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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
00:06music
00:07Good evening, Hanaa
00:09Masha'Allah, Masha'Allah
00:11They are the countries of vegetables and fruits that you planted for us, Jamal.
00:13Didn't I tell you, Hanaa?
00:14Didn't I tell you that if we grew our own vegetables
00:16We will be self-sufficient and won't pay for anything.
00:18And you didn't sell the washing machine and the refrigerator?
00:20So you can buy with them, it's obvious
00:22That's just at the beginning.
00:23I don't look at products
00:24In the name of God, what God wills
00:26God is great
00:30God bless
00:30This is Jamal
00:32This is a fruit-drawn cart.
00:34Tropical memory
00:35I honestly don't know what the point of it is.
00:37Oh, how beautiful!
00:38What else did you plant?
00:39No, that's it.
00:40Isn't that enough?
00:41What's the solution?
00:41This is all I planted
00:43What's the solution?
00:43What's in all these months?
00:45No, I didn't like movies and cartoons
00:46So that it remains full
00:46But what? It's just empty.
00:47Wait, I'll hurt you
00:53My brother, the house
00:54I'm still cleaning the house
00:56Six months planting
00:57And I didn't get those words
00:59Where are the peaches you told me about?
01:00Oh, all of this is worms.
01:01Medicine and mathematics
01:02Yes
01:03They're all worms too
01:04And the Owaisi mango
01:05No, honestly, I'm the one who ate it.
01:07With the basket, you missed out
01:08And then what?
01:09We'll give in and buy regular vegetables like everyone else.
01:12Maybe it was just a naive dream, Hanaa
01:14Maybe we need to wake up
01:16And we know
01:17We won't be able to get out
01:19On the thinking of rupture
01:20We need to realize that we are ordinary people.
01:23With normal capabilities
01:26And I'm not excited about this.
01:30Oppa
01:30Why don't we build a nuclear power plant on the roof?
01:41Dear viewers, peace be upon you and welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
01:45What I'm trying to tell you, my dear, through this episode
01:47Plants are not passive beings
01:49She has no control over the course of events.
01:51In reality, we are the ones living on the margins of the plants.
01:53The perception remained that the plant
01:55A peaceful and quiet person
01:57I don't know the intention or the competition
01:59He has no choice in his fate and he is burning because
02:01That's not true, that's just plant talk. How did they trick you?
02:04Because he feeds you an apple, a banana, and an avocado
02:06Come on, you bribe-taker, come on, you cashew and mango seller!
02:09And everyone is left with this fruit.
02:11In the forests, sunlight doesn't pass through the tree.
02:13Only 2% of the light reaches the ground.
02:16The seeds remain dormant, seeking an opportunity.
02:18Until the tree dies
02:19And from the womb of this death comes the length of life.
02:21An old tree after years of battling microbes, weather, and insects
02:25Her life ends in death
02:27A branch dies and then spreads to the rest of the tree.
02:29But the tree itself remains standing for years.
02:31It will be a home for bees and squirrels.
02:33And the tree fell until it was too late
02:35And what was on the forest floor was emptied
02:37The land is like a seed for a new tree.
02:39She had a chance for the first time in ten years
02:41So that you can get out of the ground and go up.
02:43And she reserves for herself what was in the light
02:45The sky cleared up a bit because a tree had died.
02:47Come on, the one who was imprisoning you has fallen.
02:49But my dear, she's not alone.
02:51There is a forgery of competition around it
02:52Each one of them is ready with weapons and life
02:55A palm tree seed will try to stick to it so that it catches the light.
03:05Ready with a plan after it was a complete document
03:07I'm divided into parts so that any part can escape
03:09Up on the palm tree, as it emerges, it blocks the light.
03:11But my dear, he is surrounded
03:13Balvins the climber
03:15Nabat Dhaheen and Loush were lucky in the length competition
03:17But he has the Tenderless weapon
03:19The hair clip is a specialized part
03:21Highly sensitive to touch
03:23It takes so long that someone touches a plant and gets stuck in it.
03:25He circles around it and climbs it.
03:27An elevator ride helps to reach the sun.
03:30And when his goal is achieved
03:31It misleads about the plant that helped
03:33He wraps himself around him until he suffocates him.
