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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:06Oh, what a mess you've made, my friend! And the rest of the story is just a joke.
00:11What are you talking about, you ignorant fool? These are modified, super-fungi, each one taking root in individuals in a different way.
00:17How will we tell them apart? It's easy, my friend. Let's try it on someone. Who's the stupid person who'll agree?
00:24Let's try it on him
00:25Oh my God, I'm transparent, I swear! What about me? Where did I go?
00:29Oh, we missed this one.
00:30You're mistaken, sir. Excessive consumption of genetically modified mushrooms can lead to chronic infertility.
00:36Oh, uncle, it's important and chronically infertile, as long as Hader produces offspring later.
00:39Oh, you really are a sly one.
00:41Okay, Boot Formy, you liked that one? Look, I'll try this one.
00:49So, I feel like I made a bad decision eating mushrooms. Okay, so these are the mushrooms of intelligence.
01:01Men don't cry and women don't laugh
01:05These are the fungi of stupidity
01:13Who am I and what am I doing here?
01:15Fungal loss of memory
01:19Oh, I remember.
01:21Memory retrieval fungi
01:25Sultan remains the best singer of the 21st century
01:27Yes, of course, these are the absolute truths of the fungi
01:31So what's the problem, Uncle?
01:33We were hit and we came out okay
01:34Ah, fungi that deny psychological disorders
01:44Mr. Sayed
01:46Oh God, protect us!
01:48Yes
01:49deadly poisonous fungi
01:53cardamom
01:54Now all that's missing is roseotto fungi
01:56And we're done
02:06Dear viewers
02:07Peace and blessings of God be upon you. Welcome to the new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
02:10Okay, watch the game.
02:11Don't hide
02:12Why don't you come play?
02:13Horik Sawtkat
02:13And she tells me this is because she is a queen
02:15An oath?
02:15Let's start with something easy.
02:16bat
02:17Easy, Abu Hamad
02:18animals
02:19For example, medicine
02:20Aloe vera
02:21Plants, Ya Buhamad, are easy
02:22Good flea
02:23Buhamad, this is easy
02:23insects
02:24Indeed, my dear, a flea is an insect.
02:26But we are talking here about kingdoms
02:27The porcupine belongs to the animal kingdom.
02:29I regret my finances
02:30Which lives differently from the plant kingdom
02:33For example, galvanization
02:34The hyacinth makes its food through photosynthesis.
02:36It is considered plants
02:37But for example, the Ukrainian people
02:38These are animals
02:39Why? Because it doesn't photosynthesize.
02:41He said no
02:41Umm, you eat like Abu Hamad
02:42You eat sugars
02:43The one that the hyaluronic acid does
02:45close
02:45Let's go to this strange creature
02:47drink
02:47This is a group
02:48The kingdom is classified as a kingdom
02:49Oh Abu Hamad
02:50This is easy
02:51mushroom drink
02:52Sweet, my dear
02:53Fungi are animals
02:54No plants?
02:55The situation, my dear
02:55For years
02:56Scientists will classify fungi as plants.
02:58So we
02:59If we look at the drink
03:00We won't find that it performs photosynthesis, for example.
03:01Fungi, despite being similar to plants
03:03However, it is closer to animals.
03:05You could say that
03:06I am their common ancestor
03:08Isn't it also a shared loan?
03:09Jok is a human being, my dear
03:10Masha Maulana
03:11They are grouped into a single classification group.
03:14It's called Sound Backgrounds
03:15Qabashtu Kon
03:16Also, my dear, fungi
03:18It doesn't produce its own food like plants.
03:19She looks for food and eats it
03:21It serves the same logic as nutrition.
03:22Animals
03:23The archer, my dear, will remain confused about the state of the fungi.
03:26They will say that it is neither an animal nor a plant.
03:28We will create a kingdom of its own for her.
03:30Because it lives a completely different lifestyle than the norm; it eats and reproduces.
03:34And it possesses an intelligence unique to it among all creatures.
03:36Let her go, my dear, I'll take you in this episode
03:38We learn about one of the strangest realms of life.
03:41fungi
03:42Of course, my dear
03:43If I asked you about the star of the fungi kingdom
03:45You'll say he told me about the drink or the mushroom.
03:47But let me tell you, my dear, the drink is not mushrooms.
03:57Hi?
03:58The drink here is a mushroom-based lunchbox.
04:01So that the new embryos of the fungus are in it
04:04In the form of a fungal germ, it usually remains from a single cell.
04:06With my dear Espers
04:07Fungi produce large quantities of sporozoites.
04:10And then you release it into the air so it can spread freely.
04:12If someone played the Delsto Pass game, they would know how to tell me.
