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Iceland's Deserts Are Turning Purple - here's why 

Mossy Earth
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In this video, we are putting the Icelandic Lupin debate under the microscope to try and find out the good and the bad about this invasive species.
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⏱️TIMESTAMPS⏱️
0:00 Intro
1:04 Ecology
2:05 History
3:38 Debate
🧐 ABOUT THIS VIDEO
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Lupinus Nootkatensis was introduced to Iceland in 1945 and since then it has been a source of debate for the Icelandic people. Is it an Invasive species? Yes. Should it be removed? This is where it gets a little more complicated…and it’s this question that we want to explore in this video.
Lupin has both positive and negative consequences in Iceland and it’s important to analyse both sides of the story to get a better grip on the truth. Lupin can be used as a tool for reforestation but it can also have severe consequences on the land. So what are your thoughts on this fascinating plant?

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4 май 2024

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Комментарии : 8 тыс.   
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
🌲 If you would like to support our rewilding projects by becoming a member you learn all about them here: www.mossy.earth Every single member is essential and it is ultimately what makes our work possible. - Cheers, Duarte
@jethrotertiusthethird2439
@jethrotertiusthethird2439 Год назад
thanks for the work you do!
@Eloign
@Eloign Год назад
Would this work in Faroe Island as well? They have virtually no trees and I read that the lupin could reinvigorate the soil and help grow trees in the future. Also, why not start a campaign called "Furs for Faroe" where people buy sheep products from the farmers and they agree to plant a portion of their land with lupin (maybe the sheep can eat it?) or trees. Great video btw!
@farnabyurquhart6970
@farnabyurquhart6970 Год назад
Chop-and-drop. Once a field has been successfully colonised by lupins, mow it before it flowers the following year and leave the cutting to mulch. Repeat over a course of a few years until the land is nitrogen rich and reintroduce indigenous species. It’s the perfect healing plant as long as it’s used as part of a well-planned system of reforestation
@tobiasgorny8974
@tobiasgorny8974 Год назад
Maybe you should look for species that used to grow in this particular ecosystem. Maybe there are some plants that are currently extinct on Iceland that fit into the ecosystem. Maybe such plant could even act as an antagonist to the lupin
@seanniemeyer5437
@seanniemeyer5437 Год назад
I read an article, where goats were used to control this weed. Perhaps the Icelandic Goat can make a comeback.
@Novum228
@Novum228 Год назад
Don’t worry. It’s totally not because someone killed a wall of flesh in the underworld, which causes a certain corruption to spread faster
@LlamasOldAcc
@LlamasOldAcc Год назад
Y E S
@LlamasOldAcc
@LlamasOldAcc Год назад
Did you come from duke fish, Ron?
@paolo3794
@paolo3794 Год назад
What?
@WindowsDrawer
@WindowsDrawer Год назад
OmG tErRaRiA
@dravenzindle7585
@dravenzindle7585 Год назад
I clicked the video for THIS comment
@marsveinsson2295
@marsveinsson2295 Год назад
As a southern icelander, i can tell you i have personally seen and lived throught the direct change it had in our area. Absolutely amazing. Way more plants. What this video doesnt tell you is this. There was only rocks, then lupina came, now its grasses and trees. Lupina doesnt like to share space. Once thee is competing it just moves on. Living and dying making dirt in that rock layer that other plants then finally take hold. Thats what my experience had been. I see her as a god send.
@izoyt
@izoyt Год назад
Imo, that should happened via natural forestation etc, also its definitely not just the rock in volcanic active area. As someone living in central nor more eat-south region of Europe, i can also tell you, what invasive plants (and animals etc) could do and there's no way we will ever be free of them. And still, they sell non domestic fruit seeds etc without any reserves to teh problem. We should acknowledge this more and let nature to do its thing in the wild, it shouldn't be always just about the money/resources, when it comes to agriculture etc. What Iceland can provide ob bigger scale and gain a lot of economic wealth etc, is their geo energy. This would supply a big portion of green energy demand in EU, if you ask me and not sure why this is not main agenda for least 10-15 years, but now with all this nonsense happening, at particular.
@velianlodestone1249
@velianlodestone1249 Год назад
@@izoyt Natural forestation? There is a super limited set of trees that can even begin to get a foothold and it's a struggle - the realisation is that if nature would be left to run it's course, the Icelandic winds will keep iceland barren forever.
@gruntscrewdriver3261
@gruntscrewdriver3261 Год назад
ITs great plant for country like iceland but in here finland it were just a problem due we dont have that kind of enviroment and climate changes
@Kiyarose3999
@Kiyarose3999 Год назад
Absolutely, we have a v similar plant here in England, Budleja( Bud-lee-a), that grows on wasteland and creates soil and then other flora & fauna. Habitat builder!
@fusionreactor7179
@fusionreactor7179 Год назад
@@izoyt good thing peasants don’t decide policy
@JulieKore
@JulieKore 8 месяцев назад
From my experience, while lupine is highly invasive and spreads very easily, it is also quite easy to control. Farmers in eastern europe have been using it as a plant that allows the fields to 'rest' for a year for a while now, they just plow over the field before the seeds are 'ready' and pronto, a rejuvenated field is ready for a new year of crops.
@gudadada
@gudadada 5 месяцев назад
Europe has some of the most destroyed, ruined ecosystems on Earth. And European settlers bringing their methods to all regions of the world are responsible for the majority of the world's invasive. What looks pretty does not equal what is healthy.
@racpropst
@racpropst 3 месяца назад
I thought that lupine was native to Maine and eastern Canada. I love it. Maine’s landscape is made mostly made up of flourishing forests and with numerous blueberries barrens.
@tessjuel
@tessjuel 2 месяца назад
@@racpropst The nootka lupine is native to the northern part of America but there are countless other lupine species too, mostly across the Americas but also some native to the mediterrean region.
@hasupasu
@hasupasu 28 дней назад
you can just kill one of the mech bosses so the steampunker moves in so you can buy the clentaminator and then buy green solution from him
@slasherknife4747
@slasherknife4747 14 дней назад
☝️🤓
@bjornbesbitt6446
@bjornbesbitt6446 9 месяцев назад
Native lupines helped regrow the land after Mt St. Helens erupted. They're really wonderful flowers. I tossed a few seeds into a bare little traffic island nearby, and now it's green and lovely and the intersection is less dusty.
@carlosenriqueulloa
@carlosenriqueulloa 2 месяца назад
Guerilla gardening. Love it.
@AntoineELismysalvation
@AntoineELismysalvation Месяц назад
Thanks to co2 its turning green worlwide.
@reynirgretarjonsson2622
@reynirgretarjonsson2622 Год назад
Worked for Reykjavík to plant trees in the fields of Lupine around the city about 20 years ago mostly in the Heiðmörk area, nothing but forest today so I don´t see a problem as long as you plan to go in and plant trees afterwards, they quickly make way for trees and mostly dissappear. Nothing but good things to say about it
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
Interesting insight!
@thaurusstrong4464
@thaurusstrong4464 Год назад
@@MossyEarth it is true. I heard it a lot of times. They make way for trees. And disapear because of the shade.
@philliplamoureux9489
@philliplamoureux9489 Год назад
I think this is the real answer. Forest up the place and the lupine having done its job moves on. If there are established places of berries and bird habitat, protect those, but don't worry about lupine expansion, just proceed to forest expansion
@MrArjanOskam
@MrArjanOskam Год назад
​@@philliplamoureux9489 I agree! Couldn't have said it any better! I still don't get why governments don't invest more in this kinds of things. Well I do... It's solving problems witouth making money from it.
@jsc1436
@jsc1436 Год назад
@@MossyEarth maybe starting the reforestation near the blueberry sites is an option, creating a sort of uncrossable border for the lupin
@TheMogd0r
@TheMogd0r Год назад
Lupine behaves almost exactly like Scotch Broom here in Canada. People hate it, but it only invades landscapes that are destroyed, it heals those landscapes, and then it does when other plants grow up around it. It is medicine
@drthunberg3567
@drthunberg3567 Год назад
Pionner plant, like most of fabacae. Build the soil for long terme ecological climax
@kjartanspartan5181
@kjartanspartan5181 10 месяцев назад
Unfortunately does not only invade drstroyed areas. That's why people hate it here in Iceland
@craigboden9455
@craigboden9455 10 месяцев назад
@@kjartanspartan5181 technically iceland people are an invasive species.
@baronbrummbar8691
@baronbrummbar8691 10 месяцев назад
@@kjartanspartan5181 well the once that it invadees that aren.t destroyed are weak otherwise it could.nt spread ther
@caseyb1346
@caseyb1346 10 месяцев назад
@@kjartanspartan5181 replanting trees would help a lot. Lupine can't grow where there are trees. Idk much about Iceland native plants but I bet they do fine in forests, if Iceland once had a lot of forests.
@alexandernevalainen
@alexandernevalainen 2 месяца назад
I live in Sweden and the invasive lupine is spreading like wildfire on the countryside, pushing the native flora to extinction in some areas. it is a great dirt restorer but it must be kept at bay where it is not needed.
@summerlakephotog8239
@summerlakephotog8239 11 месяцев назад
You buy lupine seed in just about any garden center in at least the western US. I do love this channel because I’m turning my little plot of Oregon desert into a nature park. 😊👏
@goodtimeswithchelsea7052
@goodtimeswithchelsea7052 26 дней назад
You should make a video about it!!!
@meiray
@meiray Год назад
Lupines also have huge taproots which can help with erosion issues in a topography where trees don't often thrive. Definitely one of the most complicated invasive species debates. But it's Iceland, so it's also one of the friendliest.