03:35And it cuts off the juice that nourishes it.
03:37But during the growth of this plant
03:39It reached the balsam plant, which protects itself from it.
03:41By means of a protective shield of bristles
03:44So, plants that try to climb
03:45She slips and can't climb any higher.
03:47So you can surpass it and reach the highest height
03:50It's time because the wood is like a bee's mixture.
03:52It has more air than wood.
03:54Its chassis is lightweight, so it's fast.
03:56The width of this plant leaf can reach forty centimeters.
03:58So, you will be left with nothing.
03:59What do you expect, Muhammad?
04:01But there's still another tree that will grow from another place.
04:03The black walnut will strike the roots
04:05And the rider is a chemical poison in the soil
04:07His name is Jaglone, he makes the paper above this
04:10It turns yellow and falls off, and the plant dies.
04:12She was jealous of everyone around her because of this plant.
04:14He can keep Gaza and the place for himself
04:16The battle of De Aziz could last for months.
04:18Until the plant gains enough and reaches the light
04:20This is the kind of peaceful science that people love.
04:22This is the kind of science that has no rivals.
04:25The candle burning for others
04:27He tells you, "The plant escaped from my balcony."
04:29Let's kill each other
04:30They're a bit of a killer.
04:31This, my dear, is a scenario for a battle between plants.
04:34On a single resource
04:35Light response avoids enclosure
04:38By stimulating the plant through rutin
04:40Light consultants arrive
04:42Hormones that stimulate the growth of sclerosus
04:44The one who endures, even if it comes at the expense of the roots.
04:46Three plants were planted in this picture.
04:48Tomatoes in bright light and the three that
04:50On the right, they planted in the shade.
04:51The plants in the shade had long, branching roots.
04:54But what emerged from the shade, its roots are your own.
04:56And the car has no branches
04:57Because the plant is focused and wants to catch the light
04:59He's waiting for any moment when he finds light.
05:02We spend more on gluing than on the roots.
05:04That's why, my dear, when we plant wheat, for example
05:06We plant the fake next to each other
05:08To increase production capacity
05:09Every plant that emerges faces fierce competition
05:11She tries to grow tall quickly so she can produce crops.
05:14This causes a problem called rubble.
05:15Affected by 20% of production
05:17The roots are needed because the plant is in a hurry.
05:19If you don't secure it properly, a little wind could ruin the crop.
05:22But there are plants that take their food ready-made.
05:24Requesting delivery
05:26Invasive plants steal the efforts of others.
05:28Oh my dear, human, animal, plant
05:30The whole thing is missing, it's all eaten.
05:32I love your twists, my dear, with the Australian Christmas tree.
05:36It's not a Christmas tree.
05:37But its name is like the name of a Christmas tree.
05:39So she can get likes because she's occupied
05:41Look at it, my dear, this tree will be found in a well-preserved spot
05:43From dried-up and dead plants
05:45How did she grow up? Illicitly.
05:47It sends out roots that travel through the soil
05:49You'll find roots more than 100 meters deep
05:51Another plant is the camphor tree.
05:53Herbs from the islands, plants that have become fertile
05:56To get 100 years
05:57Christmas comes and the shields come out
05:59Its name is Astoria, which encircles the plant's roots.
06:01The other side works by installing blades.
06:03A grain similar to Egyptian and cut
06:05The plant's roots then produce nutrients that are delivered
06:08It connects itself to tissues
06:09The victim, in order to draw water from him.
06:12And the food is ruining your house
06:13Because you have defeated humanity by naming them after her
06:15Thousands of victims are getting rid of anything
06:17You know, my dear, if this is the case...
06:19It happens according to the plants. I said okay.
06:21Yes, I understand what's happening, my dear.
06:23The term "ornamental plant" is sometimes confused.
06:25In cables and internet behavior
06:27And she cuts it off, remembering the Hijaz
06:29Fifty times a year, cables are cut
06:31Because of this plant, you can't send an email.
06:34Because there's a plant in it, because the wire is off.
06:35The idea that he wants to be is strange to her electricity
06:37You are a conspirator and an idiot
06:38Christmas tree, dear, is a parasitic plant.
06:41Prazite is a word derived from the Greek word
06:43Meaning someone who eats at other people's tables
06:46This woman wants to eat other people's food and drink.
