A Real Alien Invasion Is Coming to a Palm Tree Near You | Deep Look

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Aah, Southern California. Y’know, the whole “surf’s up, Tinseltown, sun-soaked glamour” thing? Too bad this idyllic landscape is mostly make-believe. Take the palm trees. They’re not even real trees. They’re more closely related to grass. And they’re imported. Like this Canary Island date palm. It came halfway around the world to be one of the more dazzling stars in the landscape. But this Hollywood success story is turning into a horror movie. This little monster is the South American palm weevil. Scientists first found it in San Diego in 2011. Weevils are just beetles... with snouts. This female uses hers as a drill, to get at the palm’s apical meristem. It’s a bowl of juicy goodness at the top, where the leaves sprout. She lays her eggs down in those tunnels. And her spawn eat the palm from the inside out… starting with its heart. That’s right; it’s the same stuff you can get at the supermarket. They’ll turn this palm’s healthy flesh into a rotting mess that smells like a dumpster in the sun. Once they’re big enough, the larvae will spin cigar-shaped cocoons from the leftover fibers they can’t eat. As the trees’ fronds starve and die, the larvae hang out and gestate, morphing into pupae, and… Ew, that’s just, oh man… That’s gross. As adults, they burst out, take flight and seek out a new host… leaving behind the dying, hollow shell of a once majestic palm. Mark Hoddle, at UC Riverside, is tracking the weevil infestation. He puts them on a kind of aerial treadmill in his lab to test their stamina. He’s trying to figure out how they got here, whether they hitched a ride on imported palms, or made the trip themselves. Turns out they can fly up to 15 miles a day, enough to hopscotch from palm to palm on their own. The only way to stop them: treat every palm tree in their path with pesticides before the weevils get there. That’ll be tough to do. So these particular botanical icons could be on the fast track to being just another Hollywood has-been. These weevils are pretty gnarly. So we asked Anna Rothschild from Gross Science to do those animations for us. Thanks, Anna! ANNA: You’re welcome! It’s my pleasure. I love gross stuff. LAUREN: So there is one other way to manage these larvae, sort of a biological control, which people do in some places, like Thailand, Peru and Ghana. ANNA: Entomophagy! LAUREN: Eating bugs. Mmm. Tasty. ANNA: So hop over to my channel for a whole episode about it. LAUREN: And thanks for watching this Deep Look.
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Channel: Deep Look
Views: 3,005,465
Rating: 4.7120337 out of 5
Keywords: science, deep look, pbs, 4k, education, bbc, nature, learning, wild, documentary, macro, deep, look, alien, aliens, xenomorph, chestburster, palm, weevil, weevils, palm tree, tree, invasion, gross science, anna, rothschild, south, american, south american palm weevil, california, hollywood, horror, Rhynchophorus palmarum, insect, pest, apical meristem, dactylifera, date, palm weevil, biology, invasive, species, anna rothschild, nova, ew, proboscis, larvae, larva, rotten, rot, movie, egg, adventure, wildlife, animals, worm
Id: S6a3Q5DzeBM
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 4min 3sec (243 seconds)
Published: Tue Jun 20 2017
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