04:14If someone is eating, write down the drink.
04:16When these spurs land in a suitable place
04:18It sprouts and grows into a new mushroom
04:20Every year, fungi produce fifty million tons of this clover.
04:24And its sellers in the Awaa
04:26The presence of these particles is very high in the atmosphere.
04:28It's a shame, my dear, that we breathe it.
04:30Water droplets condense on it, creating clouds and rain.
04:33The drink here isn't mushrooms, so we're not looking for mushrooms to download.
04:36We go underground
04:37You'll find it living in the form of networks
04:39It consists of tubular cells
04:41This name is Mycenium
04:42Very small fungi make a drink
04:50They're busy with animals and plants and neglecting fungi.
04:54Why a group? Why are we turning to fungi?
04:56I won't tell you, my dear, I'll tell him, "Those scholars of the scatterbrain."
04:58Life in its current form
04:59It cannot exist in the form we know it without fungi.
05:02Abu Hamid remains anything in the world
05:04It could not exist in the form we know it without her existence.
05:06My dear, this is just a rhetorical phrase, its purpose is...
05:08We understand that we are talking about something important.
05:10Okay, Abu Hamid, I mean, I'm just trying to cast doubt on your credibility in general, why?
05:14I don't know the beginning
05:15Let it go, my dear, what's left is my shard, let's go back to the fungi
05:18Fungi, my dear, have formed a city and support our urbanization.
05:20And it could be the last hope for saving the planet's future.
05:23According to anthropologists
05:25The first creature humans domesticated was neither dogs nor chickens.
05:28But the fungi look
05:30Early humans fermented fruit a hundred thousand years ago.
05:32Through this process, they domesticated a fungus called yeast.
05:35Of course, we didn't know that it was the cause of fermentation until the 19th century.
05:38But over thousands of years, this tiny fungus, which we didn't know existed, has been around.
05:42It will change the course of civilization.
05:43And it helps humans if they transition from a bestowed society to a planting society.
05:47My dear, yeast, in the absence of oxygen, breaks down sugars.
05:51Wash it, Abu Hamid, he's not a real man, by the way.
05:52My dear, these are topics between the fungi and those who follow them.
05:55The important thing is that when sugars are broken down, they produce alcohol and CO2.
05:58Alcohol, Abu Hamid, peace be upon you.
06:00That's why scientists are confused about which kingdom to send him to.
06:02drunk
06:03My dear, alcohol may have other functions in human societies.
06:06But it kills microbes
06:08Yes, it preserves the food and gives it a distinctive flavor.
06:10And if you don't know, he deals with alcohol, beer, and wine.
06:13Of course you don't know
06:14It also releases CO2, which we mentioned earlier.
06:16The one that helps in the dough's maturation and puffing.
06:18After that, and the genealogists say it's from something like alcohol and bread.
06:21It was a very important motive
06:22So that a person can settle down and start over
06:24The communities that follow will contribute to making history.
06:28But let me surprise you and tell you that the story of fungi
06:30It starts much earlier than that
06:32Let me surprise you and tell you, my dear
06:33For millions of years, there was nothing we could call it
06:36Tarab
06:37There was no life on Earth.
06:39Animals, plants, and fungi are all in the sea.
06:43Oh Abu Hamid, even mushrooms are getting summer, and I'm not!
06:45Plants on land do not have roots to transport water.
06:48And it has no dust
06:48It extracts nutrients from rocks and minerals.
06:51From here, a close, almost identical, relationship will develop between plants and fungi.
06:56They'll make a deal
06:56As far as we know, my dear, this period is a
06:59It means we look at her from afar.
07:00However, there is almost a scientific consensus that plants only reached Earth with the help of fungi.
07:06And to this day, they will remain dependent on each other.
07:07A story that will never end
07:08Am I telling you, my dear, that fungi are, in street slang, howling?
07:11any?
07:11Meaning, my dear, she doesn't know how to cook her own food.
07:13She's not alone
07:14Plants know how to make their own food.
07:16Mothers' outfits
07:16Then take some medicine on carbon
07:18Then it will give you carbohydrates and sugars
07:21And I had dinner like that
07:22And she didn't have dinner alone.
07:23I lived the whole planet
07:24We all live off the taste of this dish.
07:26But what more do plants need than water, carbon, and water?
07:30Nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen
07:33That's not how it is, my dear. I visit plants no matter how many branches they have.
07:36You can't explore the music properly
07:38She has no connections
07:39She has no connections
07:40With the same efficiency as whom?
07:42fungi
07:42From here, my dear, the historic partnership will begin.
07:45The fungus will merge with the plant roots.