06:48One percent of flowering plants
06:50Which are approximately 4000 plants
06:51All countries are parasitic
06:53I want to tell you, my dear, that there are plants that don't perform photosynthesis at all.
06:56The clothes of the pregnant women or the coscats
06:57This, my dear, is a plant that has neither leaves nor roots and does not perform photosynthesis.
07:02I don't remember the opening vowel.
07:03What he cut off his card
07:04How can you build a computer based on plants?
07:05seed or small seedling
07:07You need to find a plant to water within the first two weeks.
07:10And what will die?
07:10It means it's a mess, Abu Hamad
07:12It's two weeks, my dear.
07:13So you look for the best plant and the second one and the direction
07:16And when she reached him, she dug her arm into him.
07:18Until you reach his circulatory system
07:20The tubes that carry the nutrients
07:21Then it begins to suck the plant's blood.
07:23And the problem, my dear, is the host plant.
07:25A stupid plant that doesn't sense anything is wrong
07:27So its roots prefer to nourish the parasite on it
07:30Until you die
07:30This plant does this with all daicot plants.
07:33The splitting of the sacs is like beans and sneezing.
07:34But there is a plant that can stand up to it
07:36Tomatoes, the tomato plant, feel the burden
07:38And he knows that this load is a strange creature
07:40He starts to defend himself by pretending to be naive.
07:42Kashbi, similar to a cork cover
07:44You know, my dear, that champagne on top is the lid.
07:46So she cut off his food until the lamb died.
07:49Tomatoes, my dear, are not easy.
07:50This could make the caterpillars attack it
07:52Some tomatoes eat each other and produce a compound called
07:55Methyl gazmonate
07:56Researchers at the University of Wisconsin found
07:58The compound is a prophet who makes the larvae instead
08:00If you eat tomato leaves, you'll eat your friends.
08:02And the caterpillars eat their own kind.
08:03My dear, caterpillars will eat each other anyway if there's food.
08:06It's either a monster or there's no food, but timing is important.
08:08If the plants let the harvesters eat each other early
08:10A large part of it will remain intact.
08:12Ammar, what do you think, my dear, that plants are being attacked?
08:14She doesn't defend herself, Canon Qarj
08:16Plants aren't just under
08:18Attack from rival plants
08:19Small grass-eating animals also determine it
08:21Caterpillars, locusts, gnats, and large herbivores
08:24Turtle costumes, fox costumes, and oven costumes
08:26Everyone is greedy for the yarn found in the plant's leaves.
08:28And its sweet stems, and its memory, and its seeds
08:30So that the dear plant can protect itself
08:32It is equipped with internal and external defenses.
08:35So that it becomes a deadly or at least easy task.
08:37Plant like the mimosa or the sensitive lady
08:39If an insect gets close to its leaf, it will feel the touch.
08:42Through receptors
08:43Then it followed electrical signals to the base of the paper.
08:46The cells release irritating particles.
08:49It draws water from its cells, causing its leaves to close.
08:51This movement scares the insect.
08:52The shape is unappealing to animals, so they won't eat it.
08:55Other plants defend themselves.
08:57It is covered by the attachment of the vehicles
08:59Very tight and difficult to chew
09:01Committee uniform
09:02After that, plants protect themselves from predators.
09:04In the same way as small mammals like the eel
09:06With longing, she transformed her papers into a sharp, throbbing yearning.
09:09Guanamia and prickly pear
09:11Some of them have small, stinging logos.
09:13Her name is Tricon
09:14Like the ones on the zucchini and eggplant leaves
09:15Sumac, kiwi, and pineapple
09:17They start their payments with the first stitch of grass-eating plants.
09:21The first thing that comes after eating grass is
09:22Activate the system now
09:25They work with flowers in the shape of a microscopic grave.
09:28Her name is Raftz
09:29This causes small wounds in animals
09:31minor wounds
09:32But this penetrates the membrane covering the
09:35It acts as a competitor to bacteria and toxins.
09:37Some species secrete chemicals such as histamine.
09:40It causes inflammation like the plant Ali Issa
09:42Muhammad and Al-Hadi are talking about plants, not your friends, right?
09:44No, dear, that's actually a plant.
