Figs have tiny dead wasps inside them (but they're ok to eat)

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2022
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    2006 journal article on 11,200-year-old parthenocarpic fig find Jordan River site: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
    Scholarly response to the above article, arguing the find is not necessarily evidence of deliberate cultivation: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
    1979 article in the journal California Agriculture on caprification of Smyrna-type fig trees: calag.ucanr.edu/archive/?type...
    A useful history of fig cultivation from the University of Florida: edis.ifas.ufl.edu/publication...
    A delightful (and extensive) old blog post on figs and fig wasps from the now-retired Palomar College botany professor Dr. Wayne Armstrong www2.palomar.edu/users/warmst...
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Komentáře • 3,4K

  • @PedanticAntics
    @PedanticAntics Před rokem +14534

    Scientists have shown that over the course of a year, on average, about eight figs crawl into your mouth at night while you sleep.

    • @jojomojo508
      @jojomojo508 Před rokem +4

      Israeli scientists have shown that you can murder children as long as they're Palestinian

    • @ShadowRulah
      @ShadowRulah Před rokem +2373

      That's actually a misconception, Figs George who lives in a cave and eats thousands of figs a night should not have been included in the study.

    • @PedanticAntics
      @PedanticAntics Před rokem +1003

      @@ShadowRulah you don't get to fig-pick the data to support your agenda.

    • @leetri
      @leetri Před rokem +997

      "average person eats 8 figs a year" factoid actualy just statistical error. average person eats 0 figs per year. Figs Georg, who lives in cave & eats over 10,000 each day, is an outlier adn should not have been counted

    • @PedanticAntics
      @PedanticAntics Před rokem +418

      @@leetri fig news, I don't buy it!

  • @iamnoone21
    @iamnoone21 Před rokem +3822

    Imagine living your whole life inside part of a living organism. It feeds you when you're young and dissolves you if you don't leave it soon enough. Your instincts tell you to mate with your siblings and burrow out of this thing that's all you've ever known, and then half of you die as soon as you reach the outside world, while the other half burrows into different pods to get digested there, surrounded by your own unborn babies
    Sounds like a scifi. I love how wild nature is

  • @glenmorrison8080
    @glenmorrison8080 Před rokem +159

    Botanist here. Adam, I have to say you really do your botany info accurately. It's clear you so careful research and it kicks ass.

    • @kimberlypatton9634
      @kimberlypatton9634 Před rokem +6

      Yes! As a retired horticulturist ,his info is not only clear but accurate.Here in W.Tx,we are able to grow the most wonderful figs,and the wasps aren't usually a problem,it's getting out there to pick the figs every day before the grackles,Cardinals,Bluejays,Mockingbirds,Doves and Sparrows go wild on your fruits!

    • @traceyevans2757
      @traceyevans2757 Před rokem +1

      BoTaNiSt HeRe 😂

    • @glenmorrison8080
      @glenmorrison8080 Před rokem +17

      @@traceyevans2757 Not sure what is strange about citing one's profession when commenting on how a video is handling the subject matter of that profession.

    • @ciarancarville7730
      @ciarancarville7730 Před rokem

      @@traceyevans2757 ViRGiN HeRe 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @insertepiknamehere3149
    @insertepiknamehere3149 Před rokem +195

    Wild figs grew in my back yard at my old home and I ate one and it became my favorite fruit related crop. But watching this makes me rethink my life decisions…

    • @mariotheundying
      @mariotheundying Před rokem +14

      Yummy bug, extra nutrients

    • @drewmurdaugh6264
      @drewmurdaugh6264 Před rokem +6

      what most people do not realize are t....ny little wasps that you find in figs are pollinated by those little wasps. without those little wasp there would be no figs or fig newtons ohh give me a figgy pudding no give me a figgy pudding and don't forget the wasps ..

    • @eitantaub5503
      @eitantaub5503 Před rokem +2

      There is nothing like the taste of fresh figs...

    • @insertepiknamehere3149
      @insertepiknamehere3149 Před rokem

      @@eitantaub5503 Yea nothin’ better… But now i can’t stop thinking of wasps and i know it’s ok to eat but if i let my relatives know they’ll FLIP when I eat it!

