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  • - Hey it's me, Destin.

  • Welcome back to Smarter Every Day.

  • There's a really cool thing happening

  • on the internet right now and we want you to be a part.

  • It's called Team Trees and the goal is simple.

  • 20 million trees by 2020

  • and we actually have a mechanism to do this.

  • If you go to teamtrees.org

  • the Arbor Day Foundation has agreed

  • to plant one tree in the ground

  • for every dollar that's donated there.

  • That is a huge opportunity

  • and internet content creators from all over,

  • every genre of content, were all working together

  • to do this but we need you.

  • We need you to help us do this

  • by going to teamtrees.org and donating.

  • Let's say that we're all on board and we're all awesome

  • and we make this happen.

  • $20 million go to the Arbor Day Foundation

  • and they're gonna plant 20 million trees.

  • How do we do that scientifically?

  • In order to figure this out,

  • I wanna go look at this whole concept

  • through the eyes of my granddaddy

  • who attempted to plant hundreds of trees

  • in a field back in the 60s.

  • My dad was there and he remembers exactly what happened.

  • (beep)

  • - Early 60s, '61, '62, Daddy had a group of students

  • from Auburn come and plant some longleaf pines.

  • They planted them in different methods,

  • some in a hill, some in a furrow, hundreds of them.

  • And only two of them lived.

  • - Why did Auburn University come here

  • to plant trees in this field?

  • - It's not native to this area and Auburn wanted to see

  • if a longleaf pine could survive this far north.

  • - [Destin Voiceover] The fact

  • that longleaf pines were planted here is super interesting

  • because Granddaddy's land was just north

  • of the natural range for that species.

  • Whenever I travel to different regions of the world,

  • I love to discover what tree species thrive

  • in that environment, whether it be a strangler fig in Peru,

  • a baobab tree in western Africa,

  • or the famous Recoleta rubber tree

  • in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

  • Certain species of trees always seem

  • to thrive in certain areas.

  • To learn more about why certain thrive

  • in certain environments,

  • I went to Auburn University School

  • of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences

  • where I met with Dr. Becky Barlow and Dr. John Kush.

  • Both are experts in sustainable forestry

  • and both know a ton about the longleaf pine.

  • - [Destin] How does a person find the right tree

  • for the right location?

  • Let's say someone lives in Ohio for example,

  • or they live in, I don't know, Wyoming

  • and they need to figure out the exact tree

  • they need to plant on their property.

  • - The first thing that they need to do is,

  • like Dr. Kush was saying,

  • you need to think about the soils.

  • You need to think about what soils you have.

  • You need to think about what you are willing to do

  • from a management standpoint.

  • How active are you willing to be

  • in the management of your property?

  • Some people are just, wanna plant it and walk away

  • and not have to do anything to it.

  • And that's okay too and there are certain things

  • you can do from that standpoint.

  • But most of the time, you're gonna have to plant it.

  • Then you're gonna have to monitor it

  • and you're gonna have to maybe do some thinnings

  • in there to make sure

  • that the trees have enough water, light, nutrients

  • to grow, because they start to get too crowded

  • and then they're gonna start to die naturally.

  • And so you wanna thin it

  • so you don't have that natural mortality.

  • You can actually capture that mortality.

  • - [Destin] So there's science to it.

  • - Yeah, a lot.

  • And you also need to know about the trees.

  • You need to think about the tree that you want to plant

  • and think about its life history,

  • its silvics is what it's called.

  • - [Destin] How do you spell that?

  • - S-I-L-V-I-C-S.

  • It's kind of its life history.

  • Where does it normally occur?

  • Where does it naturally occur?

  • How does it grow?

  • How tall does it get?

  • Does it need a lot of sunlight or can it tolerate shade?

  • It's those things like that that you need to understand

  • about the trees that you're wanting to plant

  • and then making sure you, again,

  • that's how you match the tree to your site.

  • - [Destin Voiceover] Dr. Kush pulled up a soil survey

  • from Granddaddy's land

  • and explained that the different types of soil affect

  • how trees grow differently.