09:45That's his name
09:45Its scientific name is nettle
09:47or urticaria
09:48Because it causes hives if you touch it
09:49After that, we started extracting medicines from it.
09:50We originally intended to produce pharmaceuticals, medicines, and spices.
09:53It was part of the plant's immune system against microbes and predators.
09:57Drugs, my dear, were a weapon of the plants.
10:00What kind of drugs were these that were made so that when the creature comes to eat this plant
10:04He drifts into another world, forgets, and loses focus.
10:08So he no longer remembers what he was?
10:10Even after all this, the microbes still managed to infect the plants.
10:13The cells surrounding the affected area commit suicide.
10:15Self-destruction to create a carnitine for infection
10:17And it walks through the whole plant
10:19The affected branch sends a warning to the other parts.
10:21It releases hormones and compounds that travel through the air.
10:24The second region receives it and gains its defenses
10:26The thickness of the waxy layer of the leaf
10:28It strengthens cell walls and closes leaf pores.
10:31If necessary, this means rallying allies to fight the infection.
10:34For example, cotton plants when caterpillars attack
10:36Khalil releases about ten chemicals into the air.
10:39Benadi is calling for the wasps to come and kill Irqat
10:41Even after all this, the plant loses the battle, warning those around it.
10:44In the researchers' experiment, they brought insects to the sagebrush plant.
10:47The insect will destroy the vine
10:48And the scientists also extracted some information from it.
10:50In the period that followed
10:51They found that the damaged branches were much less affected by insects.
10:54As well as the branches of the neighboring plants
10:57They suspect that the reason is that defenses against these insects have been strengthened.
11:00After receiving warnings about the plants he brought
11:02And that's why, my dear, you smell something after you cut the wonder
11:05Due to chemical compounds
11:06The strange thing is that it sends them out from the plants around it as a warning.
11:09Think about it, my dear plant: prey that cannot age from attack.
11:12But it defends itself with strong armor and a chemical arsenal brimming with weapons.
11:16and cross-species alliances
11:18And he alerts those around him
11:19He is a sweet-looking, well-read person.
11:21If they are monsters, why would I warn other plants?
11:23Plants, my dear, don't know how to communicate inside their bodies like we do.
11:25You don't know how to get information from one place to another.
11:28It depends on the fact that it sends signals from branch to branch.
11:31He who removes it is by the signs of love
11:32As an incidental result of self-defense mechanisms
11:35The plants next to it are the ones listening for these signals.
11:38Like when your neighbor gets Corona
11:39So you go and store the Panadol
11:41Plants generally understand the signals sent by another plant of the same species.
11:44The important thing is that the species continues, even if, hypothetically, it dies.
11:47But plants like tobacco and tomatoes decode signals from other plants.
11:51Thank God, my dear plant, it managed to reach its goal and escaped the competitors.
11:55Now he's grown up and needs to get a horse to carry on his name.
11:58The process begins with the male impregnating the female.
12:00There are no sperm in plants.
12:02But there are pollen grains
12:03We fill the pollen with light pollen.
12:06The wind might carry it away, or it might float away with the water.
12:08But the rest needs to be said; someone has to intervene and move them.
12:11Beetles, moths, birds or bats
12:14The important thing is that the pollen grains will be transferred from the male enemy to the female enemy.
12:18After plants that contain enemies, such as mango and kiwi
12:21Manga is hermaphroditic, my dear.
12:22Of course not, my dear
12:23This type of plant contains the male or female enemy.
12:26The thing that produces pollen contains a little air or an insect
12:28It sticks to her legs or sticks with the air, the vaccine
12:31He goes to the female enemy
12:32This is in the case of plants that have two enemies.
12:34In the case of plants that have no enemies
12:35We need someone to bring it to transport the grains and the first rules of nature.
12:38Each type is sold with its own salvation and doubts the survival of the two.
12:41Plants exploit this rule to do what they want.
12:44Orchid flower costume
12:45One of the most widespread plants that has spread to almost every corner of the world.
12:49European orchids, for example, target male bees.
12:52We know he wants to get married
12:53The flower secretes pheromones similar to those of a female bee.
12:57So the remembrance of God Almighty is attracted
12:59It lands on the flower that not only releases pheromones
13:01But it also resembles a female bee in appearance.
