If we know what we are looking at, rather than what we are looking for, we can find epic struggles going on all the time, right in our own back yards. I'm always humbled to think that the great French entomologist Henri Fabre (more) based his life's work on observations he made in an area not significantly larger than my back yard.
As long as plants and animals have been alive, things have never stood still. Today, in a quiet patch of green, we can see the kind of struggle that may have been a factor in the extinction of the dinosaurs.
The lizard-tail (pictures and more), named for the shape of its flowers, is a modest little plant native to the southeastern United States. You can find it in moist, shady areas blooming in the spring.
The air yam (pictures and more) is a relative of the yams that are almost as important as turkey for Thanksgiving dinner-and also a relative to the plant that provides the active ingredient in birth control pills. An invasive vine, it can grow very rapidly, because, like all vines, it does not have to devote nourishment to building a sturdy upright stem.
When the two plants are growing in the same area, it is likely that the lizard-tail will be crowded out by the air yam, and so, a few square feet in the back yard or along the side of the road can be a battlefield (as you can see in my photo). Ecology is not just about how we human beings get along with our environment; it is about how all living things interact.
When I used to teach children about dinosaurs, I often talked about carnivorous and herbivorous animals. The young paleontologists often asked if a particular animal was "good" or "bad," that is, if it ate plants (good) or meat (bad). Of course, animals are pretty much beyond good and bad. A meat-eater does what a meat-eater gotta do, while from the point of view of a blade of grass, a cow is a mass-murderer. (If you are interested in dinosaurs, you can find more about them here.)
Although it is tempting to cheer on the home team, the gentle little lizard-tails trying to hold onto their homeland, the truth is, the air yam is not trying to do the natives in. It is simply doing what it does best: grow.
We don't have to take a NASA flight or head out to wherever the latest reality television stars are surviving. If we keep our eyes open to see what we are looking at, we can find Heaven in a grain of sand, and a mighty epic in what many would dismiss as a patch of weeds.
Published by Michael Segers
I'm old enough to know better, but too young to admit it. I've been a teacher, owner of a sandwich shop, collector of neckties, acupuncture student. Now I get bossed around by my parrot and rejoice that I d... View profile
- Reality Television Trends and Thoughts The trend is to throw some celebrities into what used to be a reality television format.
- Reality Television Addiction Why do so many people find a fascination in watching others live out their lives on television? It's pure addiction and the human desire to know what others are doing compared to their own lives! Is it truly entertain...
- Men and Communication in Reality Television This essay examines how men communicate and examples of this by using reality television.
- Human Beings Are Capable of Change Via External or Internal Impetus Whether the impetus is internal or external, human beings constantly prove themselves capable of change.
-
Can You Be a Meat Eater and Still Enjoy Vegetarian Food?
Have you ever been called a "semi veg?" Some people think that if you are a meat eater, you should avoid vegetarian meals. Does that make vegetarian meals out of bounds? Are you...
- Meat Eating Plants !!!
- Nigeria as Seen Through Two Famous Works of Fiction
- Thanksgiving Dinner for One
- Argument in Favor of Genetic Engineering of Human Beings
- Ways in Which Reality Television Has Changed
- Best Reality Television Shows for This Season
- America's Love Affair with Reality Television
|
|
34 Comments
Post a CommentMore page love
I wondered what those odd hanging potatoes I mean yams were :)
great compairason, good read.
Excellent article and like Donna said, very clever title. Congrats on being featured it was well deserved.
Your article is featured in the technology/science section on AC. Nice job and clever title.
very cool!
Nice work. So true that we can find many interesting things right under our noses.
Well done on a topic many people don't consider!
The air yams look familiar...
So THAT's what all that blood curdling screaming is coming from my backyard at night! :)