This is the World's Loneliest Tree
Transcript
This is a story of a plant, but not just any plant.
It is the story of a plant that long, long ago once ruled the world.
A plant that, today, is the very last of its kind.
It’s this plant, behind me, Encephalartos woodii.
E. Woodii for short, and I’ve been looking after it for over 20 years.
It was named for British botanist, John Medley Wood, who in 1895 discovered it growing on a hillside on the coast of South Africa.
A strange, handsome plant caught his eye, and he carefully removed a small portion of it and had it shipped all the way to London to here, Kew Gardens, where it’s been for the last 117 years.
But its history goes much, much further back.
You see, Encephalartos woodii, is what is known as a cycad, and cycads have been around for 300 million years.
As the millennium rolled on, cycads flourished providing shade for triceratops, a perch for pterodactyls, and a tasty snack for brontosauruses.
At one point during the Jurassic, cycads made up 20% of all the plants on Earth, and covered every corner of the globe.
But the good times couldn’t last forever.
The dinosaurs went extinct.
Ice ages came and went.
New modern plants, like conifers and fruit trees, started pushing cycads out, and the once proud population of E. Woodiis were reduced, and reduced, and reduced until there was possibly only one left.
One single solitary E. Woodii growing quietly on a hillside.
Which brings us right back to John Medley Wood.
At the time, he had no way of knowing just how rare his discovery was, but expedition after expedition in search of more E. Woodii have proved fruitless.
You see, cycads are dioecious, meaning, you need separate male and female plants to create a new one, and this one happens to be a male, a true lonely bachelor.
If a female mate cannot be found it really will be the last of its kind.
To this day, researchers are still looking.
After all, it’s a big world, there might just be a chance.
In the meantime, it’ll have me to keep him company.
Vocabulary List
rule
(verb) to govern or control
hillside
(noun) the side of a hill
roll on
(verb) to continue to happen or exist
flourish
(verb) to grow or develop successfully
shade
(noun) a dark area or place that is protected from the sun
perch
(noun) a place to sit or rest on a high or exposed place
tasty
(adjective) having a pleasant taste
extinct
(adjective) no longer existing or in use
solitary
(adjective) living or being alone
fruitless
(adjective) not producing any results or benefits
bachelor
(noun) an unmarried man
company
(noun) the fact or condition of being with another person or other people
Grammar Point
The dinosaurs went extinct.
In this sentence, the verb “go” acts as a linking verb and we can use it in the following pattern:
go + adjective
When “go” is used with an adjective, it means “to become or be in a particular state or condition.”
Many families are forced to go hungry.
go hungry = become hungry
Since “go” has 5 verb forms, we can use it in those forms.
Many families are forced to go hungry.
go hungry = become hungry
He suddenly went quiet.
went quiet = became quiet
The milk has gone sour.
has gone sour = has become sour
Her hair is going gray.
is going gray = is becoming gray
He goes crazy when this thing happens.
goes crazy = becomes crazy