Ornamentals and invasive plants: if you choose one you get the other as well
TL;DRAbstract
In 1997, when he was awarded a doctorate honoris causa by Ghent University, David Attenborough was invited to give a public lecture. The auditorium was packed, and I was lucky to get one of the few remaining seats. Attenborough explained how, after he had produced a number of nature documentaries on animals, he sounded out his boss about doing something on plants. The immediate answer was rather discouraging: “But David, they don’t move...” The boss, however, was wrong. With The private life of plants Attenborough produced a wonderful series full of movement and action that clearly showed that plants move around with ease and reach new habitats far and near. Plants may indeed forever be rooted in the soil, yet they disperse their fruits, seeds and spores over more or less long distances, and with a little help from humans – knowingly or not – they perform even better.
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In 1997, when he was awarded a doctorate honoris causa by Ghent University, David Attenborough was invited to give a public lecture. The auditorium was packed, and I was lucky to get one of the few remaining seats. Attenborough explained how, after he had produced a number of nature documentaries on animals, he sounded out his boss about doing something on plants. The immediate answer was rather discouraging: “But David, they don’t move...” The boss, however, was wrong. With The private life of plants Attenborough produced a wonderful series full of movement and action that clearly showed that plants move around with ease and reach new habitats far and near. Plants may indeed forever be rooted in the soil, yet they disperse their fruits, seeds and spores over more or less long distances, and with a little help from humans – knowingly or not – they perform even better.
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