  • He said the main factor, however, was probably

  • that Granddaddy planted them in a grassy area

  • where the weeds probably choked out the trees.

  • - [Destin] So longleaf pine.

  • - Longleaf pine.

  • - [Destin] What do I need to know?

  • - Burn it.

  • (Destin laughs)

  • - What?

  • - Burn it.

  • - [Destin] What do you mean?

  • - Plant it, burn it.

  • - [Destin] What do you mean?

  • - You gotta use prescribed fire,

  • get your little area cleaned out,

  • get your trees planted, wait a year, burn it.

  • - [Destin] So you're talking about the undergrowth.

  • - The undergrowth.

  • - [Destin] Okay so you're not saying,

  • "Cut the tree down and burn it."

  • - No, don't cut the tree down.

  • Please don't cut the tree.

  • We're doing too much of that already.

  • - [Destin] Okay so fires can be a good thing

  • if they're done correctly, is what you're saying.

  • - Fires are a excellent thing if done correctly.

  • But we have to do it correctly.

  • - [Destin] What do you mean?

  • - You have to prescribe, get your conditions right,

  • prescribe the fire, get a burn permit

  • from the Forestry Commission and do what's right for nature.

  • You're just mimicking what nature did.

  • If we weren't here it would be happening.

  • If you have nobody here, get away all the people,

  • all the roads, and you just have wildlife out there,

  • a lightning strike hits a tree, starts a fire.

  • It'd go for miles, tens of miles, hundreds of miles.

  • So the southeast was seeing fire very frequent

  • and thus you had longleaf pine there.

  • - [Destin Voiceover] Dr. Kush explained to me

  • that the longleaf pine is different.

  • He explained that it has adapted the ability

  • to actually be burned during its first few years of life.

  • Dr. Barlow and Dr. Kush took me outside

  • to see actual longleaf pines and explain how they work.

  • - We actually have a longleaf pine in the grass stage here.

  • - [Dr. Kush] I planted this four years ago.

  • The idea of trying to bring longleaf pine back to this site.

  • It passed the stage

  • where it doesn't really put out any woody extension growth

  • like all trees do.

  • It waits for its chance to take fires for a couple years

  • and then that central bud, it will one day decide

  • that it's time to come out of the grass stage

  • and off it will go.

  • - [Destin] Really?

  • That is not, - What that--

  • - [Destin] That is not what I think of

  • when I think of a small tree.

  • - It is not.

  • Any longleaf pine this size can take fire.

  • Any other tree will die.

  • - [Destin] So that's why it exists like this.

  • - That's why it exists like this.

  • And then when it comes out of that grass stage,

  • it'll put on four or five feet of growth in that year,

  • get its quote unquote head above the fire,

  • and it just hangs out

  • for the next three, four hundred years.

  • - [Destin] So this is just a completely different strategy

  • for survival? - Absolutely.

  • Unique in the world.

  • - [Destin Voiceover] When the longleaf pine is

  • in the grass stage, it's busy making a very deep taproot,

  • which also means it's drought resistant.

  • Check out the comparison of this loblolly pine

  • and this longleaf pine.

  • - This is only two years old and that's four years old.

  • - [Destin] We're in 35 days of drought.

  • Did this die recently?

  • - Yeah this probably just happened

  • within the last three or four days.

  • - [Destin] Oh really? - Yeah.

  • - [Destin] So we've got some real data here.

  • - This is real data.

  • This is actual.

  • - [Destin] Loblolly pine died because of the drought.

  • The longleaf pine is just kicking it.

  • - He's just hanging out saying,

  • "I'm not quite ready to come out of the grass stage."

  • What that trigger's gonna be, nobody knows but--

  • - [Destin] At some point its gonna figure it out.

  • - My guess just based on the size now,

  • it's gonna come out next year.

  • - [Destin Voiceover] Odd as it might sound,

  • talking to Dr. Kush and Dr. Barlow taught me

  • that one of the reasons Granddaddy's trees might have died

  • would've been lack of fire.

  • Four days after visiting Auburn University,

  • I'm driving across northern Florida.