@crustaceanking3293
@crustaceanking3293 Год назад
they're also legumes, which means that they fix nitrogen for other plants. Not only that, but they start receding as other plants start growing, remaining in areas where other plants cant grow
@DrDuckMD
@DrDuckMD Год назад
Sounds like the best type of invasive species.
@crustaceanking3293
@crustaceanking3293 Год назад
@Dr. Duck MD it's basically an invasive species that leaves the area more hospitable for other plants
@smelltheglove2038
@smelltheglove2038 Год назад
It’s way better than kudzu
@PainterVierax
@PainterVierax 11 месяцев назад
@@crustaceanking3293 unlike humans who just destroyed the forests of the island.
@DAH-ss1nu
@DAH-ss1nu Год назад
I'm from Alaska where it's native, oddly enough I've also lived in Iceland for 4 years. The lupin is seen as a colonizer on degraded/bare soil but is quickly overtaken closely by birch and aspen trees. This can be seen on the edges of roads cut through the landscape. You want to control lupine then plant birch/aspen behind it which will soon outcompete the lupin. You'd be better served by air dropping lupin seeds everywhere, then 5-10 years later airdropping birch and aspen seeds, then in another 5-10 years airdropping various evergreen pine/spruce seeds. BTW blueberry is a understory shrub and it'll do fine.
@LOVE-wq4ku
@LOVE-wq4ku Год назад
this actually could work out but i’m sure it need other factors to work perfectly
@benjaminclegg7109
@benjaminclegg7109 Год назад
don't think aspen is native in Iceland. Betula pubescens is their only native tree of any size.
@kineticstar
@kineticstar Год назад
This is a fascinating conversation. The implications could be far more reaching seeing a large increase of desertification around the world. Iceland could be the petri dish that sparks a resurgence in natural ecosystems and arable lands. I would like to see if I could run simulations via the super computers and AI systems here at my university to predict possible out comes and where next; if possible to attempt a similar movement with locally comparable outcomes.
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Год назад
Isn't that the point? Lupine restores the soil and native trees can be planted again which out compete the lupine easily. There seems to be no valid argument here. Even the blueberry bushes out compete lupine. Humans destroyed the forests, lupine restores the soil so the forests can grow again.
@lexsec
@lexsec Год назад
@@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep I don't think they're trying to argue against...
@Gregor_Arhely
@Gregor_Arhely 9 месяцев назад
Oh, we had a field of lupines near my hometown! It just popped up on the *supposedly* dead soil after the town dump was leveled to the ground to build some apartments nearby. That was strange, but somehow beautiful. I used to walk there with my friends and sometimes take photos. Just imagine: a few apartment buildings, a sports facility, some department store, an industrial zone... And just in 50 meters from that, right behind the road, lies a purple ocean, separating the city from the forest line.
@callen8908
@callen8908 11 месяцев назад
On the volcanically active areas of the big island of Hawaii, the landscape is covered in lava, and there is initially no life. Ferns starts growing there first, and layers of fern eventually grow on top of the initial layers below, slowly creating soil. Ti plants also spring up. Beautiful process
@jamestaylor3805
@jamestaylor3805 Год назад
Lupines aren't greedy... they retreat from competition and ends up in tiny pockets where others things just refuse to grow well. It appears here in recently done flatworks(read as ground disrupting landscaping) and stabilizes the new surfaces before retreating to the presence of other plants. It also appears in the wakes of wildfires in great abundance for a season or two.
@TT-ww8vv
@TT-ww8vv Год назад
And as a legume they fix nitrogen into the soil
@drippy_pics9086
@drippy_pics9086 Год назад
They should plant tons of bamboo too
@TT-ww8vv
@TT-ww8vv Год назад
@@drippy_pics9086 too cold
@meiray
@meiray Год назад
@@drippy_pics9086 Oh god, the horror stories I've heard from people who weren't prepared for what running bamboo species would do to their gardens.
@devtech4661
@devtech4661 Год назад
@@meiray dont ever plant bamboo into ground. It will create a forest. You have to cover it for up to 10 years so it doesnt regrow
@Dalcenn
@Dalcenn Год назад
As a tree planter in British Columbia, we have a lot of lupin here, it is very often the first plant that returns following a forest fire (nicknamed fireflower), it is an incredible plant and plays a huge part of our forests recovery from fires in western Canada. It’ll be interesting to see its effects on the deserts in Iceland
@drthunberg3567
@drthunberg3567 Год назад
I think Lupin will push the Iceland biotope to a higher ecological climax, but it will affect species adapted to this non optimal climax. Lupin, as most of fabaccae, is a pionnier specie and more advanced plant and three will follow once the soil start to became more fertile.
@smalltime0
@smalltime0 4 месяца назад
we have a similar thing in Australia with the wattle (especially the yellow wattle). The only issue is it is spreading into some of the areas where it didn't use to exist (mostly due to them being vulnerable from logging) and it is crowding out certain types of local forest. Its a relatively minor issue right now, but some re vegetation efforts are being impacted by it.
@ingibingi2000
@ingibingi2000 4 месяца назад
The word desert feels wrong here there is more than enough water in the area, but it is barren landscape
@babzrobinson9196
@babzrobinson9196 3 месяца назад
Fire weed and lupine are very different plants...
@motaparatu
@motaparatu Год назад
We have those, or something very much like, purple flowers here. They grow in the late spring/early summer. They sometimes turn the mountains purple. It's quite a sight.
@danielkover7157
@danielkover7157 8 месяцев назад
I'm still trying to wrap my head around Iceland having deserts. Never really occurred to me that it could, just like thinking of Antarctica as a desert blows my mind. Hopefully, the lupine and other plants and animals can find a way to coexist. In places where desertification is a problem, viable solutions are needed. Here's hoping the lupine proves to be one of those solutions.
@WetaMantis
@WetaMantis 5 месяцев назад
Yep cold desert.
@mightyx5441
@mightyx5441 5 месяцев назад
@@WetaMantis why don't people call it a tundra
@RedNumber19
@RedNumber19 5 месяцев назад
Iceland is weird. It’s snowy but fiery, lush but deserty. It is everything. And it’s growing.
@delbato9683
@delbato9683 5 месяцев назад
@@mightyx5441 because a tundra is not a desert?
@luckas221a
@luckas221a 4 месяца назад
​@@mightyx5441 tundra is a grassy biome. Tundras have moss, shrubs, vines and *lots* of grass. Deserts are way less dense in vegetation. Tundras are not cold deserts.
@dashybaby255
@dashybaby255 Год назад
One of the most fascinating attributes of Lupin is how it spreads it seed. When the seed pods dry up they twist and split open. The force can throw the seed up to 25 feet when they pop open, allowing the plant to spread itself even further. If you sit quietly in a Lupin field during this time of year you can hear the popping and flying of seeds. You might even get hit by one... ha ha
@deaconfetundes7888
@deaconfetundes7888 Год назад
Yes my cousin
@Jordan-er9bx
@Jordan-er9bx Год назад
Amazing :) Thank you for sharing
@thefisherking78
@thefisherking78 Год назад
Wisteria does that too. I used to wake up to the seeds hitting my bedroom window 😂
@diane9247
@diane9247 Год назад
Sort of like pinecone seeds on a hot summer day.
@jamiejames6150
@jamiejames6150 Год назад
Blue ribbon Comment of the year! 😉
@uts4448
@uts4448 Год назад
I'm from Texas and our state flower is called "blue bonnets". As soon as I seen this flower, I thought they were blue bonnets. So I looked up the scientific name of blue bonnets and its called "Lupinus subcarnosus" and they belong to the Lupinus family. They are related.
@brandonreal916
@brandonreal916 Год назад
thought the same thing when i saw them lol
@breakthecycle5238
@breakthecycle5238 Год назад
me too. I was like tf bluebonnets grow that far north?
@NatureShy
@NatureShy Год назад
Bluebonnets are just one of so many lupine species. They're not even that notable among lupine species growing here in North America, as far as how they look compared to other lupines really. There are maybe dozens if not over a hundred different lupine species and subspecies, even within North America. Even among botanists identifying species can be difficult because of all the hybridization and mixing at the boundaries. Within just Oregon and Washington there's dozens of lupines. Some are annual species, some are very small and cold hardy growing in the alpine tundra, others found in subalpine zone, and others in lower elevations. Some grow in deserts, and others grow in forests or mountains. Some are woody, as lupinus rivularis, and others (most) are herbaceous. The garden variety of lupine is lupinus polyphyllus, which is native to the Pacific Northwest with the tallest lupine flower spikes and largest lupine leaves in the world. Common name: large-leaved lupine.
@maciejpanasiewicz3947
@maciejpanasiewicz3947 Год назад
They belong to Fabaceae familly. Lupinus is a genus
@c.rutherford
@c.rutherford Год назад
Yes I saw fields of these when I visited Texas and that's what I thought of too.
@robingauff5173
@robingauff5173 Год назад
Super interesting subject! At the University of Padova we're currently designing a restoration project in the Venice lagoon that utilizes the introduced Oyster M. gigas as an erosion protection for salt marshes. The problem with the native oyster is that it is completely outcompeted by the introduced one in intertidal habitats (and it also has some other issues which are the cause of its steady decline; the introduced one was brought to Europe BECAUSE of the disappearance of the native one). So if you would try to use the native oyster for such projects it would almost guarantee a failure. So this poses a clear ethical problem: do we accept restoring a habitat through an introduced species, further favoring its spread? On the other hand, the benefices and the ecosystem services provided by the introduced oyster (Higher biodiversity, water filtering, erosion protection, carbon storage etc.) are extremely high, and it has been in Europe for so long now, it is everywhere and is actively farmed, so why should we really care about the fact that it is introduced? It is basically a new native species at this point, so we could use it for its benefices (?). I think its always a case to case question, but the general idea of introduced=bad, native=good does not always make complete sense. One thing is sure though: ACTIVE introduction should be completely avoided as it may lead to really bad unexpected side effects (there is no lack of examples of this...)
