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Symbiosis: A surprising tale of species cooperation - David Gonzales

2m 12s360 words45 segmentsEnglish

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0:13

Are you familiar with the word symbiosis?

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It's a fancy term for a partnership between two different species,

0:19

such as bees and flowers.

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In a symbiosis, both species depend on each other.

0:25

I want to tell you about a remarkable symbiosis

0:27

between a little bird, the Clark's nutcracker,

0:29

and a big tree, the whitebark pine.

0:32

Whitebark grow in the mountains of Wyoming, Montana

0:35

and other western states.

0:36

They have huge canopies and lots of needles,

0:39

which provide cover and shelter for other plants and animals,

0:42

and whitebark feed the forest.

0:45

Their cones are packed with protein.

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Squirrels gnaw the cones from the upper branches

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so they fall to the ground,

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and then race down to bury them in piles, or middens.

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But they don't get to keep all of them;

0:56

grizzlies and black bears love finding middens.

0:59

But there's more to a symbiosis than one species feeding another.

1:03

In the case of the Clark's nutcracker, this bird gives back.

1:06

While gathering its seeds, it also replants the trees.

1:10

Here's how it works: using her powerful beak,

1:12

the nutcracker picks apart a cone in a treetop,

1:15

pulling out the seeds.

1:16

She can store up to 80 of them in a pouch in her throat.

1:19

Then she flies through the forest

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looking for a place to cache the seeds

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an inch under the soil in piles of up to eight seeds.

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Nutcrackers can gather up to 90,000 seeds in the autumn,

1:30

which they return for in the winter and spring.

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And these birds are smart.

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They remember where all those seeds are.

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They even use landmarks on the landscape --

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trees, stumps, rocks --

1:40

to triangulate to caches buried deep under the snow.

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What they don't go back and get, those seeds become whitebark.

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This symbiosis is so important to both species

1:50

that they've changed, or evolved, to suit each other.

1:54

Nutcrackers have developed long, tough beaks

1:57

for extracting seeds from cones,

1:59

and whitebarks' branches all sweep upwards

2:02

with the cones at the very ends,

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so they can offer them to the nutcrackers as they fly by.

2:07

That's a symbiosis:

2:08

Two species cooperating to help each other for the benefit of all.

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