  • Trees on the left side of the road are tall and healthy

  • but they have burned trunks.

  • Trees on the right side of the road are crowded

  • and they look like scrub brush.

  • It all clicked when I saw this sign.

  • - I could not have planned this if I tried.

  • Turns out, there's a place down here

  • called the E.O. Wilson Biophilia Center.

  • They're all about the longleaf pine

  • and I have to show you what I learned.

  • These people are awesome.

  • This is Ashlyn. (Ashlyn laughs)

  • I just found this place.

  • And I'm seeing that right there,

  • which leads me to believe that you guys believe in burning

  • to promote longleaf pine health, is that right?

  • - Very controlled burning.

  • - [Destin] Controlled burning. (Ashlyn laughs)

  • But the whole idea is to get the fuel

  • at the bottom of the ecosystem

  • to take out all the scrub brush right?

  • - Exactly, yes.

  • - [Destin] Cool and you said there's somebody I can talk to?

  • - Yeah definitely, we'll find Bob.

  • - 'Kay we're gonna go see Turtle Bob

  • who knows about burning longleaf pines.

  • - Hi. - [Destin] Nice to meet you.

  • So you know about burning longleaf pines?

  • - Well, we've burned a few.

  • (laughter)

  • - [Ashlyn] Planted a few as well.

  • - Fire is important

  • to keep the longleaf pine ecosystem alive

  • because to start with, it requires bare mineral soil

  • to start germinating.

  • And then what it does is it opens it up enough

  • for gopher tortoises to survive.

  • Gopher tortoises have to have an open habitat.

  • - [Ashlyn] This is a gopher tortoise.

  • - [Destin] And these are the turtles,

  • or they're not turtles, they're tortoises,

  • that make the burrows right? - Yes.

  • - [Destin] And they make the burrows

  • as a result of the longleaf pine?

  • - They do make it in that nice open sandy soil

  • that can be found in the longleaf pine ecosystem.

  • And they dig those burrows really far into the ground

  • and it's not only important for them,

  • but they are a keystone species

  • because they're gonna dig those burrows

  • which can house up to 200 or 350 other species,

  • especially during those fires.

  • - [Destin] She's waving.

  • - Those animals need places to go.

  • Really good place to do that is gonna be

  • a big hole in the ground.

  • - [Destin Voiceover] Ashlyn took me out into the forest

  • and showed me several young longleaf pines

  • in the grass stage and then the secondary stage

  • known as the bottle brush phase,

  • which then leads to the sapling phase

  • and finally the mature trees.

  • Ashlyn took me out further into the forest

  • to show me the holes that the gopher tortoises dig

  • and this is where it all came together.

  • Because this tree can survive fire,

  • the underbrush gets cleared away

  • which paves way for this turtle

  • to gain access to the forest floor

  • where it can dig these holes.

  • As Burning Bob explained,

  • these holes support hundreds of other species

  • that're then able to live on the forest floor,

  • which creates an ecosystem

  • which can sustain even larger umbrella species

  • such as the black bear.

  • So it isn't about a single tree,

  • it's about an entire ecosystem.

  • An ecosystem which takes advantage

  • of one particular tree's ability to survive fire.

  • - [Destin] So this is what the natural forest looks like?

  • - Yes, if we didn't burn it, lightning would.

  • And then it would eventually have this nice open clear area.

  • Lots of room for the wildlife to live in

  • compared to this side. - [Destin] But this side.

  • (Destin laughs)

  • - Lots of different kinds of trees.

  • We've got some slash pines, we've got some oak trees,

  • yaupon hollies, taking over, kind of crowding out

  • some of those other pine trees that would typically be here.

  • And then there's a ton of leafler on the ground.

  • We actually call that pine straw our fuel load.

  • If lightning were to strike that right now

  • it would burn entirely too hot entirely too quick

  • and would definitely turn into a wildfire

  • which would be very bad.

  • - So if I were to decide to plant a tree,

  • what would you tell me?

  • What do I need to know?

  • - I would say plant a longleaf

  • if you live in an area that'll sustain a longleaf.