07:47And God takes from her the sugars He needs
07:49In return, he will extend his networks in Al-Tarbah
07:51He explores it with the innate roots we call
07:54Microhiza alvangia
07:55This, my dear, is 100 times longer.
07:57And fifty times more accurate
07:59From the finest roots
08:00This way, he can provide the plants with the elements they need.
08:03And the exchange begins
08:04Take the elements and give me the answers
08:06Take potassium and phosphorus, but also bring sugar.
08:08This partnership, my dear, has happened before.
08:10Some plants have roots.
08:11And it will make more than 90% of the plants
08:14Based on fungi
08:15Again, my dear, this planet lives off...
08:18The food that plants make
08:19If there were no fungi, God knows what this planet would be like.
08:22How was it completed?
08:24The plants now have thinner and faster roots.
08:26In growth to mimic fungi
08:28What's the secret behind the idea? The scientists
08:30So they understand if this exchange is happening
08:32This exchange of benefits
08:33Now we will look at a specific element: the plant.
08:36What kind of mushrooms do they need? Like phosphorus.
08:38This isn't the month of phosphorus, so don't follow it.
08:40The scientists extracted it; they brought a carrot plant.
08:42They grew it in the lab and then allowed the mushroom
08:44Its name is Rhizophagus erageoleris
08:46Hsu from Game of Thrones allowed instinct
08:48It is intertwined with the roots
08:50The plant's name after the name of God was inserted
08:51Wow, he started wandering far away to get
08:54The network was created with elements called scientists.
08:56For two rooms, and put them in these two rooms.
08:58Quantities may include some phosphorus
09:00One of them taught phosphorus to be used in meat.
09:01And the second ones were marked in blue
09:03And, my dear, the mushroom found a flood on the phosphorus.
09:06He began to store a large quantity of phosphorus.
09:08Inside his networks
09:09The idea that scientists found the fungus
09:11It doesn't just provide phosphorus to the plant.
09:13It's not just transferred from the higher concentration in the mushroom
09:15For lower concentration in the plant
09:17No, this is a type of management.
09:18There is a phosphor card available.
09:20For example, we see the phosphorus supply moving to the plant.
09:23Then he stops and changes direction
09:25What in God's name is going on?
09:26Let's repeat the experiment so we can understand?
09:27This time they'll make sure there's a room with less phosphorus.
09:3010% here and 90% here
09:32They found that the fungus was moving phosphorus from the rich area
09:34For the poor area, plant roots
09:36When she found the supply of phosphorus was low, she got a bankruptcy.
09:39The price of phosphorus began to rise
09:40Plants produce more sugar.
09:43vs. phosphorus
09:44Did there, my dear, a supply and demand? And the phosphorus currency was...
09:47Higher in the poorer area
09:48The periods here are acting like they are being used.
09:50The two researchers did not expect that the fungus would manage
09:52This supply process depends on him
09:54Who benefits the most? They're looking for profit and a high price.
09:57The instinct, my dear, in exchange for his services
09:59He sweetens it with the plant, he takes from it.
10:01Up to 30% of what he does
10:03In photosynthesis, Tax
10:04Nothing breaks this mood like plants like Montrope
10:07My dear, this plant has a strange white color.
10:09Unlike other green plants
10:10He doesn't have the famous color of chlorophyll.
10:12Which helps in absorbing light
10:14Therefore, my darling doesn't know how to perform photosynthesis.
10:16White plants need a light-filled display to get them what they deserve.
10:19Okay, Muhammad, let me ask you a question.
10:20How does this plant eat?
10:21I'm going to kill you, my dear
10:22This plant feeds on fungi
10:24It doesn't just take elements from it
10:25No, not carbohydrates either.
10:26What is this?
10:27Plus
10:27We learned that
10:29Zelzno satcha singa s free launch
10:31What does the fungus fighter get in return?
10:33I'll surprise you, my dear, and tell you
10:34No need
10:35The plant here, my dear, is a parasite on the fungus.
10:38The plant that serves 90% of plants
10:41I sprayed this plant
10:42And you will tell him, Abu Ahmed
10:43Is that the one that silences the mushrooms?
10:44Don't leave them as pictures
10:45And how is this mushroom?
10:46He distracts himself
10:47And it turns away from the plant
10:47This meeting, my dear, has puzzled scholars for years.
10:50Gaza will remain so until the knives are laid
10:52Until an idea comes to you
10:53Swedish botanist
10:55Beric Björkman
10:55This guy is bringing in common sugars
10:58So that he can torture her
10:59Where are you going and where are you coming from?
11:00Who are you going to and who are you coming from?