13:04And the clever lady is kind
13:06Tala'a Feek Akawn
13:07During the male bee's attempts, he mates with the fake female.
13:10It is covered with pollen.
13:12time after second
13:13The male bee catches the trick and no longer lands on backs with the same scent.
13:17So you think the orchid pot is doomed to fail?
13:19This is exactly what the flower is like
13:21The male bee will leave the place because another flower far away will trick him.
13:24It produces different pheromones
13:26He goes down on her and tries to marry her.
13:28I thought she was a female bee
13:30And he moves from the first flower
13:32So, on his legs are the pollen grains of the male
13:35When he descends upon the second flower
13:37He mistook her for a bee and tried to marry her.
13:39Is it really possible for the first orchid to be this flower?
13:43Professor Brashed is being laughed at
13:45These are plants
13:46Flowers are a currency that floats in an insect
13:48Flowers generally vary in their appearance so as not to get caught
13:51The Dracaea orchidise is reserving another insect
13:53A flower similar to the Onissa of the Pink-Bearer
13:56Onsidium orchidides
13:57It resembles male bees
13:58In the real Zakour, they come and have sex with her.
14:00And vaccination takes place
14:01The look of the flowers and their fragrance is the most romantic thing about them.
14:04Just a strategy from a plant to lure the pollinators' feet
14:07If it requires rotten souls, they won't be taken.
14:10The Dracula orchid emits a cat urine scent that attracts flies.
14:14Rafflesia is the largest flower in the world.
14:16Her weight can reach seven kilos
14:18And its presentation could reach Peter
14:19A flower without roots or leaves
14:21However, she succeeded
14:22And she says it existed before you, human.
14:25Sixty million years ago, my dear, it was parasitically eating this flower.
14:28And in order to get married, she produces a foul odor.
14:31It smells like the dead
14:32And that's why it's called the following.
14:33corpus flower
14:34To attract flies to the corpses
14:36Of course you're telling me, Abu Hamid
14:37Sorry, I don't have time for this nonsense about insects.
14:39Insects are stupid
14:40These plants are not only capable of deceiving insects
14:43These plants also have the ability to deceive animals
14:46For example, you have the Green Bird Flower
14:47The yolan magdolae, which is the bat flower
14:50and the bird of paradise
14:50White Igrit Orchid or Big Duck Orchid
14:53All these countries, my dear, are just two birds with the same purpose.
14:56The Holokia flower emerged from them, and some of it remains in nature.
14:59Fifty-seven only
15:00Because the bird that was pollinating it and these plants are trying
15:02They tried Naqqara
15:03This is the first time I've seen anything like this on Instagram.
15:05But God sent someone to help them.
15:07A big man named Hank Oppenheim
15:08He picks up pollen with a light brush from flower to flower.
15:12Before he leaves, he plays the sounds of the Ivy.
15:14So that he can summon the rest of them to return and pollinate the plants.
15:18Thank God, the mating is happening and the plant is getting married.
15:21Even if it takes the benefits of creatures, it's not a problem.
15:23Congratulations
15:24And now we have the new baby
15:26Crown Prince
15:27Does the plant throw away the seed so that it will grow next to it?
15:29no
15:29If the seed fell under the plant's leg
15:31It will produce competitive sofas
15:32What did we gain?
15:33When the type increases in the same place
15:35Living, use other places that need to transfer seeds
15:38Wild oat seeds do something strange
15:40All people are seeds with two arms called Quns.
15:42The first thing that happened to her was that her seeds came with her.
15:43These arms do something amazing
15:44You walk until you find a rock or a hole in the soil.
15:47She plants herself in it
15:48Another tree is called the Sandbox
15:49It transfers its seeds in a different way
16:01And at a speed of seventy meters per second
16:04Not every seed has the ability to grow and explode.
16:06If the seed is light, the root will remove it.
16:08Cottonwood tree costume that you inflate and the bird
16:11These are seeds from a brisket
16:12The seed can walk on water
16:13Especially if there is a thin layer around it, it will crack
16:15Coconut costume
16:16Its lining is light, so it can be carried in the ocean.
16:18Until you find an island
16:19The second one needs to deceive other people
16:22Is it tempting to be a little bit of coffee grounds?