@cetomedo
@cetomedo 4 месяца назад
I think even active introduction can be helpful, especially in (ironically enough) combating other invasive species. There was a project that was about introducing a species of wasps to an eco-system that hunted and required the presence of a particular invasive species they were having problems with. By intentionally multiplying and releasing these wasps, they were pushing back the invasive species.
@FatEngineerGaming
@FatEngineerGaming 5 месяцев назад
God dammit, who planted corruption seeds?
@destroyeralex6627
@destroyeralex6627 14 дней назад
My bad, misinput
@jackochainsaw
@jackochainsaw Год назад
Being a nitrogen fixer, it is very valuable, it might be an invasive species but it's doing some good. I'd say don't rush to purge it. Monocultures don't last forever anyways, so it will either hybridise or be replaced by something else. This plant doesn't enjoy shade so when trees beat out the light, it will die. Once you get trees and bushes back, you are on the right track.
@edarddragon
@edarddragon Год назад
let it do its job but then take it off and plant some trees after. i think its a good colonizer plant , its a better than nothing plan but once you get trees then thats that
@DadsCigaretteRun
@DadsCigaretteRun Год назад
Invasive is suppose to just mean it’s not native, generally it is destroying natural habitats but not always. Destroy isn’t the right word but maybe change
@EdolasMystogan
@EdolasMystogan Год назад
Yeah definitely. It can improve the deserts. And even though its invasive, its not like theres much to compete with in a desert.
@bramvanduijn8086
@bramvanduijn8086 Год назад
It can do good in the deserts, but it will ecocide the nitrogen poor shrublands. Its spread will have to be controlled around the shrublands.
@landscapesandmotion
@landscapesandmotion Год назад
@@bramvanduijn8086 of course. It's a helpful plant that can be used as a natural tool to help to increase biodiversity in Iceland. It can condition the soil for native shrubs and berry plants, more food for wildlife, trees will come later, more birds, birds spread seeds, and it snowballs from there. They don't have much to loose by using it and managing it in areas where it could effect already natural and native ecosystems that haven't suffered desertification.
@retf8977
@retf8977 Год назад
I was intrigued by the uniqueness and usefulness of this plant as the video went along, but when it got to the "it can be made into food" part, and mentioned that they eat it in the south Mediterranean, and mentioned its name in Portuguese... I realised that it is what we call "Termes" here in Egypt, the hegemon of summer snacks along the sea or corniche... we even make a hot spicy drink out of it called "Halabesa", didn't realise Termes was so beautiful and intriguing!
@retf8977
@retf8977 Год назад
@@alexanderdvanbalderen9803 Good idea, although I don't know whether this north American variety of Lupins produce the same seeds as Mediterranean lupins
@ANPC-pi9vu
@ANPC-pi9vu Год назад
This type of Lupine is different than the Mediterranean varieties, so it might not work. The plant is mostly toxic, though I did see a claim that the seeds are edible but only after a very lengthy process of soaking them and repeatedly changing the water to leach out the toxin.
@ramihajyounesmontoya5194
@ramihajyounesmontoya5194 Год назад
I'm originally from Lebanon and I had the same reaction to that realization! Termos is very popular there as well.
@MarikaMeos
@MarikaMeos Год назад
@@ANPC-pi9vu Do you know if only sand lupinus is edible..?
@Beren74.
@Beren74. Год назад
We eat it here with name of "Tirmis' at Turkey but its not so common, its common at Antalya region mostly
@henankan
@henankan 4 месяца назад
Here in Sweden lupines have been taking over much of the areas where native flowers used to be. It's a pretty flower and from the video I can see that it has some good benefits. Sweden probably don't have the same "needs" like Iceland does when it comes to restoring flora in barren land and perhaps this is why it seems to be way more invasive here. Just this past summer I noted how few native flowers I saw in areas where I feel like I would have seen them otherwise. There has been a lot of talk about multiple invasive flowers and plants this past year too in Sweden. Interesting video for sure, thank you for making it!
@SnowyWarrior
@SnowyWarrior 11 месяцев назад
I buy Lupins for my garden here in Canada all the time. Such beautiful flowers and the pollinators love them
@dappledlight8073
@dappledlight8073 Год назад
As an ecologist who got their degree studying invasive plant species, I have two things I would like to contribute. First, this is perhaps the best video I have seen on RU-vid dealing with this issue. It is nuanced, and avoids absolutes, to which this field is prone. Bravo! The second thing is that because the flora is so closely related in this plant's native and invasive ranges, I wonder if contacting researchers in Alaska might give insights into how this species both colonizes similar situations, and then interacts with very similar communities over time. The glacial melting in Alaska, as elsewhere, is exposing new ground to be colonized, and there are likely to be good studies out there which could help you, and Iceland as a whole, assess what might be expected. It would give you a baseline from which to make informed decisions. Good luck, and keep up the good work!
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
Thanks for that, we do our best to keep our videos on topics like these neutral and factually correct! Contacting Alaskan researchers sounds like the exact right move, I'm sure Iceland's forestry service has contacts there and they would have far more expertise on the plant. Always good to have a backup plan if the Lupine spread does prove to be a big issue! - Tom
@NinjaXryho
@NinjaXryho Год назад
@@MossyEarth There was a similar invasion in New Zealand of Ulex europaeus. One conservationist was able to use these leguminous bushes as as nurturing sites for native trees, which eventually shaded and outcompeted the Ulex. Perhaps the historical native trees in this context can do the same. There are also studies on the promiscuity of U. europaeus rhizobial partnerships, which is one reason it and many other legumes are such successful invaders. I wonder if L. nootkatensis is similarly promiscuous and whether it can harbor a bank of native microbes. One more thing, you mention the area of L. nootkatensis vs. the afforested area. It may have been good to also include the historical forested area.
@svidakjammi
@svidakjammi Год назад
The lupine here is even referred to as the Alaskan lupin 😊
@pboyd4278
@pboyd4278 Год назад
"nuanced, and avoids absolutes, to which this field is prone" - can't be said any better in my opinion. I would like to contribute to Mossy Earth but and supporting a local nature trust. Tough topic to suggest but perhaps Mossy Earth could add that into their pitch - "If you are already supporting...but if you'd like to support us...if you live in areas where we are working..." I think a few viewers feel like "Iceland...why bother? Not close to me" Thank you - wonderful and inspiring videos!
@COCOLEAF1169
@COCOLEAF1169 Год назад
Zzzzz
@dawnhughes9942
@dawnhughes9942 Год назад
I've been resorting ecosystems from invasives as a Master Arborist in the northern UD. After 20 years I have learned to appreciate the invasives. They are healers. Use them as a tool or a step in the journey to help restore the canopy. Once you get larger shrubs or trees growing they will shade out the lupine. The key is to be focused and nurturing on that next step up, always planting trees! Trees need after care tho. You can't just plant and walk away. We have to manage it to be what we want. I wish I could help. you!
@franklinstephen3268
@franklinstephen3268 Год назад
Hello 👋 how are you doing?
@blertagjolena3817
@blertagjolena3817 Год назад
Hello, I’m having a problem with wild bermuda grass in my garden, it’s a headache, any advice on how to eradicate it? Thank you!
@FoundaPeanut
@FoundaPeanut Год назад
The invasives need to create enough soil to sustain large trees.... it may take several generations to create enough healthy soil.
@vanleeuwenhoek
@vanleeuwenhoek Год назад
Not to offer pro bono services for the CEO of Hades, but aren't all organisms invasives?
@inharmonywithearth9982
@inharmonywithearth9982 Год назад
You would Love Fred Pearce 's book THE NEW WILD. It's all about that ridiculous invasive theory..
@Asura12
@Asura12 6 месяцев назад
This is something new to me but I have been seeing alot of youtube videos about brighter crops being actively better for the environment due to how they reflect light. The videos which I have seen mostly focused on sunflowers due to their yellow colour, but this effect must also occur with the purple/white Lupin flowers as well. This could be an interesting experiment to run on these Lupin fields like determining average ground temperature before they take over an area and after. Plus could make a cool follow up video for this project.
@user-bo7jn9jf8t
@user-bo7jn9jf8t 4 месяца назад
It has an interesting story in New Zealand as well. It only seems to grow largely in barren lands (Makenzie basin) but it also clogs up rivers and other waterways
@TOH_Fan
@TOH_Fan Год назад
Considering how Iceland used to be a completely forested isle, I think using it for reforestation could be very useful.
@danielkristinarson292
@danielkristinarson292 Год назад
not really "forested" , it was more like brush, like Birki og reyni, maybe being about 2M at height on avarage
@SysterYster
@SysterYster Год назад
@@danielkristinarson292 There used to be forests of rowan, birch, willow and some other species I forgot. So, a little more than brush, I'd say. Not huge forests with massive trees, of course, but still. But the viking settlers cut them all down.
@richardcowley4087
@richardcowley4087 Год назад
Iceland is a volcanic island Iceland is only there due to igneous activity from the mid atlantic spreading ridge there were no "forests" on Iceland prior to today
@richardcowley4087
@richardcowley4087 Год назад
@@SysterYster it was brush and not "forest"
@SysterYster
@SysterYster Год назад
@@richardcowley4087 Yes, there was. When the Vikings settled there were forests. As I quoted in my earlier reply. Also, I'm effing teaching history. Every history book says there were forests on iceland. No, not some kind of redwood forests, but still forests.
@d.c.marsha9027
@d.c.marsha9027 Год назад
Having grown lupin in the North Eastern part US (native plant Lupinus perennis), it loves sun, if you were to plant trees/ birch or other native trees around the lupin it would just die off due to a lack of sunlight. Once your trees are established I doubt you'll have much a problem with the lupin.
