poly culture, water

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foul were always integrated. Ducks are

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not just livestock. They are the

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biological managers of your pond. When

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ducks swim, they stir up bottom

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sediments, releasing nutrients into the

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water column. When they defecate, and

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they do constantly, they are adding

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nitrogen directly into the ecosystem.

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That nitrogen feeds algae. The algae

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feeds zup plankton. The zup plankton

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feed small fish. The small fish feed

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larger fish. And the ducks eat insects,

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aquatic plants, and occasionally small

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fish. It is a closed loop where every

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action feeds something else. A small

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flock of 3 to five ducks will also give

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you eggs. Khaki Campbell ducks, one of

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the most productive breeds, lay between

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280 and 340 eggs per year per duck. That

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is 840 to 1,700 eggs annually from a

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tiny flock. Research shows that ducks

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with access to pond ecosystems can

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forage up to 30% of their nutritional

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needs from insects, aquatic plants, and

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small organisms, drastically cutting

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your feed costs.

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You are stacking functions. The ducks

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fertilize the water. The pond feeds the

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ducks. The fish clean up excess

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nutrients. The plants filter what is

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left and you simply harvest the surplus.

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Second, you have the plants. Aquatic

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vegetation is not decoration. It is the

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kidneys and lungs of your permaculture

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pond. Cattails are one of the most

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efficient biological filters on Earth.

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Their roots pull excess nitrogen and

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phosphorus out of the water, preventing

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algae blooms and keeping the ecosystem

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balanced.

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A ring of cattails around your pond's

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