16:23No, they won't be able to remove the seed.
16:24By deceiving the animals, you lure them with a seed coat.
16:28Why does it taste so good?
16:29The animal eats this covering.
16:31What kind of animal is this, Abu Ahmed?
16:32Is it me too?
16:33You? You're an animal, Abu Ahmed?
16:35I'm talking about fruit, my dear.
16:36Fruit is not a servant of plants to the world
16:39This is a trick to transfer seeds
16:40You or I are no different from bees
16:43The one that shines like nectar
16:44You will eat the fruit, you will serve the fruit
16:46And the seed will remain intact.
16:47Covered with a hard-to-digest layer
16:49That's what I wanted, my dear, if you ate tomatoes, guavas, or peppers.
16:52I did what everyone else did and noticed the result: the seeds were intact.
16:55The seed didn't just move
16:56She also found features on my side
16:59There are other seeds, my dear.
17:01Hitchhikers
17:01Aref, my dear, when you're not in charge of the plants
17:03So you meet Shawq Ab Kouchi or on Hadouma
17:04The farmers call it
17:05Take me with you
17:06It uses you based on your clothing.
17:08To transport the seeds miles from their mother
17:10Luna is already like that, so it's a harmless trick.
17:12But let me tell you that there are animals whose lives are being destroyed
17:14The Basil trees were just like the rest of the hitchhikers
17:17He leaves his seeds on birds that build their nests on it.
17:20But what I did was take this to a higher level
17:22Dear home, cover the seeds with squirts.
17:24And small snatches, and not a single seed remained.
17:26This is a spiteful person carrying 200 seeds
17:28When our bird perishes, listen to the story
17:30The eggs hatch by the young birds getting hold of the seeds.
17:34And it left her unable to fly.
17:35Then the little birds fall from the tree and die of hunger.
17:38I'll see what happens; these seeds will be used to kill the victim.
17:43As a fertilizer that nourishes it
17:44The evil plant
17:46Sitges will be upon the children of the slanderer
17:47Plants and other things in their place can utilize animals
17:50And she makes deals with them not just for vaccinations
17:52And transfer the seeds, but sometimes also if the food isn't enough.
17:54I'd like to introduce you to the pitcher plant
17:56A plant that grows in poor environments of nitrification
17:58To find an alternative source, his papers were changed
18:01to a deep jug with a lid
18:03I'll tell you in a little while what it looks like.
18:04The pitcher plants are summoning professors for a strange relationship.
18:06It secretes nectar onto the edges of the jug
18:09Fiji Tishro, a stadi animal
18:11Living in tropical forests
18:12He comes and licks the secretions that are covering the jug.
18:15The idea is that he cannot obtain the nectar.
18:17Except when it points its rear end towards the plant's opening
18:20He obtains nectar and mixes with the nectar.
18:22Pepe works at the heart of the plant.
18:24We're in a place where there isn't much nitrous oxide.
18:26When we get a nice poop like this
18:28Fata is a sweet source of malaria and nitrosine.
18:30Here, take some nectar.
18:31Baby's crazy, by the way
18:33Feces are responsible for 57%
18:35From Nitrochin plant leaf
18:37Other plants like the plants in this picture
18:39The animal is not tempted by nectar, nor is this above.
18:41This is like a teasho, but this plant is attractive.
18:43Bats, bats have radar
18:45It emits ultrasound waves
18:47It captures the reflection of these waves and deflects them onto the world.
18:49The plant learned to mimic the sound of a bat.
18:51His papers turned into a structure
18:53Concave and elongated axial waves
18:55Many corners in the Bat Club
18:57He comes inside and sleeps
18:59And every now and then, the Qatari pot opens
19:01No, the plant isn't looking for any animal.
19:03No, this is due to cognitive preferences.
19:05Pitcher plants, the owner of the baby's henna
19:08It did that because it grows on mountains.
19:10It doesn't have the animals that surround its plant siblings.
19:12Second pitcher plants
19:13She also faces a shortage of talent, so she gets angry.
19:15frog, insect, or nectar group
19:17But the ewer missed
19:19Hairs slip on it, preventing it from firmly placing my leg.
19:22He falls into a deep well
19:23Full of fluids, trying to get out
19:25But the inner wall becomes slippery with waxy secretions.