@WmJared
@WmJared Год назад
issue is less in forested and future forested areas, and more in heath-y shrublands, though.
@mightheal
@mightheal Год назад
@@WmJared You just use the trees as a buffer zone to protect those areas.
@d.c.marsha9027
@d.c.marsha9027 Год назад
@@WmJared I've never seen lupin out compete blueberry or other shrubs. to be honest once the soil improves I've seen lupin get pushed out. Now this is only what I've experienced growing on my property. I've found lupin to be rather temperamental, slow growing and honestly a pia. will be interesting to see if lupin can compete in healthy soil
@WmJared
@WmJared Год назад
@@mightheal You can't use trees as a buffer if it is an area inhospitable to most trees, such as a heath, the area stated to be the problem area. A heath is a shrubland habitat found mainly on free-draining infertile, acidic soils and characterised by open, low-growing woody vegetation. That means no trees.
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
Exactly that is the plan, use the fertile soil to plant native trees and eventually the lupin will die out. But the expansion must be controlled - Cheers, Tom Berry
@vulcan4d
@vulcan4d 10 месяцев назад
Desserts are going in many parts of the world so this is actually great! Native or not native, this is one world and it is always changing.
@user-ti7me6yv7w
@user-ti7me6yv7w 9 месяцев назад
I remember study in high school, there was once a policy of introduce certain foreign plant to keep degradation around beaches under control. And then they find out the foreign plants does nothing compared to native plant, and have to deal with introduced intrusive species as well, because it compete with native plants.
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Год назад
Lupine is such an amazing plant that really has the potential to help bring back a lot of the natural fauna. Lupine doesn't like shade, unlike blueberry, so just plant some trees and boom. Regardless, I think it is doing more good than harm, and is paving the way for a brighter future. Lupine has a way of self-managing and isn't a very competitive species.
@Grey3minence
@Grey3minence Год назад
As the inventor of Lupine, you're obviously biased.
@alienoidyt1
@alienoidyt1 Год назад
@@Grey3minence obviously based*
@parthsrivastav1465
@parthsrivastav1465 Год назад
@@alienoidyt1 biased*
@warcriminalgaming2359
@warcriminalgaming2359 Год назад
How are the nukes going
@landkonnudur
@landkonnudur Год назад
It's slightly poisonous, so that's a negative as well, although it is so slight that it hardly counts. Humans can get a very, very, very, very slight high from it (think 1% of being high on mild cannabis) and it can cause paralysis in sheep if they graze on it too much. Sheep have been damaging to Iceland's landscape with their overgrazing and that's an entire thing on its own, but it's understandably a part of the debate in Iceland with how many sheep are in Iceland. I don't know how poisonous it is to other animals as I'm not sure if that's been researched but it should at least be mentioned that it's poisonous when making a video on the plant.
@maxhocks2006
@maxhocks2006 Год назад
If the plant was invading existing forests or grasslands I would say fight it. But it’s growing in deserts and fixing the soil. If you can add trees and bushes to areas where the lupine has been for two or three years then it would be a huge benefit to let the lupine grow.
@michaelwebster3124
@michaelwebster3124 Год назад
He mentioned in the video that it is indeed threatening several species of native flora and fauna. I think that is the whole reason for the debate. If it was a purely beneficial invasive species then no one would bat an eye.
@prodogtwodogman3857
@prodogtwodogman3857 Год назад
@@michaelwebster3124 Replacing native flora and fauna might not necessarily be a bad thing. This happens naturally without human intervention.
@swordzanderson5352
@swordzanderson5352 Год назад
@@prodogtwodogman3857 Unless it drives species into extinction. There might be hidden benefits locked behind their genetic codes and biological structure that will forever be loss to us if we just let them be replaced. Nature does its thing on its own, but so does entropy, so there are certain cases where we should resist change of nature if said change can drastically harm us and nature itself.
@FoundaPeanut
@FoundaPeanut Год назад
@@prodogtwodogman3857 removing the invasive flora will need to be done after the flower has created enough of the soil needed to sustain the native plant and animal life, may take many years but Mars was not terraformed in a day...lol ^_^
@prodogtwodogman3857
@prodogtwodogman3857 Год назад
@@swordzanderson5352 If we can forest deserts I’m ok with some species loss.
@JasonsGreenSleeves
@JasonsGreenSleeves 2 дня назад
I didn’t know about this use of lupine in Iceland. This is beautiful 🌿! I love this!
@desertnaturealliance
@desertnaturealliance 11 месяцев назад
Arizona here🌵 lupine grows here along with the orange poppy before Summer kicks off. 😍Our problem always is fire danger from too much dried out grasses etc when they all die off.
@RDJ2
@RDJ2 Год назад
If the current situation is basically "no ecosystem" then what does it matter if the new ecosystem isn't native. Lupine will make a new top soil, which can then accommodate trees. After that the lupine will mostly disappear, because it wants poor soil. And even if it doesn't, I think it deserves a spot in Iceland's new ecosystem as its saviour.
@AcornFrog
@AcornFrog Год назад
Lupine is great as a colonizer for claiming barren lands, but the problem is that as an invasive species, there is no check on it. It can colonize both deserts as well as already thriving woodland and grassland. If it chokes out native species of plants, that will wreck havoc on the fragile ecosystem web that is not designed to accommodate such a plant.
@bncsmom1
@bncsmom1 Год назад
@@AcornFrog Yet it needs poor soil and no shade to thrive. It won't be found under trees because trees need good soil to thrive and give shade. It isn't going to wreak havoc on the ecosystem, you just use it to fix the soil then plant things that will choke it out.
@cathie9614
@cathie9614 Год назад
Totally agree, if it doesn't like shade and needs sun, then plant trees. The shade and no sun will kill it.
@user-uy6uc5ey5q
@user-uy6uc5ey5q Год назад
@@bncsmom1 Yeah, but lots of complex native ecosystems exits which don't have trees. The classic example mentioned elsewhere on this page are the native tussock grasslands (though the NZ tussocks aren't true grasses) high country in New Zealand and then the alpine scrub zone above this. As these native plant ecosystems are already under stress from invasive flora and fauna, the way lupine colonise ends up rapidly pushing several unique species towards extinction. NZ native tree species don't establish as they have an altitude limit over between 600 to 900 metres (the further north you travel the higher it gets) so the only large trees that take over are the equally eco destructive Nth American pines that are also a real problem in the high country.
@nicoledang27
@nicoledang27 Год назад
@@bncsmom1 n
@scottlarue5304
@scottlarue5304 9 месяцев назад
Here in NJ in the US we have another species (Lupinus perennis) which is extremely rare due to fire suppression and habitat destruction. It colonizes areas disturbed by fire. Desert areas may be similarly attractive for it. Areas invaded by lupine would eventually turn into shrub lands or forests. This may be a good thing in some areas but I would imagine that open grassland habitats are threatened by it. These early successional habitats are important as well. Not everything should be forests.
@brynjolf3974
@brynjolf3974 10 месяцев назад
Just flew into Iceland to catch another flight to Helsinki and it’s absolutely crazy how bits of it look like mars and other parts have those dense patches of purple. These dudes weren’t lying
@lilithyolanda9851
@lilithyolanda9851 Год назад
I think Lupine will be a great way to fix lands with little to no plantation, but I do think it needs to be monitored. It has the potential to be invasive but it has helped more than destroy 🤷🏻‍♀️
@everythingsfinett3903
@everythingsfinett3903 Год назад
It doesn’t destroy anything, it doesn’t like shade so when trees are planted it makes way for them. It’s an amazing fertiliser.
@mansiarora008
@mansiarora008 Год назад
Totally agree
@nolamo1496
@nolamo1496 Год назад
It IS invasive. wether or not it's helpful and whether it's worth keeping are the only questions
@lilithyolanda9851
@lilithyolanda9851 Год назад
@@nolamo1496 ok BRUH.
@kek3908
@kek3908 Год назад
@@everythingsfinett3903 I was curious about that and wondering if it reacts that way.
@adamhartmann4714
@adamhartmann4714 Год назад
forestry technician and fire management professional here, I just wanted to add that if you're going to use lupine for soil restoration, you should have something you're restoring it for. You need to follow up the spread of lupine with comprehensive reforestation and understory management. I thought this was an excellent and nuanced video, keep up the great work!
@Meggsie
@Meggsie Год назад
I think this is a very important note. I kept waiting to see what they were planning on doing with the soil and they never said
@ASKWildeHilde
@ASKWildeHilde Год назад
Agreed, time to start planting
@Srabubulupa
@Srabubulupa Год назад
You don't have to write your degree to give your opinion lmao
@ASKWildeHilde
@ASKWildeHilde Год назад
@@depakkp if the proper under story shrubs and over story trees are planted the groundcover in place now ,will vanish over time. Human time frames are often impatient when it comes to restorations this vast. Species vilification isn't fair as an overall sentiment in situations as dire as this. Any plant is better than no plant. Most invasive new comers only last a few hundred years as a dominant plant. Plants have and will continue to move around the planet, by large it's been a good thing. We must re green this planet... all plants are a valuable.
@depakkp
@depakkp Год назад
@@ASKWildeHilde simply explain deeply. please so we all understand in this all country
@christopher.96
@christopher.96 7 месяцев назад
Reminds me how we feel about the zebra mussel in Lake Erie. It is invasive… but it really improves water quality.