11:02And he says it's true that these common sugars
11:04In a plant next to the monotrope
11:06He will be surprised that sugars
11:07I reached the monoembryo plant
11:09Meaning that the plant transferred food to another plant
11:11And in the English world
11:12David Reed
11:13It will prove conclusively
11:14This is not a protection exclusive to the Montroba.
11:16ordinary trees
11:17They exchange carbon with each other
11:18In underground business
11:19And the year 97
11:20It will be proven that this happens on an independent, entire forest.
11:23Because every fungus attaches itself to the roots of a plant
11:25It branches out until it reaches another plant or more.
11:28He grasps at its roots
11:29So laugh, my dear
11:30The monoetope plant here
11:31He wasn't parasitic on the fungus
11:32This was a parasite on the plant that the fungus was parasitizing.
11:35And the plants, my dear
11:36As you say in Polyamoros
11:38You'll find she doesn't get into a relationship with just one mushroom.
11:40They separated the Relisha Shab from many fungi.
11:42multi-relationship
11:43And the result of all this
11:45We have a very complex and large underground network.
11:48In every inch of soil
11:50It connects all the plants in the forest as if they were one single organism.
11:54The younger ones
11:54It deposits sugars in the young tree until it grows up
11:57He lengthens the light and returns the favor
11:59The entire forest communicates and alerts each other
12:01If, for example, there is a risk of insects
12:02So you, my dear, come and look at the plant collection
12:05With fungi as a single system
12:06Countries, not individuals
12:07Rima, my dear, means the name Riwsh in Makul.
12:10It means because their sense of humor is limited.
12:11They call this network the World Wide Web
12:14Of course, this is in the name of the World Wide Web.
12:16www.
12:17This, my dear, is not a network that connects things metaphorically like a food web.
12:21They do not tie them up; their behavior is beneath them.
12:23It's as if the forest, my dear, has an infrastructure.
12:25Life has an infrastructure
12:27This fungal network represents a third of the biomass in the soil.
12:31Globally
12:32Total length of fungal hyphae
12:34So, 10 centimeters deep in the soil.
12:36More than 450,000 quadrillion kilometers
12:39This, my dear, is half the offer of the strike that will keep us
12:43What? Why?
12:44Why?
12:44I don't know, Hamad Hussein, this is the reaction you're expecting from me.
12:46Al-Azizi placed it in various scenes, like a suffocating spectacle.
12:48Where is my dear? Where is she?
12:50This network, my dear, has existed on Earth for approximately 150 million years.
12:53You die and come back to life, you die and come back to life
12:56Approximately ten to sixty times a year
12:58Its length, dear trachoma, is over a million years
13:01Qatar is known as Qatar.
13:03The Observable Universe
13:05The imagined, my dear, is known to all.
13:06Which is 14 billion years long
13:07The mushroom-shaped networks are built with impressive efficiency.
13:10What I'm telling you, my dear, is that they conducted a Ro Shawi experiment using water from Japan.
13:13They brought the map of Tokyo
13:15They did the same thing in a laboratory dish.
13:16Each city in Tokyo will have oat flour.
13:19And they brought a type of fungus that loves oats.
13:21This is definitely Abu Ahbab's mushroom trying to harm my bad brother
13:23The link started working.
13:25To see the best way to eat
13:27During the natural spaces, he will create a network
13:29Hitchipi greatly alters the Tokyo railway map
13:33This is one of the most efficient transport networks in the world.
13:36The mushroom brought it like that
13:37The engineers spent years working on it.
13:39The mushroom did it that way
13:40Not able to see
13:41You're not far off, my dear, if the mushroom line is with you at IKEA.
13:43It makes it easy for you
13:44We are facing a being
13:45He doesn't have a brain or nervous system like ours.
13:47This makes us think about the different forms of intelligence.
13:50Different life forms
13:51This is something he did for the network
13:52This also makes us rethink the identity of beings.
13:55He told him, "You, Abu Hamid, are the creatures that have become bisexual."
13:57Come on, let's see, my dear, you've been keeping up with the event for a while now.
14:00No, my dear, let's review what we said. We have mushrooms above ground, that's the brown one.
14:04And the fungus is not underground; it is intertwined with plants.
14:07The plants are linked to other fungi and form a network
14:10Come here, dear Heover, the question
14:11What exactly is a fungus? Is it the cell that forms the network?
14:14And many fungi, some of them are harmful.
14:16Life, my dear mushroom, is all about the network of...
14:19It has no specific shape
14:20If we keep going, a large amount of natural spray will appear.
14:22And we analyzed the religion, what is its meaning?
14:23We will find only one creature
14:25Oh my dear, that's very serious.