  • You're gonna need to be upland, not too wet.

  • Definitely stick to the native plants.

  • - So look at the local environment and the ecosystem

  • and identify the silvics of the trees in your area

  • and figure out what trees will grow there

  • and then pick something like that, you'd say?

  • - Yeah, something that's a lot

  • of different animals are gonna use.

  • - Okay, so think about the whole ecosystem.

  • Don't just think about the one tree.

  • - Yeah, it doesn't have to look pretty

  • but it has a job.

  • (laughter)

  • - teamtrees.org that's the whole point of this entire video.

  • We've partnered with the Arbor Day Foundation

  • because they are the experts.

  • They understand the silvics,

  • they know exactly what tree to plant in what location,

  • and the goal is simple.

  • We want to raise $20 million for 20 million trees by 2020.

  • And to do that we're gonna need your help.

  • And I would encourage you to consider going to teamtrees.org

  • and donating or right here on the YouTube page,

  • there's a donate button below.

  • If you use that, YouTube's gonna pay

  • for the transaction fees.

  • This is a huge thing that we're all doing together.

  • It is rare to have the opportunity

  • to plant one tree for one dollar

  • so I'm gonna take advantage of that.

  • I don't know if you've ever planted a tree.

  • It's kind of expensive to go buy an individual tree

  • and put it in the ground but at this kind of scale

  • you can literally plant a thousand trees

  • for a thousand dollars

  • or a hundred trees for a hundred dollars

  • or 10 trees for 10 dollars.

  • Your money goes a really long way to help the environment.

  • So if you're interested in doing that, teamtrees.org

  • or click the button below to donate here on YouTube.

  • In fact, the sponsor for this video, Hello Fresh,

  • they've agreed to donate $5000 to plant 5000 trees.

  • (beep)

  • This episode of Smarter Every Day

  • and my donation to teamtrees.org is sponsored by Hello Fresh

  • and you're gonna help today, Dad?

  • - I'm gonna try.

  • - [Destin] I don't ever think you've cooked in front of me.

  • Maybe-- - Hot dogs

  • and eggs is all I know.

  • - [Destin] All right okay, there we go.

  • Today we're gonna do pineapple poblano beef tacos

  • and we're gonna cook for Mom.

  • You think we can do this?

  • You've assemble spacecraft.

  • - I have.

  • - [Destin] We can do this.

  • Got our meats, got our ingredients.

  • Let's get to chopping.

  • Hello Fresh is a home meal kit delivery system

  • that sends you fresh ingredients to your house.

  • You can cook it, it's really simple.

  • Just follow the instructions

  • and you can make a delicious meal for your family.

  • Poblano. - Poblano.

  • - [Destin Voiceover] If you want to make Hello Fresh

  • at your house, you can get it by going to hellofresh.com

  • and using the promo code smarter80 at checkout.

  • That gets you 80 bucks off the first month of Hello Fresh,

  • which is like eight free meals.

  • That is a lot of food and a lot of savings.

  • - Drizzle? Oh.

  • - [Destin] Oh? - Oh?

  • (laughter)

  • - [Destin] You're the one I got it from.

  • (Darryl laughs)

  • Hello Fresh is now from $5.66 per serving

  • so you can feed your family delicious food

  • at an affordable price.

  • All right, moment of truth.

  • What do you think?

  • - It's good.

  • - Big thanks to Hello Fresh for sponsoring this.

  • Big portion of this sponsorship is gonna go towards trees

  • at teamtrees.org

  • (beep)

  • Please consider going to teamtrees.org

  • and joining Team Trees.

  • Also go check out all these other videos

  • these other creators are making.

  • We're all in this together.

  • We are trying to do this huge movement together

  • and we need you on Team Trees.

  • So that's it!

  • I'm Destin, you're getting smarter every day.

  • Have a good one.

  • Bye.

- Hey it's me, Destin.

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2000万本の木を植える方法 - 毎日スマートに 227 #TeamTrees (How to Plant 20 MILLION TREES - Smarter Every Day 227 #TeamTrees)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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