@xerces_red
@xerces_red 5 месяцев назад
Personally I think it would be better to have an invasive landscape and ecosystem rather than no ecosystem at all, but also from the sounds of it from other comments it seems that the lupine seems to path the way for native plants to retake undesirable areas
@Xendruis
@Xendruis Год назад
You can always use the Clentaminator to prevent the spread
@streetyfries
@streetyfries 11 месяцев назад
THIS
@chrismc1287
@chrismc1287 10 месяцев назад
And the terraformer if the moon lord has been killed
@Plut0TheCrypt1d
@Plut0TheCrypt1d 10 месяцев назад
@@chrismc1287 yeah dont worry I already killed him, plus I have a DCU so we can block it off if we need to
@jan5558
@jan5558 9 месяцев назад
I use it and that 1 block I missed corrups everything again
@chrismc1287
@chrismc1287 9 месяцев назад
@@jan5558 id sugest then to look for the block in terramap
@thejollygreendragon8394
@thejollygreendragon8394 Год назад
In New Zealand, hilly land that was cleared for pasture grazing, easily became infested with introduced invasive gorse. The Gorse is from the same leguminous family as the Lupin, a nitrogen fixer, thus increasing the fertility of the soil. New Zealand’s answer to the problem is seed collection of the native species which once grew on the now gorse infested land, and aerially reseeding the landscape. The new trees germinating amongst the gorse have protection from grazing, growing up through the gorse, then covering the gorse with its canopy, and in turn, out completing and killing the gorse, thus restoring the landscape to native trees. Seems like the Lupins could be used in the same manner, to restore this depleted landscape back to its former glory. In doing so, in some areas, it may be wise to stop the lupin, which would seem possible due to its slow spreading rate, and in other areas, introduce the lupin as the starting point for restoring the land back to what once was. Native Vegetation. 🐉
@oLevLovesLove
@oLevLovesLove Год назад
Gorse isn't ideal for allowing succession of native trees, it's just almost impossible to eradicate so they have to make the best of the situation.
@MaryCorbell
@MaryCorbell Год назад
Beautiful plan! They should do this!
@petermgruhn
@petermgruhn Год назад
@@oLevLovesLove I feel like Hinewai Nature Reserve disagrees with you.
@2poor4xbox
@2poor4xbox Год назад
Also a lot of lupin in central Otago
@thefisherking78
@thefisherking78 Год назад
@@oLevLovesLove it has been deliberately employed for that purpose in at least one well documented project, and despite all the objections of surrounding farmers, it worked. Where I live, the equivalent would probably be walnut or flowering pear trees. They take over unmowed fields easily, but the larger trees they nurse will eventually choke them out.
@lararabb8888
@lararabb8888 10 месяцев назад
If it can be followed with subsequent planting of native flora and it dies out, then it may very well serve a positive purpose. It just may need kept in check where traditional Plover nesting grounds are located.
@2to-tango
@2to-tango 9 месяцев назад
Lupines are very popular in floral design so why not allow florists to gather what they need for their floral industry. Also while planting trees to rewinding the forests they can be undergrowth or will die out from understory plantings not getting enough sun. Either way seems like a win win for rewinding your forests, making sure to control growth far from where it's NOT wanted. Good luck Iceland! I hope to see beautiful forested areas where only sparse gravel and rocks once inhabited. 🙏 💕
@AndreaGrinoldsSoap
@AndreaGrinoldsSoap Год назад
I think invasive species are awesome when you're dealing with wasteland and or dessert. My mom's dealing with invasive flowers in her forest in Idaho. Totally different problem when you have a thriving ecosystem and the invasives come. So she makes invasive bouquets picking as many flowers as she can before they go to seed.
@stonew1927
@stonew1927 Год назад
There is no such thing as a "wasteland" when it comes to Nature. Even areas that appear to be "wastelands" to humans serve a very specific ecological purpose that provides habitat for endemic species.
@AndreaGrinoldsSoap
@AndreaGrinoldsSoap Год назад
@@stonew1927 yeah, animals trapped in a place will adapt.....man made wasted land. Arizona was a poplar forest. Ethiopia was also largely treed. Deserts are made by man, they're not a natural thing. Wasted land. Wasteland. Geoff Lawton lives in a man made wasteland. Egypt is a man made wasteland. The bugs and lizards will somehow manage to adapt to a nicer environment. Promise
@stonew1927
@stonew1927 Год назад
​@@AndreaGrinoldsSoap Arid areas and deserts (one s, not two) are naturally occurring all over the world. You mention a few examples where desertification is happening due to human activities. I'm not even going to begin naming all the naturally ocurring desert areas around the world. You should educate yourself before you comment. Ignorance is not attractive.
@minutemansam1214
@minutemansam1214 Год назад
@@AndreaGrinoldsSoap You are incorrect. Deserts are, in fact, natural, and always have been. A desert is defined by precipitation. Antarctica is the largest desert in the world, some places haven't seen precipitation in over 2 million years. Most of Australia is a desert, and it's like that not because of man, it's due to wind. Deserts are typically found in the rain shadow of a mountain, where on one side of the mountain it is humid, and the other side dry. Deserts are the largest biome on Earth, and they are certainly not created by man. And no, a land being devoid of plant life is not a desert. If you do basic research, you'd realize this. But unfortunately I'm not sure you are capable of doing even that.
@Iamgayman
@Iamgayman Год назад
@@minutemansam1214 bro I understand man made deserts exist I live in AZ but like there's natural deserts everywhere 💀 who can argue against that lmao
@lornobe5324
@lornobe5324 Год назад
i'm icelandic and i love the plant. I'd rather see a sea of lupin than a black dune sea. It doesn't grow in gras as far as i know so it fertilizes the soil and then has to recede for other plants. It works fast. Fields that were sand become lupin, become grasslands, become hopefully forest in the future.
@icelandinreallife2042
@icelandinreallife2042 Год назад
I personally also like sand dunes. Not everything needs be green and covered in trees.
@JonBernhards66
@JonBernhards66 Год назад
@@icelandinreallife2042 The problem is the vast land with sand dune will be lost, e.g. because of the wind will blow out to the sea.
@TonyTheDude310
@TonyTheDude310 Год назад
@@JonBernhards66 Highly doubt it. If that was true Africa would be sand-less?
@JM-ys5vx
@JM-ys5vx Год назад
@@TonyTheDude310 Iceland is a volcanic island in the far north. The amount of loose sediment that can become soil is limited. If it blows away they're screwed. You can't get soil from rocks and boulders.
@hispanicchurro8131
@hispanicchurro8131 Год назад
@@JonBernhards66 huh? Wdym if a plant grows the roots will cling onto the earth meaning the wind will have a harder time blowing away the dirt 💀 😂
@Antikia
@Antikia 6 месяцев назад
In Denmark we have lupin growing wild along the highways, it's soo beautiful and really brings some color to the area
@barbarael
@barbarael 10 месяцев назад
So interesting! and on the other subject, I didn't know about the tremocos origin either, obrigada & parabens!
@sam-vb5rg
@sam-vb5rg Год назад
I always look at invasive species like this: If they replace native vegetation and outcompete it, it should be managed and possibly completely removed if feasible. If it's filling an empty ecological niche (created by human interference, climate change or whatever) it should be allowed to grow until a native plant community is reintroduced to that area either by planting manually or by ecological succession of that ecosystem (to for instance native forest).
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
Well said it's all about striking that balance! - Cheers, Tom Berry
@Kadagirl777
@Kadagirl777 Год назад
My thoughts exactly! If it's being useful in a certain area, why not use it? But if it's endangering something else, it needs to go.
@billpetersen298
@billpetersen298 Год назад
@@Kadagirl777 Does that mean, we have to go? Yes, but not me, or mine. There’s the rub.
@solar0wind
@solar0wind Год назад
If it is not harming native species, it is not invasive, but just a neophyte.
@josebaez7116
@josebaez7116 Год назад
Exactly my thought too. Keep it growing while it’s benefiting the area. Once it’s done its job, manage it or eradicate it.
@edgarnlb
@edgarnlb Год назад
If it grows abundantly it's because it is filling an ecological niche. I'd like to think it is a pioneering species that will eventually be replaced by a more mature plant community. Great work! I love your videos!
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
In theory when the trees grow tall enough, the canopy will limit the amount of sun the Lupines get and eventually they will disappear. But it is important to manage and control the areas in which it expands! - Cheers, Tom Berry
@Omti9
@Omti9 Год назад
@@MossyEarth Hm, maybe just remove them near native ecosystems that need to be preserved and just plant them elsewhere? It's not like there's a lack of deserts in island. Would it be possible to use them for their nitrogen fixing capabilities, then burn the fields down and plant something else`?
@Beregar79
@Beregar79 Год назад
Here in Finland it's considered invasive species as well, and it's specifically harmful because of its nitrogen fixing potential and prolific seed production which means it drives native meadow species closer to extinction. We have already very limited space for plants that require hot and sandy environment so lupine makes it worse and we already have native nitrogen fixing species such as boreal vetch, so we don't really need it. Even worse, it's spreading to forests endangering many native forest species. It is marked for eradication but no one really believes we can rid off it because it has spread too far and wide.
@jonatansvar8076
@jonatansvar8076 Год назад
@@Omti9 it's really hard to get rid of them. The only real solution is to uproot them, but that's really hard as the roots can be quite big. The stems are quite tough so it's hard to mow them. It would take years of dedication to remove them from a small area, and there simply isn't enough manpower for that
@crazydragy4233
@crazydragy4233 Год назад
@@jonatansvar8076 Thing is it will only get worse because it won't stop spreading :/
@divinenonbinary
@divinenonbinary 9 месяцев назад
The way universe works, all you could/gotta do is gocus on the positives and encourage whatever other species you’re trying to. Fighting it will do no good and will exhaust you as well. Good luck!