14:27Do you know why? No, by Ahmed.
14:28Because it threatens the Blue Whale Center as the largest creature on this planet
14:34You were saying that God is with Ahmed, meaning you are saying that mushrooms can be bigger than a blue whale?
14:37Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
14:38Okay, my dear, I'm telling you
14:38There is a fungus found in the state of Oregon.
14:40It covers an area of 9 square kilometers
14:43He is over 8600 years old
14:46The passage is more likely if you cut the fungal network into two parts.
14:49And each one grew up far apart from the other.
14:50You'll find them identical and vertical.
14:52Here's where he starts causing you trouble
14:54Guys, are these two beings or were they two bodies?
14:56This underground fungus trains everything we know about identity.
14:59My dear, you yourself are a network
15:01A part of you grows inside the plant's roots.
15:03And she eavesdrops on criminal conversations
15:05Plant hormones affect your honey and vice versa.
15:07And all of this is part of it
15:08This, my dear, is just one part of you.
15:10In a second part related to other points of the roots
15:12So that if one line gets cut, there are other routes.
15:14And other branches of you are linked to different plants.
15:17They all lived through different circumstances, but all at the same time
15:20What you saw in front of you, my dear, was called dandruff.
15:22Or the Lykins
15:23This, my dear, covers 8% of the Earth's land area, meaning
15:28This, my dear, is neither a fungus nor a plant.
15:30These two
15:31Bye
15:31A single entity composed of two beings from two different kingdoms
15:34None of them can stand alone
15:36But through their unity, they can live anywhere.
15:39The fusion process produces sugars, and the fungus delivers the nutrients.
15:42You'll find, my dear, that this entity isn't exactly in a good mood.
15:43He lives in the desert
15:44On the roof
15:45On the rocks
15:45You might also find it on beetles and insects, my dear.
15:48He can also listen to this
15:49Survival in space
15:50It can withstand 12,000 times the amount of radiation.
15:54Which could be a human category
15:55Yes
15:56How do I dig?
15:56How will this mushroom get nutrients if it's not in the soil?
15:58Let me tell you, my dear, about the third amazing thing about the life of fungi.
16:01How do you eat mushrooms?
16:03Have you ever asked yourself
16:04The containers
16:04Zayan
16:05Find food
16:05Then she gets up and puts her body in it
16:07But my dear, when it comes to fungi, the matter is different.
16:09Fungi find food
16:11She put her body inside the food.
16:12Its flexible mesh allows it to penetrate food.
16:15It begins to secrete enzymes that break down and remove
16:18Okay, so what is her favorite dish? What does she eat?
16:21Where do you understand?
16:22And 19 inhabitants of Easter Island, which contains those famous stone water statues.
16:25They will build a support to save hundreds of statues from the rubble.
16:28Remember the sprouting mushrooms I told you about?
16:30He describes it
16:31Lichens D
16:31It's almost like leprosy
16:33It distorts the features of statues
16:35Although the statues are made of basalt rock
16:37But the mushroom makes it a bird.
16:39Wuthering works for her
16:40My dear fungus can break the strongest rocks and minerals
16:43Because it grows with a semi-available network
16:45And it goes inside the rocks
16:46So, my dear, fungi never get enough.
16:48She makes her way and eats anything in her path.
16:50Every now and then she opens the fridge and takes something out
16:52At the beginning of life, fungi transformed the rocky ground into soil.
16:55My dear, extract the minerals from inside the rocks.
16:58And then these metals entered the biological cycles of organisms.
17:01To get things running and build civilization and all that
17:03Part of the minerals in your body
17:04Iron, phosphorus, calcium
17:06Often, a period of time has passed since the onset of fungi.
17:08Breaking down the minerals in the mountains and rocks
17:10Its entrance was built like this on the food chain's highway.
17:13Fungi, my dear, and listen to this
17:15They are the link between inanimate objects and life.
17:17This is a very important process in our lives.
17:19Its name is decomposition
17:20Without dissolution, the companionship of life would have ceased.
17:22The end
17:22If trees could make a forest
17:24And fungi don't decompose this wood.
17:26It will start to get very large numbers
17:28It reaches kilometers on planet Earth
17:30From 300 million years ago, my dear
17:32This was during an era known as the Carboniferous period.
17:34It is called that because it contains liquid quantities.
17:36From the trees of the forest
17:37She died and was buried, like a huge quantity of gravel.
17:40The strange thing is
17:40Then after that
17:41There was no era with such a large quantity of pottery.
17:43I wonder why
17:44Debt, my dear
17:45Fungi that can decompose these trees
17:47It wasn't there yet.
