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myrmepropagandist

yeah moss is great but how about a vascular plant that has basically ... gone back to the way of the moss...

Azorella compacta

It's... it's a carrot that has given up on having leaves...

Imagine a hostile planet with plants like this... could you tell that they once grew in less cold and arid climates? What if flora of the twilight days of a planet look like the earliest life... but when you look closer there are abilities, and structures that tell their history....

Densely packed leaves, like moss, or pine-needles...
It looks exactly like a tuft of green moss.
19 comments
donkey herder

@futurebird oh, that’s supposed to be great duck food for your backyard ducks! They love to eat it and it grows exponentially fast in stagnant water.

🌼 Dagnabbit, Pascaline! 🌼

@violetmadder
Oooh, yes I love them!
Suddenly I am reminded of the cute mushrooms I used to find in France (so; totally unrelated) that were so soft, round, and nice. They too could be used for fuel (for shame though, for shame!) and were so nice to have in my hands. I once took one home and may still have it somewhere.
Ah, l'amadou ❤🍄

@donkeyherder @futurebird

@violetmadder
Oooh, yes I love them!
Suddenly I am reminded of the cute mushrooms I used to find in France (so; totally unrelated) that were so soft, round, and nice. They too could be used for fuel (for shame though, for shame!) and were so nice to have in my hands. I once took one home and may still have it somewhere.
Ah, l'amadou ❤🍄

donkey herder

@violetmadder @futurebird WOW!! 😮 that’s so cool, even cooler than duckweed indeed!! Thanks!

michel v

@futurebird most fascinating is the idea that this plant generates its own peat.

adaddinsane (Steve Turnbull)

@futurebird

Interesting, it's on the same lines as there's no such thing as a tree. Only more so.

violetmadder

@futurebird

I love that stuff so very much.

It's like a special precious pokemon that should never, ever be hurt. Nobody touch it.

Takiro 🎨

@futurebird
Can I still put that carrot in my salad?

myrmepropagandist

@Takiro

I think the bulbous roots are long gone... and many members of this family are poisonous... though I have no idea about this one.

Stephanie M

@futurebird I got all excited thinking this was the "star plant" that made me so happy when I was trekking in Ecuador, but the range and altitude didn't quite match. Turns out I was looking for Plantago rigida, which looks very similar, because apparently convergent evolution gave us a number of plant families with hardy little high-altitude cushion plants like this. TIL!

Steven Bodzin bike & subscribe

@futurebird and then there's Punotia lagopus. I took this photo from a bus driving by inaturalist.org/observations/2 but there are better shots out there. It just looks like a pale boulder. Only 20 observations on iNaturalist, probably because nobody realizes they are looking at a plant.

Photo of low grasses and moss in alpine tundra of the Peruvian Andes. In center of photo is a broad white boulder about 3 meters across and 2/3m high over the surrounding landscape. It has small reddish tufts off of it, and on close examination it reveals a textured surface made of thousands of little white balls.
Sam Stephenson

@futurebird I saw these llareta in Atacama and they were absolutely incredible. Alien. (They’re endangered now because they grow so slowly and miners harvested them for fuel)

Llareta growing on a rock, with a hand and extended finger for scale
Closely cropped shot of llareta flowers. They’re tiny, bright green, and tightly packed together like pile carpet
Extra_Special_Carbon

@futurebird I still don’t understand what the structure is underneath. Looks like stems, but maybe really tightly packed.

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