19:28He prefers to try and get out before he discovers
19:30He is currently in an open stomach
19:32The digestion process is about to begin.
19:34And now it's starting to slowly decompose.
19:36Until it turns into a joke and gets drunk
19:38With the rest of the previous day's prayers
19:39This is just one type of approximately 630 plants
19:42He eats meat
19:44Oh, what a strange situation, Abu Hamid! Even the plants aren't in nature!
19:46Vision, it's Batat, I didn't find nitrogen in the soil.
19:48So you take from the insight of its modified papers
19:50It will be a trap
19:51Abu Hamid, I know her.
19:52It's like a fly that comes and stands on its mouth, then you close it off.
19:54Finesse Flight Rap is excellent
19:55Even Abu Hamid sees the videos being touched and then they shut down
19:58great
19:58You've filled this plant so well, Abu Hamid!
20:00What you don't know is that if a plant closes its mouth with every touch
20:03This is a huge waste of energy
20:04The insect might escape
20:05So the plant makes sure that the prey is secure.
20:08His paper is divided into textual parts
20:09Each text has tiny hairs called trigger hairs.
20:12eloquent name
20:13The plant, as you say, counts
20:15He waits until he has been touched at least twice.
20:17During a period of 15 to 20 years
20:20Five touches sends and brings digestive enzymes right away
20:23It's passing, my dear
20:24A plant that is contagious
20:25So that he doesn't waste his energy on a gnat
20:27Not even a drop of rain
20:28He knows how to assess his prey
20:29Is it worth the effort or not?
20:30All plants eat meat, but in different ways.
20:33Petrotus and Sandiose cover their leaves with a sticky gum.
20:36So the sandwich wraps its paper around it until it catches
20:39And all the animal struggled to get out
20:41Everything the external stomach attached to it
20:43The bulldozers or water loads
20:45Its leaves are modified in the shape of a hinged door.
20:47It is also lined with zanan bristles
20:49The first machines it touches are like an amoeba or larva.
20:52It happens in a thousandth of a second
20:55She traps her victims in a watery grave until they laugh.
20:58This plant epic helped plants adapt in all ecosystems
21:02In the barren desert, underwater, and between city sidewalks
21:05And we are the other side, the beneficiaries of this epic.
21:08Millions of years ago, plants flourished, giving rise to ice ages.
21:11It paved the way for a world ready for humans
21:13Our equation for respiration is the inverse of photosynthesis.
21:15But while the plant fights enemies from other plants and insects
21:19The real enemy is not them, the enemy is us.
21:21Organisms that have come to depend on it for survival
21:23Those who don't see that we have been living in the Holocene epoch for 12,000 years
21:27This is the first stable climate period after the last ice age.
21:30During this time, all human civilizations developed.
21:32But from 1950 a new era began
21:34Anthropocene
21:35Human impact on the climate
21:37To such an extent that he created a new era
21:39Humans, represented by 0.01%
21:42from the biomass of creatures
21:44They made all these changes
21:46While it contains 82% of the biomass
21:50We're the ones who made some dramatic changes that surpass the extinction of the dinosaurs.
21:54We destroyed 50% of the plants
21:56According to Chris Fablí
21:59The conditions provided by the plant
22:01To make our planet suitable for receiving us
22:03These circumstances are slipping away from us now.
22:05And a new era begins in which humans and plants atrophy.
22:08And he hides himself with him
22:09Follow us, my dear, for this episode
22:10Show you how the world of plants
22:12A world full of movement and action
22:13And not a stagnant world and a woe
22:15As we imagined or as we expected
22:17Plants teach us that sometimes cleverness
22:19It's not about us modifying the environment to suit our desires.
22:21But the safest and most sustainable way is for us to adapt ourselves to the environment.
22:24That's all, my dear
22:25I hope, my dear, that in this episode you have learned some nice meanings about plants
22:27You discovered that they are neither good nor ten
22:29They are plants trying to live their lives
22:31They try to eat in order to survive.
22:32That's it, my dear, finally, but not least
22:34Don't forget to check out the previous cases.
22:35Let's see the new cases
22:36We forget to verify the sources
22:37And we subscribe to the YouTube channel
22:38That's all, my dear. Thank you very much.