17:48The one who pickles plants
17:49It doesn't decompose easily
17:50For example, through microbes
17:51It is a strong carbon structure
17:53Its name is Legnum
17:53He protects the tree
17:54According to a new analysis published in the journal Science
17:56Fungi still have the ability
17:58She dismantled this lignam
18:00With regard to the carbon-age period
18:01That's why
18:02Tabata got burned in the tree
18:04Because it kept decomposing
18:05It is also used as soil components.
18:07The truth is, Aziz, this is still a hypothesis.
18:08But she is famous
18:09Many scientists recognize it.
18:10Fungi too
18:11You don't just solve one problem.
18:13One of the most powerful biological materials
18:15Leggings
18:15This also breaks down even the most precious liquids.
18:19Fish softness called kerosene fangs
18:21Oh my dear
18:21Do you know where you live?
18:22It lives in the aircraft's fuel tanks
18:24They dissolve and break down kerosene
18:26The one who was blind in the year 198
18:27They discovered that the soil was contaminated with oil.
18:30The one that contains poisons has a itch
18:31After a week of fungal growth in it
18:33These fungi were estimated
18:34It's your phone, that's the battery
18:36to less valuable materials
18:38And the slurries that were present in the soil
18:39I qualified by ninety percent
18:41My dear uncle started telling you
18:42What is this?
18:42We benefit from his talent
18:44Our world
18:45It has more than five million places
18:46They have oil pollution.
18:47This oil pollution
18:49Animals and plants
18:50It causes cancers and sometimes atrophies organs.
18:53We can benefit from these fungi
18:55We can also apply this.
18:56On pesticides
18:58or even inorganic materials
18:59For example, heavy metals
19:01Things like lead, arsenic, and lead
19:03Even my dear, let me tell you
19:04radioactive materials
19:05That's it, my dear.
19:06Let's leave suddenly
19:07It happened in Cher Ruble
19:08After my dear
19:09nuclear reactor explosion
19:101986
19:11Devastating radioactive contamination spread
19:13Let's leave the area
19:14It is currently uninhabitable.
19:16Experiences, my dear, have proven
19:17Fungi can treat radioactive materials.
19:19I want to tell you
19:20I'm not going to tell you anything, my dear, please forgive me.
19:22Some scholars
19:22Train the fungi
19:24They are eating garbage
19:25Cigarette butt
19:27The spars
19:27This, my dear
19:28Let's think
19:28Eh ta ta ta ta ta ta
19:30We're doing business.
19:30We too are like our plants on fungi
19:32This happened
19:32For example, we said to the fungi
19:34Do you need these enzymes for something?
19:35Give it to her
19:35Here, let's take it and use it to solve the garbage problem.
19:37Not only that
19:37We put it in the washing and soap dish.
19:40Some of these are enzymes
19:41Like the enzyme alliase
19:42This dissolves fats
19:43and protease
19:44The one that dissolves protein
19:45amylase
19:46The one who dissolves starch
19:47You might think, my dear
19:49The mushroom is a benevolent being
19:51Since we talked about him
20:00Fungi, my dear, destroy enough crops to feed 600 million people every year.
20:05In fact, it kills the human being directly.
20:08Fungi cause the death of approximately 1.5 million people annually.
20:12Usually, Abu Ahmed
20:13Everyone kills whoever gets caught.
20:14That's not how it is, my dear.
20:15Fungi have hideous ways.
20:17For example
20:17The carmelalia is dominant
20:18This, my dear, is the mushroom that grows into a honey mushroom.
20:20It digs its roots into the tree
20:22He looks for all its dead and its nutritional content.
20:24So the farmers, of course, say, "Life is either good or it kills the tree."
20:27They try to feed him
20:28Or stuff it from the tree
20:29Then Yanmeh gets up again
20:30And like my dear, humans play with it and control it.
20:32Fungi also have a history of manipulating animals.
20:35Fungi, for example, produce things that challenge the immune system.
20:37So you can infect animals without the hassle of the immune system.
20:40What is the replacement blood cell? What is in what?
20:43What instinct do you have?
20:44No, no, no, no
20:45Take them to sleep
20:45The drug that instinct produces
20:47We will then isolate it and call it cyclosporine.
20:49This is for people who have certain autoimmune diseases.
20:51It helps alleviate immune system diseases.
20:54For example, people who undergo organ transplants have a foreign body inserted into them.
20:56So immunity is in my hands, this is what it is.
20:58What are the nuclear volumes?
20:59So, of course, we'll give this stupid, backward immune system a good beating.
21:02And the sleep is a little
21:03No, this is a new member because the previous member was a...