@PineappleForests
@PineappleForests 8 месяцев назад
I think you should harvest it then spread it all over the deserts along with other biomatter. It should sprout after a couple rains. Once goes to seed, You could organize a day where people all over the island go into the fields to stomp the flowers. Could call it Lupin stompin' day. Once the fields are stomped, the plants should still grow; though they will grow in all different directions. This will shade the ground more in random spots, causing a higher moisture level in those areas. As well as creating bare but fertilized Locations for native plants to thrive.
@Nebarus
@Nebarus Год назад
The Lupine is still a sight of life in a waste "desert". It does provide shade and maintain more moisture on the surface. It improves soil due to nitrogen deposits and prepares for the planting of trees. And secondarily the view of them are spectacular.
@edwardg9695
@edwardg9695 Год назад
In the shot of the new Lupin encroaching on unfertile soil, I noticed a variety of species behind the mature Lupin. Are diverse species able to grow in behind Lupin once it fixes the soil? We had zebra muscles invade the great lakes. It was a huge crisis. I remember swimming and seeing muscles 2-3 layers deep on rocks. Once years of algae (and industrial waste) was consumed, they disappeared. The water is clearer than it has ever been.
@aguyontheinternet8436
@aguyontheinternet8436 Год назад
Yeah, that is the entirety of the argument as to why it is good in this video. It roots in dry soil, makes it fertile, and then other plants, along with a LOT of Lupin, will rise up and take back the desert.
@HickoryDickory86
@HickoryDickory86 Год назад
That's the point I made on the previous video. Often the plant and animal species we label as invasive are so for a reason. They typically play a pivotal role in reorienting and balancing the area's ecosystem and then, once that's achieved, they withdraw and/or die off, giving way to the areas native species, who inherit a far better environment than they would have otherwise. I say keep it contained to the desert regions and monitor it to prevent unnecessary damage. Otherwise, in the contained areas, let it run wild to do its job. It seems native species will come in to bring it under control in due time. And if not, then take extra measures to help the native species along.
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 Год назад
@@HickoryDickory86 Yearly Controlled burns of boundary zones? How resilient are the seeds to brush fires? I’ve tried roasting peanuts myself but had the temperature too low and the kernels were still raw inside. Legumes in general are at least as hardy. The burns might be more effective in the spring JUST as the seeds are sprouting, which should kill them for certain.
@Yell5651
@Yell5651 Год назад
Dandelions work the same way. Once they have done their job, they mostly move elsewhere.
@nematarot7728
@nematarot7728 Год назад
This is fascinating! I remember reading about the sudden invasion of zebra muscles awhile ago because I wanted to buy a Marimo moss ball, but their import had been banned because they were the culprit bringing the zebra muscles into the US
@Cool-Vest_Leo
@Cool-Vest_Leo 9 месяцев назад
Seems like a positive to me. Here in the U.S. by Lake Michigan, we have these amazing forested duned. They support all sorts of wildlife, more different species than most places on earth. But it all started with a grass colonizing the sand, providing nutrients for the trees later down the line.
@rickywinthrop
@rickywinthrop 11 месяцев назад
Wonderful plant. You see them on the thin rocky soils of Northern Ontario (pretty sure they aren't native there either) and they thrive there despite the harsh and acidic soil conditions. Invasive species are a massive issue but if your going ro have your country taken over by any plant, lupin is far better than most. Tons of benefits.
@jeromeclaessen3921
@jeromeclaessen3921 Год назад
Plant a ton of native trees in the lupine fields. As well as lower canopy fruit trees and bushes. Their shade will automatically keep the lupine in check. In addition it will eventually mulch itself creating an even denser nutritious soil and attract more wildlife. Building swales and digging out ponds in between will speed up the foresting process. In areas where there’s no lupine I’d let it run rampant. It’s way too beneficial for the soil and without soil there is neither flora or fauna. Eventually, if people refrain from exploiting this forest, this system will forest Iceland automatically.
@thejollygreendragon8394
@thejollygreendragon8394 Год назад
Yes. In New Zealand, hilly land that was cleared for pasture grazing, easily became infested with introduced invasive gorse. The Gorse is from the same leguminous family as the Lupin, a nitrogen fixer, thus increasing the fertility of the soil. New Zealand’s answer to the problem is seed collection of the native species which once grew on the now gorse infested land, and aerially reseeding the landscape. The new trees germinating amongst the gorse have protection from grazing, growing up through the gorse, then covering the gorse with its canopy, and in turn, out completing and killing the gorse, thus restoring the landscape to native trees. Seems like the Lupins could be used in the same manner, to restore this depleted landscape back to its former glory. In doing so, in some areas, it may be wise to stop the lupin, which would seem possible due to its slow spreading rate, and in other areas, introduce the lupin as the starting point for restoring the land back to what once was. Native Vegetation. 🐉
@daddyleon
@daddyleon Год назад
That sounds like a truly magnificent sight to behold. Once barren planes and ridges that'll become overgrown with hills of bil- and blueberry bushes; crystal clear streams swirling through patches of planted trees (some mixed, some of one species; and in between and on the edge of the evergreening frontier: the beautiful lupines (hopefully other non-natives too, of all different colours), carefully maintained to not be a pest but a fantastic painting come to alive.
@theicelandicnationalist2.023
*reforest Iceland, Iceland used to be covered in trees, so it would be reforesting, not just foresting
@Jolene8
@Jolene8 Год назад
I love learning things like this. 🎉🎉🎉❤️
@YourBoyTrue
@YourBoyTrue Год назад
It is true that some invasive flora and fauna are detrimental to the ecosystem. But can invasive life really damage anything if there's no ecosystem, to begin with? Perhaps these plants have provided Iceland's deserts with a rebirth of sorts. It could be the start of a new ecosystem altogether. Who knows? Humanity could use this to learn more about teraforming.
@LodrikBadric
@LodrikBadric Год назад
I totally agree! Every plant that that grows and eventually dies - and is not a Lupin - leaves behind valuable material to create new humus and is a new chance for other plants to grow.
@leonc4653
@leonc4653 Год назад
"invasive species" is bad because its "invasive" and often read as bad without considering the context. If the ecosystem is dying, or if there is a real need. then as long as its properly considered with all the consequences in mind, its a solution to a problem. The attributes of the plant need to be considered, hasteful attempts of bring species into non native can be terrible or its a cat.
@dr.skillz77mgpl92
@dr.skillz77mgpl92 Год назад
YES, we need to terraform MARS!
@Sheghostly
@Sheghostly Год назад
But nothing will prevent the plant from spreading beyond the desert and outcompeting other native flora in forests
@samuela-aegisdottir
@samuela-aegisdottir Год назад
Lipine can make desert into a new ecosystem, but not all the places in Iceland are now a desert. Lupine can destroy ecosystems which are already there and there are plenty of them.
@fisherbredrup
@fisherbredrup 9 месяцев назад
Lupin grown heavily in here in Maine and it is beautiful.
@PhoenixLive_YT
@PhoenixLive_YT Год назад
*People refusing the save earth by stopping CO2 Emission* Lupin Plant: "Fine, i will do it myself"
@infrasonicrebasses4763
@infrasonicrebasses4763 Год назад
RIGHT!!
@alphabetazeta5373
@alphabetazeta5373 Год назад
That’s not how this works, it’s invasive, and will overtake the flora
@bennyc409
@bennyc409 Год назад
As an Aussie I'm highly sceptical of invasive species, as the damage they've done here is incalculable. So this was a really interesting watch. Your presentation of both sides of the argument was great and left me wondering if we could take advantage of any invasive species here. But I'm inclined to think not, since Australia's flora and fauna are so unique.
@ariavachier-lagravech.6910
@ariavachier-lagravech.6910 Год назад
Bro most of the land in your country is a deserts. What makes you think this won't be useful on those areas?
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
@@ariavachier-lagravech.6910 Deserts are wonderful places, it's not like they need to be changed to something else.
@palomaalhambra2453
@palomaalhambra2453 Год назад
Hmm so you as an Aussie, may I remind you that YOU are also an invasive species, and the damage you've done there is also incalculable. Native Australians probably have something to say about this too.
@bennyc409
@bennyc409 Год назад
@@palomaalhambra2453 I am an Indigenous Australian. And even if I weren't that would be a straw man argument.
@gabennewell2841
@gabennewell2841 Год назад
@@ariavachier-lagravech.6910 most of our desert here actually has green and trees throughout it, invasive species has only destroyed our ecosystems if it was my choice I would only plant more native plants on our lands because it thrives naturally
@emosasukelover222
@emosasukelover222 8 месяцев назад
lupine is also a native to ohio in the states
@olgaiushkova2454
@olgaiushkova2454 11 месяцев назад
Here in Sibria lupins are grown as a garden flower. There is usually a purple-pink-beige bush next to the well. But I've never seen them here in a wild
@augustjay6436
@augustjay6436 Год назад
Since it hates shade, planting a defensive line of trees around areas you don't want it to grow could incredibly help section off where it is beneficial to grow and where it would damage local ecosystems.
@tikaepixwhom666
@tikaepixwhom666 Год назад
Sounds like a great idea...hopefully it's possible, since reforestation would be highly beneficial for all of the planet.
@grahamfloyd3451
@grahamfloyd3451 Год назад
That would not work, at all.
@freetousebyjtc
@freetousebyjtc Год назад
@@grahamfloyd3451 why is that though
@Mabra51
@Mabra51 Год назад
Wouldn't the wind still spread the seeds beyond the tree barrier?
@joe42m13
@joe42m13 Год назад
@@Mabra51 trees make for an effective windbreak as well
@aneonyme8943
@aneonyme8943 Год назад
I have once taken part in a volunteering project in Iceland that aimed at restoring the degenerated land and our project manager told us that Lupin was only dominant on degraded soil, but is outcompeted by native species once the soil is restored.
