• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Tumbleweeds Might Not Be What You Think They Are

July 12, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Most of us will have seen a tumbleweed. Well, not necessarily in real life, but as a long-standing prop in cowboy movies, or in your brain when someone asks you a question during a Friday afternoon meeting. We know what they look like – but do you know what they actually are?

Advertisement

TikTok user whatsinthekoolaid was shocked to find out that they are not in fact made up of sticks, as were several other people in the comments of a video captioned “everything is a lie” – an understandable description under the circumstances.

“I was under the impression that tumbleweeds were like collections of sticks on the road that just kind of found each other and then rolled around like a desert snowball, like an outside dust bunny,” said the TikTok creator.

ⓘ IFLScience is not responsible for content shared from external sites.

Others who commented on the video thought the same, while some even said that they didn’t know tumbleweeds were even real.

But as the video goes on to explain, tumbleweeds are in fact very real, but they aren’t a spherical mass of stuck-together sticks – they’re plants.

Advertisement

Many different plant species can be considered tumbleweeds, but the one best known to the US is the Russian thistle (Salsola tragus), which begins its life very much rooted into the ground. It then grows into a large, round shape that looks a bit like a prickly green bush.

As the plant ages, it becomes weak near its base and, eventually, breaks off. Then, with a gust of wind, the Russian thistle dies, but a tumbleweed is born.

That’s not the end of the story, however. Yes, the plant is technically dead, but the tumbleweed is about to ensure the survival of the species; the characteristic behavior of roly-polying with reckless abandon is actually a seed dispersal technique.

As the tumbleweeds rolls and bounces along the ground, pushed by the wind, its seeds are left behind on the ground, germinating with far less complex requirements than many plants.

Advertisement

Given the Russian thistle can produce and carry in the region of 20,000 to 250,000 seeds, this makes for a rather effective way of having surviving offspring in large numbers, and given that the wind can take tumbleweeds pretty much anywhere, far and wide too.

That’s great news for the Russian thistle – but not so much in other ways. Not only is it considered to be an invasive species in the US, having been accidentally introduced in the 1870s, but the lack of control over where it goes can end up being a fairly massive pain in the ass.

“Tumbleweed tornados” – tumbleweeds caught up in dust devils – can cause visibility problems on roads, and attempting to get rid of the pests by burning them can end up with the same thing but with the added pizzazz of fire.



Advertisement

They can also get more than just a bit in the way, as residents of towns in Utah and Nevada found out earlier this year when high winds brought literal stacks upon stacks of tumbleweeds into the streets, in an incident appropriately dubbed “Tumblemageddon”.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. U.S. Gulf Coast grain exports slowly resuming after Ida as more power restored
  2. Accenture expects strong Q1 as Delta variant delays return-to-work plans
  3. Egypt’s Baboon Mummy Mystery Finally Unraveled After 118 Years Of Puzzlement
  4. ZiG: The World’s Newest Currency Is Off To A Rocky Start

Source Link: Tumbleweeds Might Not Be What You Think They Are

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The Largest Turtle Ever Known To Have Lived Was An Absolute Unit
  • “It Literally Leapt Out Of The Rock At Us”: How Violent Storms Led To The Extraordinary Preservation Of Baby Pterosaurs
  • This Is The Reason Why Earth’s Core Exists, And It’s More Interesting Than You Might Think
  • Over 11 Million Years Of Evolution, Eyeless Cavefish Developed Blindness Independently Many Times
  • Tropical Mammoths, Dazzling Brain Map, And Perfectly Preserved Pterosaurs
  • What Is Actually In Pumpkin Spice? Spoiler: It Isn’t Pumpkins
  • Voyager 1 Launched 48 Years Ago Today, So NASA Shares Archival Footage Of Carl Sagan To Celebrate
  • Infrasound: The Noise That Travels Further Than Any Other On Earth
  • Ready, Set, Chonk: Fat Bear Week 2025 Is About To Begin. And Yes, It’s Early
  • Artificial Sweeteners Like Aspartame Linked To 1.6 Years Of Extra Brain Aging In 8-Year Study
  • The Largest Mammal To Ever Live Made African Elephants Look Incredibly Small
  • West Coast States Form New Health Alliance To Give Vaccine Advice, Saying CDC Is Now “A Political Tool”
  • Shakespeare’s Skull Is Missing
  • Is One Type Of Drinking Water Better Than Another?
  • What Food Did Neanderthals Eat? The Real “Paleodiet” Wasn’t As Meaty As You Imagine
  • Typhoon Tip: The Largest Storm Ever Could Have Swallowed Half Of The Continental US
  • Is Acrylamide Really Bad For You?
  • Macaws Learn From Watching Other Macaws Interact – A Kind Of Imitation We Thought Was Unique To Humans
  • “Volnado” Dances Around Spectacular Lava Fountain In Kīlauea Volcano Crater
  • “Impossible To Imagine”: Queen Ants Produce Babies Of 2 Different Species, And It’s Never Been Seen Before
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version