21:06Another innate trait is called Vangas Mass Blackboard
21:08It affects the cycad
21:09Bevers has an amphetamine stimulant in her body.
21:11At the same time
21:12psilocybin anesthetic
21:14He told him
21:14Why is Abu Ameen both a narcotic and a stimulant?
21:16Certainly, my dear, because instinct begins to eat the insect's posterior tissues.
21:20Including the sexual organs
21:22The drug makes the insect detach from reality.
21:24And the stimulant makes it a standard
21:26And she wants to mate without her reproductive organs.
21:28Then the scent spreads the mushroom clover.
21:31Oh, Nahrso, that's Abu Hamid.
21:32This is what we put on our macaroni
21:34Of course, my dear, you were terrified and scared and said
21:36That's it, Abu Hamid, this is definitely the worst thing that could happen.
21:38You're being disrespectful, my dear, you're being disrespectful, my dear.
21:39Let me tell you about the zombie ant fungus
21:42If you visited a tropical country like Brazil
21:43You will encounter carpenter ants, my dear.
21:45If you waited long enough
21:46You will see an ant leaving its colony
21:48And it's like that, on the longest arrows
21:50Although she is afraid of heights
21:52Until you reach a good leaf, my dear
21:54Then the central vein of the leaf is cut.
21:57Let me tell you, my dear
21:58The ant didn't do that by biting.
21:59Oh Abu Hamid
22:00This ant, my dear, is dead.
22:02any?
22:02And it is controlled by fungi
22:03This mushroom is called
22:04Mother of the Troklets
22:05Antrolais
22:06But my dear, his name is with you, I'm tired
22:16This mushroom
22:17This mushroom is so thick that an ant can enter it.
22:18prefers to grow, grow, grow, grow, grow, grow
22:21Until it becomes 40% of its mass
22:24Varicose veins, my dear
22:25Ant 40% fungus
22:26He destroys, my dear, through anger
22:28So it separates it from its edges
22:29It controls the ant's limbs
22:31Like the Maliunt
22:32So my dear ant's brain remained working
22:33But he's a stunner, she's crazy about him.
22:34And then, my dear, his cycle is over
22:36A stalk emerges and pierces the ant's brain.
22:38It's like a spear
22:39And the leg starts to grow
22:41For a capsule full of sporks
22:42Where is this capsule now?
22:4425 centimeters above
22:46Then Tak
22:47The spurs are now descending upon the rest of the ant.
22:49So the rest of the ant does the same thing
22:51They all turn into zombies
22:52The deficiency recurs
22:54These researchers believed
22:55Controlling the behavior of this ant
22:56Obtained through chemical substances
22:58The fungus secretes it
22:59It affects the muscles
23:00The ant's nervous system
23:01You'll see, my dear
23:02With ultimate control
23:03The vanges can make the ant
23:06The vein is considered 98%
23:09This mushroom belongs to a group called
23:10Irgod Alkaloids
23:11This is similar to another fungus called
23:13Ergot mushroom
23:13or magic mushrooms
23:14The one who will isolate himself from him
23:15Swiss chemist
23:17Albert Hoffmann
23:17A very important property, my dear.
23:19Its name is LCD
23:20What is this, Abu Hamad?
23:21Huh?
23:22Oh boy
23:22TV diffusers
23:23This, my dear, is a fungus.
23:24It contains malicious substances
23:26Known for its magic, not
23:27Oh Abu Hamad, this
23:28Why is this?
23:29There are only these drug-related episodes.
23:31May God bless him
23:33What does it mean to be the starting point in it?
23:34No, Abu Hamad, you're being unfair to me.
23:36I don't know about these things.
23:37It contains, my dear, more than 200 types of magic mushrooms
23:40It usually contains the substance cerucida
23:42It's created on my dear, the one who takes it
23:43He sees and hears things that aren't there
23:45It's like he's dreaming, and he's the owner.
23:47His senses start to malfunction
23:48You find Aziz watching music and hearing colors
23:50His sense of time is fading away
23:51Sometimes it can also cause anxiety and panic attacks.
23:54And cramps and pains
23:55Oh dear Batal, she's got ripples on her, may God protect her.
23:57Professor of Biology at Harvard University
23:59Richard Evans Schultz says
24:00These fungal compounds are undoubtedly known and have been used since the first humans were infected.
24:05On the remaining plants around it
24:06To the point that Celie's paintings date back to stone sticks
24:09From 9000 BC, it includes gods with animal heads.
24:12And mushroom-like forms sprout from their bodies
24:14There is ample evidence to suggest that humans have known about mushrooms as medicine and food for thousands of years.
24:19They have used it in religious and spiritual rituals since the dawn of history.