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
Yes, we have heard that from a number of sources too.
@pappafritto
@pappafritto Год назад
Hah! So no need to worry then
@eljanrimsa5843
@eljanrimsa5843 Год назад
I'm not sure why it's not mentioned in the video, but Wikipedia explains that areas pioneered by lupine become green with untypical plant communities including the invasive cow parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris).
@thedangerzone9399
@thedangerzone9399 Год назад
Not true, it is a scourge you never get away from and it kills everything from its path. Few nordic countries have banned the lupine and are in process of trying to exterminate it. Will be impossible task. Poison the lupin fields while you still can.
@aneonyme8943
@aneonyme8943 Год назад
@@thedangerzone9399 Our host organization had some reference fields and the Lupin of the older fields was almost entirely replaced by grass and bushes. However, I'm not an expert... could be that this outcome is location-specific
@MattGarZero
@MattGarZero 9 месяцев назад
Rejuvenating land is complicated. Good on you guys for tackling such a large area. Best of luck.
@mrapollo13
@mrapollo13 3 месяца назад
Here on Vancouver Island in Canada we have an issue with Scotch Broom. It was introduced by some guy who planted a couple on his farm and now they're everywhere. It crowds out native species, changes soil chemistry and can be highly flammable. The worst part is it grows like fire. At least the lupin can be seen to have some benefit
@KepplerManson-nn4dv
@KepplerManson-nn4dv Год назад
I'm currently working on a degree in Ecology and one thing I've learned is that "invasive" species is a very distinct category of "non-native" or "non-indigenous" species that causes harm to the environment, economy, or human quality of life. In this case it does sound like Lupine is invasive in the sense that it is a risk towards the plover's preferred environment! But I have noticed that many people tend to use the terms non-native and invasive interchangeably! I sure did before my class this semester 😳
@liliaaaaaaaa
@liliaaaaaaaa 11 месяцев назад
Yes, but if you read all the comments above, people are saying that Iceland is only the way it is now, because of deforestation of all most of its native species in the past, and has not recovered. Lupin now is being used to help the soil to re-establish itself, and if you plant trees after a few years, the lupin will retreat and the native blueberries and bilberries etc. will then return under the tree cover as understory shrubs, while the lupin will retreat. So with careful management there is no problem. Also you can easily build wildlife / forestry management policies to control different habitats to protect sensitive species.
@VestedUTuber
@VestedUTuber 10 месяцев назад
It's a risk towards the Plover's preferred _inland_ environment (I'll get to why I specified inland in a bit), but the Plover's preferred environment is one that threatens many other species. Not to mention that Plovers are predominantly coastal wading birds, so even with the deserts being replaced with foliage the birds would still have somewhere to live - this is why I specified _inland._
@smokeywaffle1781
@smokeywaffle1781 9 месяцев назад
its almost like theyre being plantist
@composedlight6850
@composedlight6850 2 месяца назад
So what it does change reality using terms in a classroom.😂
@jakemoeller7850
@jakemoeller7850 Год назад
We have some Lupine growing in northern Arizona. The colors of this plant's blooms range from pink to electric blue to violet. That the plant has the ability to fix nitrogen is a huge bonus.
@camielvanlenteren5256
@camielvanlenteren5256 11 месяцев назад
Super learning / educative video, love it.
@penelopejarecke3821
@penelopejarecke3821 9 месяцев назад
I think your idea was great and very logical. Grow the lupine where it can reincorporate the barrensoil, and get it out of the areas where it can damage current plants and wildlife.
@alyssa7974
@alyssa7974 Год назад
Pros outweighs the cons. This plant, like said in this video, is the starting ground for more forests. Nothing wrong as long as they keep it from colonizing areas that needs to be let alone & restrict it's movement from being too invasive. Plus, as long as you're planning to reforest the area there's rlly nothing wrong with it. It's also just beautiful overall.
@jillwaley4113
@jillwaley4113 Год назад
yeah but why not just plant the forest....birch trees grow and propagate perfectly well in rocky barren soil for example
@apveening
@apveening Год назад
@@jillwaley4113 Because: 1) even birch trees do much better in prepared soil 2) a mono-culture of birch trees is hardly better than a desert and doesn't do much for a balanced ecosystem
@pollyh7715
@pollyh7715 Год назад
What would happen if the advancing areas were mowed really short so the plant cannot seed?
@icelandinreallife2042
@icelandinreallife2042 Год назад
@@pollyh7715 Mowing Lupine is difficult and time consuming, but possible.
@icelandinreallife2042
@icelandinreallife2042 Год назад
Iceland's forests have almost doubled in the past half century or so. Personally I'm not a fan of seeing them grow much larger than that, but I also would like to halt the soil erosion of some areas.
@isaT
@isaT Год назад
I think it is really nice how well Lupine can turn a barren rock land fertile again. Of course the areas where ecosystems with vulnerable native plants are still intact need to be protected, but in the rock deserts I see the spreading of Lupines as totally beneficial.
@user-gn3go6qy2d
@user-gn3go6qy2d 5 месяцев назад
It’s just like how we use Acacia Koa that are in the fabacea in hawaii for silvopastures!
@Waverlyduli
@Waverlyduli 11 месяцев назад
Sounds like a mix blessing/threat. Whenever you have a problem the best answer is usually more data. Only then can you plot the best way forward in consultation with the people of Iceland.
@ericp0012
@ericp0012 Год назад
In Iceland’s situation, I would say that the goal is to combat desertification through reforestation. I think it’s not a major issue, as long as the Lupin provides some aspect of mutualism or commensalism with other native species of plants and animals.
@AKu-xs5vg
@AKu-xs5vg Год назад
Iceland has no deserts in the precipitation sense. All of Iceland gets enough rain/snow for plant growth. Iceland's "deserts" are so not because of dryness but because of volcanic eruptions which have covered the land in debris/ash and acid rain My guess is that debris hurts a lot more in an already light-starved place like Iceland. This, combined with the fact that it's a pretty isolated place which sees fewer types of plants (meaning fewer permutations of stuff that could possibly survive there) So the Lupine is maybe well-suited to the acidic soil, or something else like that. This isn't reforestation, it's just the path of least resistance, which is why it's happening by itself without human input.
@AKu-xs5vg
@AKu-xs5vg Год назад
Also in theory there should be no need to "combat desertification". Normal deserts grow because evaporation exceeds precipitation. Deforesting a land means more evaporation, which is why cutting down too many trees often leads to desert. Iceland's deserts have little to do with water, so the deserts in theory shouldn't grow (unless the acidic soil is somehow spreading and causing a negative effect) The host also talks about Lupine taking over Iceland's 1.5% forested area, but a meadow plant can't overtake a forest. Lupine doesn't climb so this is physically impossible. He only described it outcompeting blueberry bushes.
@kimwesterlund3124
@kimwesterlund3124 Год назад
It is now a few years since I visited Iceland. A few things stayed in my memory. The bubbling hot springs and the smell of sulfur. The flat black beach. Glaciers and waterfalls. Whales. Lavafields and volcanoes. These were expected. And then the unexpected huge purple fields. I had to stop the car and check it out. It seemed unreal for a single plant to be so dominating without being cultivated.
@ZBRO881
@ZBRO881 Год назад
garfeld
@brockn7878
@brockn7878 Год назад
Like Heather in Scotland. Every rolling hill as far as the eye can see is purple and smell magical in season..
@ZBRO881
@ZBRO881 Год назад
@@brockn7878 garfeld
@brockn7878
@brockn7878 Год назад
@@ZBRO881 you can't even spell yer own name? Chill out on the lasagna son..
@ZBRO881
@ZBRO881 Год назад
@@brockn7878 garfeld
@hjvdb6829
@hjvdb6829 10 месяцев назад
Nature has a way of first covering open soil then over time allowing native plants to take hold so i say its very good
@kf9346
@kf9346 11 месяцев назад
One of my most vivid memories of New Zealand/Aotearoa was the seas of lupin. I thought it was native but learned it isn't from your video. So, why not look at how NZ/Aotearoa handled/is handling their lupin?
@alaskansummertime
@alaskansummertime Год назад
I'm in Alaska and to me its a wonderful plant. I see it growing where nothing else will grow. Its not an invasive species its a pioneer species. It improves the soil well enough for a forest to grow. Ironically the native Alaska species cited is in the minority at least around Anchorage. The current Lupine here is also invasive. I find few people myself included can easily tell the difference.
@kattkatt744
@kattkatt744 Год назад
The key point being that Lupin is native to Alaska. That it is good for Alska doesn't mean it is good for other places. Where I grew up it is killing of all the native flowers that grow in gravely ground naturally and need that type of enviourment. The Lupin is growing faster than them and making the soil unsutable for those plants and they are dying. All the local insects that where in a synbioisis with the local flowers is then dying because all their food is gone. It becomes a monoculture of Lupin and no local trees will either will grow in the ground because they to rely on less nutrient dense ground to survive.
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
@@kattkatt744 where did you grow up? I'm too far south for Lupin but I have seen invasive species in action in Hawaii.
@helgaherbstreit5102
@helgaherbstreit5102 Год назад
The plant is invasive to Iceland.
@alaskansummertime
@alaskansummertime Год назад
@@helgaherbstreit5102 Who cares?
@somnyad
@somnyad Год назад
Yes, your statement that "it is not an invasive species, it is a pioneer species" I think could be applied to many "weeds".