24:22To the point, my dear, that botany is a cog in the machine in his book and a god in his work.
24:26I'm putting forward a hypothesis that says that narcotic fungi have a very important component.
24:29In the development of the human mind and culture
24:31Of course, this statement isn't necessarily true.
24:32But we are only presenting the hypothesis.
24:34One hypothesis states that we are sustained by the emergence of language and contemplation.
24:37And some of the unique functions of our human brain
24:39For the ancient ancestors who tried the magical concoction
24:42Especially, my dear, between 3 million years and 2 thousand years
24:44The period in which Homo sapiens most likely appeared
24:46Which is me, you, and the guys and stuff like that
24:48Primate brains
24:50It will be three to four times smaller in size
24:52This, my dear, is what's known in those circles as a prime boom.
24:55This kid is tah tah tah tah
24:56Velvet is larger
24:57And the women no longer know how to turn
24:58A dilemma arose
24:59The idea is that the sedocaypen in the period
25:01We see that it increases the branching in the brain.
25:03Distance
25:04Distance
25:05They all say that Emma Alfiter increased brain size.
25:08He supplied the nerves
25:10And this has somehow been passed down through generations.
25:12Or in other words, it broadened human horizons.
25:15And these drugs gave them a different cognitive experience.
25:18They developed new ideas and behaviors
25:19And it took them out of the worries of daily life to deal with existence
25:22It means, my dear, according to what these people say.
25:24I worked on an upgrading of the mind
25:25Philosophers from centuries ago will coin the term
25:28This means anthropocentrism
25:30Humans at the center
25:32Man is the center of the universe and the leader of the planet.
25:34Yes, we have this narcissism and frankly, we deserve it.
25:36Therefore, we have the right to do anything in our best interest.
25:38Al-Masili, my dear, with the development of science
25:40He will appear in the 20th century's besties
25:41Criticism of this term from environmental ethics academics
25:45Useless people
25:46If you look at something like fungi
25:47It's possible that this planet will remain a planetary dynamite.
25:49In the way we saw it
25:50It is what shapes our lives.
25:51But it's a hidden power that we can't see.
25:53The one who appears in the center, or the one who loves longing
25:55Some estimates suggest there are five million mushrooms in the world.
25:58But we only know of 150,000 types.
26:00The Azizi research is called Dark Vangai
26:02It seems to be a little racist
26:04We know it exists from its nuclear origin.
26:06But we don't know whether to see it or pray to it.
26:09Science, my dear, just makes a person humble in the face of hidden fungi.
26:12It shaped our lives and deconstructed our world a thousand times.
26:15But let man recreate his world anew.
26:17In a healthy way and from the same material as the feces
26:19In 2014, an architectural engineering team
26:21Dr. David Benjamil's Greetings
26:23They will build a 12-meter utility building in New York
26:25You don't repent or with concrete
26:26The production of which is responsible for 10% of the planet's carbon emissions
26:30But what will Abu Hamid build this building from?
26:32They will make molds from a mixture of mushrooms
26:35The one who eats the ash of the slate
26:36Damna, my dear, will be very strong.
26:38Insulating and non-flammable
26:40Other scientists are working on creating bioplastics.
26:43Also from fungi
26:44Tomorrow, my dear, is coming, and with it, many possibilities for fungi.
26:47These fungi could be a hope for saving the future.
26:49Just as she betrayed a major reason for our continued existence until now
26:51Just let go of your narcissism.
26:54And his feeling that he is the center of the planet
26:55And he doesn't just acknowledge the importance of fungi.
26:57Just as he employs it in a thousand ways
26:58He does, however, acknowledge that they are also beings deserving of protection.
27:01This, my dear, is because of the radiation that maintains ecosystems.
27:04Fungi were overlooked and their value underestimated for many years.
27:07This neglect has consequences
27:08Because if fungi are exposed to danger because of what humans do
27:11The entire ecosystem will be threatened.
27:13Because then it won't be destroying the medical records.
27:15Or by increasing the heat
27:16But by destroying vital force
27:18What holds this whole planet together
27:19That's all, my dear.
27:20Good or bad
27:21Don't forget to check out the previous cases.
27:22See the next cases
27:22Check out the sources and subscribe to our YouTube channel.
27:25Abu Hamad, I feel you're tired.
27:26Let me just say the point about the end of the episode.
27:28Here you go, my dear
27:29You know, Abu Hamad
27:30What are mycologists called?
27:32But what I see is what's going on.
27:33any?
27:34In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful
27:35Fattariya
27:36Okay, my dear
27:37Honestly, this is exactly the same level as what came before.
27:39honestly