@chunky16
@chunky16 Год назад
I saw so many lupines around the Lake Tekapo area in New Zealand... it was breathtaking to see the fields full of them just before a storm
@Stormnado_
@Stormnado_ Год назад
I was thinking i had seen those plants before, I had no idea what they were called They certainly are beautiful
@helloworlditskiwi
@helloworlditskiwi Год назад
Yooo I live in New Zealand.. I haven't really been anywhere else but Auckland though. I'm definitely taking a trip to see them
@Stormnado_
@Stormnado_ Год назад
@@helloworlditskiwi def worth it, nzs very beautiful
@psyvana
@psyvana 5 месяцев назад
I think the lupne lays the way for better planting. I hope some local plants can set better roots soon. Maybe think about adding heather and bilberry into the mix?
@joshlucio8120
@joshlucio8120 11 месяцев назад
I think its a mater of balance. Introducing more animals and plants to the mix would help. For instance, animals that eat it's seeds which would help slow the spread.
@deanwinchester6654
@deanwinchester6654 Год назад
Looks like the Lupin is really good for the environment. It is bringing life back to places that need it. I do agree that letting it take over spots where native floara lives is bad but can be managed.
@Klaus1386
@Klaus1386 11 месяцев назад
It doesn't kill native plants, it recedes when they begin to grow..
@FireAngelOfLondon
@FireAngelOfLondon 8 месяцев назад
@@Klaus1386 It's not that simple. With some native plants it completely wipes them out, with others it dies off once they start to take over and makes way for them. In still other cases something between the two occurs. Predicting the outcome when it is introduced into an existing ecosystem is impossible, so if you do decide to use it to recover a barren area you need to monitor very carefully. You may well end up with a battle to control it costing huge sums of money and real damage to a local environment; so use with caution.
@TheHonestPeanut
@TheHonestPeanut 8 месяцев назад
@@FireAngelOfLondon seems like it actually is that simple. Let it go and reseed the natives when it evens out.
@phillipcollette5224
@phillipcollette5224 7 месяцев назад
I have grown lupin in the garden and trust me when I say it is NOT aggresive. Opportunistic in an open site - yes. But when other plants get going it is weird how non-commital lupine gets.
@alexanderbeck803
@alexanderbeck803 Год назад
As an Icelander first of all, thank you for your work here, but with the topic of Lupine (Lúpína). I personally take the Lupine as a positive in most regards with the beneficial uses for fighting back against desertification, ect of Iceland's habitat and most Icelanders agree with that. But it also not good for some of our native species and it invading the gardens/towns of people. But with all that we Icelanders can't overlook the benefits of the Lupine, and we better start "Rewilding Iceland". With that I think I should look into helping my own little island. Takk fyrir að lesa :3
@MossyEarth
@MossyEarth Год назад
Lupine definitely has a lot to offer to Iceland, unlike most species classified as invasive. While the threat it poses to some native ecosystems can't be overlooked, this one plant could also provide the first stepping stone to solving Iceland's desertification problem... An interesting debate to say the least! - Tom
@gumundur1721
@gumundur1721 Год назад
Well I hate the Lupine it's everywhere and it's annoying it has changed some landscapes around Reykjavík to purple fields which I found cool until it is everywhere.
@icelandgaming
@icelandgaming Год назад
​@@gumundur1721 Well, I think that's fair, but, at least from my perspective, you do need to look at this from a different angle, so to say. Plant a couple trees and the lupines quickly die out because they can't compete with something that gives shade, and lupines don't like shade. I understand where you're coming from. It can be annoying to turn up to a field of purple when you'd rather see green. But it is of my personal opinion that these plants are more beneficial. Vonandi skilurðu.
@lunacanyonrose8436
@lunacanyonrose8436 Год назад
I live in SoCal so I recognized the lupine right away since we have so much here as well.
@brianhurd3355
@brianhurd3355 Год назад
As a Texan this flower is immediately recognizable as a close relation of our state flower, the Texas Bluebonnet (Lupinus texensis). I believe the state government seeds the side of major highways every Autumn with these flowers, making roadways more colorful each Spring.
@memelurd7341
@memelurd7341 11 месяцев назад
Aren't they illegal to pick as well?
@brianhurd3355
@brianhurd3355 11 месяцев назад
@@memelurd7341 I always heard that growing up, but it's just popular and persistent rumor with a tiny kernel of truth in it. You aren't allowed to pick flowers in a state park, and you have to follow safety rules when pulling off the highway to a patch of flowers, but picking a few is completely fine.
@collincooper7760
@collincooper7760 Год назад
Iceland is such a geologically young island, I wouldn’t consider any plant “invasive”. It seems like the lupine is playing a vital role in maturing icelands biosphere. Although there may be some negative effects, it seems like something like this lupine invasion (whether it be lupine or not) is inevitable for a place like Iceland. It is also quite stunning, and has a positive influence on the micro fauna, which in my opinion are arguably more important at this stage in icelands development.
@excitedbox5705
@excitedbox5705 Год назад
What if it is only invasive because of a lack of competition? If Iceland is "young" as you say there are probably not many other species competing with it, leaving it to win out over other species. A competitor for lupine that doesn't compete with native species may be able to keep it in check.
@Jacob-yg7lz
@Jacob-yg7lz Год назад
Iceland is 20 million years old. That's young by geologic standards, but by ecological standards that's very old. The dinosaurs only went extinct 65 million years ago, so Iceland's been around for almost a third of the Cenozoic era, and pretty much all of the neogene (the previous ecologic paradigm) and 10 times longer than the quaternary period (our current ecological paradigm, including even the ice ages). For reference, iceland is about as old as Bears. So needless to say, yes things can be invasive to iceland. In fact, things can be especially invasive to "young" island ecosystems, because they are hubs of biodiversity where evolution gets to stretch it's legs.
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Год назад
Iceland had it's ecosystem destroyed by humans. It used to have trees. It's actually absurd hearing anyone argue against lupine. Especially because it allows the forests to be replanted. Dead land and tiny pockets of "moss ecosystem" or forests again. It's a no brainer.
@hendrikdependrik1891
@hendrikdependrik1891 Год назад
Although we don't admit, a lot of human beings hate forests. I can see it here in the Netherlands with nitrogen issue or with the Dutch Serengeti called the Oostvaardersplassen. You see, Dutch soil likes forests really much. However, there are some overgrazed heaths left that are considered nature. Or forests get cut down or overgrazed on purpose to get a Serengeti effect.
@novideohereatall
@novideohereatall Год назад
This always springs to mind when I hear about invasive species. Lots of plants. insects and animals go extinct every year, way before humans where a thing. The earth is constantly changing, sometimes drastically, sometimes very slowly. Humans have definitely caused rapid changes which have, and will continue to kill lots of species. Invasive species and weeds, are plants and animals that are extremely good at adapting to their enviroment, survive in harsh conditions and reproduce very quickly. The ultimate survivors. Other plants and animals need extremely specific conditions to survive, and will, no matter what, go extinct sooner rather than later. Nature always finds a balance, and one species that specialises in one thing while killing everything else will definitely create a huge gap for another, competetive species to take hold. The only issue is time. Before humans messed with stuff, the planet probably stabilized pretty well, minimizing the amount of swings to monocultures. Now we introduced a massive change, that will take a long time to stabilize. The earth will change, as it always have done. We can only hope we didn't go over the edge where no other species could ever compete again.
@show_me_your_kitties
@show_me_your_kitties 11 месяцев назад
In Texas we call this a blue bonnet and they are all over. I love them they are beautiful ❤
@WJCharliee
@WJCharliee 4 месяца назад
As President Theodore Roosevelt said “ it is all about land management when it comes to the art and science of conservationism”. Basically one little known fact about Teddy is that if he didn’t get involved in politics, he would’ve been a botanist. He used this love to set up the first national park in the United States and started the whole environmentalist movement. His advice is very simple. We are the species on planet earth that can preserve our planet. So the answer is simple.: we should let the lupines thrive in areas that will not destroy the native plants and animals. It is all about land management.❤️🌻🦋
@infernogoddess9479
@infernogoddess9479 Год назад
We grow this stuff because it’s really good for bees! And all you need is like 1 bag of seeds and some patience. We went from seeing about 40-50 bees per year to seeing so many they covered the bushes completely! (I’m in Canada so lupin is native) lupin doesn’t crowd out other plant species like buttercup does, in fact we plant it around our fruit trees because it attracts bees and acts as a blocker for more invasive species!
@jassyburgos1042
@jassyburgos1042 6 месяцев назад
As a Agroforestry student that deals with the study of sustainability and also specialized in bringing back degraded land, lupine can help bring back all the nutrients it lost. 😊
@PikaBolaChan
@PikaBolaChan 4 месяца назад
normal desert chilling* Lupin: *WHAT IF IT WAS PURPLE?!*
@johannhawk8471
@johannhawk8471 Год назад
I have worked some summer seasons in forestry in Iceland at the Þöll forestry station. i've never realized it was a threat to some ecosystems and generally heard people call it a pioneer plant rather than invasive plant. The station director said that any given lupine in an area would lead to its own demise in a matter of 4-ish decades all on its own as it paves(or pioneers) the way for forests to muscle them out in the future. I haven't been aware of any debate surrounding them or heard of anyone dislike them for being non-native or affecting the landscape. Just that they're issues for farmers that need to get them out of their fields but those are reasons that aren't covered in the video. In my view we don't need to overcomplicate things beyond 2 factors: 1. the lupine will largely take care of itself and will do so even faster if we actively plant trees among them. 2. if they're a threat to farms, ecology, local species, etc. Cutting them with something solid or motorized is feasible. But i don't know if anyone would want to devote resources into cutting and making larger preservation areas if its outside the bounds of the national parks.
@sran438
@sran438 Год назад
The corruption is spreading.
@Listenclearly1979
@Listenclearly1979 8 месяцев назад
Lupins are used as fodder in Australia. I know a racehorse that is highly allergic to oats. He sweats, breaks out in huge hives , heart rate increases and requires veterinary intervention. His owner/trainer uses lupins to replace the oats.
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