    • @atverde
      @atverde Před rokem

      Wow! Informative 👍

  • @rin_etoware_2989
    @rin_etoware_2989 Před rokem +1873

    since i learned that the fig essentially dissolves the wasp inside it, that just made figs sound more monstrous to me

    • @deepakhiranandani6488
      @deepakhiranandani6488 Před rokem +9

      Yes. Me too, sort of. A bit creepy, it seems.

    • @hamburger512
      @hamburger512 Před rokem +121

      Extra protein

    • @yurirodriguez888
      @yurirodriguez888 Před rokem +76

      It sounds a bit terrifying. It reminded me a lot of this one chapter in the Life Of Pi, where Pi is on an island made of moss that “eats” any animal that’s still on the ground during the night. Even finding some human teeth in the bud of flower that has yet to bloom growing on the island.

    • @apw9929
      @apw9929 Před rokem +10

      I think the wasps are fine with it

    • @jaspervanheycop9722
      @jaspervanheycop9722 Před rokem +66

      There's lots of plants that can do similar things, that slight tingle on your tongue and lips when you eat pineapple? Yeah that's the enzymes in the pineapple trying to digest YOU, you just usually are faster.

  • @viralgayguy
    @viralgayguy Před rokem +651

    “Figs have tiny wasps inside them” can be said to the same rhythm as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

  • @ToddsDiscGolf
    @ToddsDiscGolf Před rokem +91

    Thanks man, you cured my phobia of eating wasps in figs! I’m so relieved to hear that they dissolve

    • @lonalxaia
      @lonalxaia Před rokem +15

      U vill eatz zee bugz.

    • @DJMerck
      @DJMerck Před rokem +2

      You probably don't have to worry about it because almost all fig trees are self-pollinating you have to go search for a fig tree that needs to be pollinated by a wasp and there's very few of those here in America. A quick Google search will let you know how misleading this video is

    • @TunaIRL
      @TunaIRL Před rokem +16

      @@DJMerck And you only had to watch the video a little further to see that he talks about that. Amazing

    • @DJMerck
      @DJMerck Před rokem +1

      @@TunaIRL no thanks...

    • @myusername3689
      @myusername3689 Před rokem +1

      When I first heard about this, I was more worried about the sting from a potential wasp than the wasp itself. I’m pretty sure these wasps don’t have stings tho so I don’t worry.

  • @Vegeta1423
    @Vegeta1423 Před rokem +17

    Thanks for getting the point immediately at the beginning of the video. Usually a lot of people try to bury the lead. I really appreciate that. I watched the whole video, good info here especially for someone who knows nothing about this stuff but has eaten a good amount of figs lol.

  • @wtfserpico
    @wtfserpico Před rokem +1131

    I picked up a pack of Fig Newtons for the first time in YEARS last week and thought something just wasn't the same about them...turns out it was the seeds and wasp bits that I was missing. Such a bummer. The seedy waspy Newtons were so much better.

    • @Tariqali-bj5hm
      @Tariqali-bj5hm Před rokem +25

      Lol

    • @arina4030
      @arina4030 Před rokem +29

      honestly i love it

    • @aerynstormcrow
      @aerynstormcrow Před rokem +48

      My newtons I had tonight had seeds. And the crunch.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Před rokem +12

      The fig absorbs the female wasp ... so you won't find a wasp in a fig

    • @wtfserpico
      @wtfserpico Před rokem +48

      @@alexcarter8807 The waspy-bits part was a joke, the crunchy seedy part wasn't. They simply are better with seeds.

  • @Merlmabase
    @Merlmabase Před rokem +1214

    I'm not weirded out by too much on the food realm, but this definitely blew my mind when I first learned of it. Adds a whole other freaky dimension to an already pretty alien (and beautiful) not-fruit

    • @swedneck
      @swedneck Před rokem +30

      same, the wasps basically being ants means i wouldn't really care even if they weren't dissolved. At that miniscule size the insect is basically a more palatable grain of sand.

    • @jojomojo508
      @jojomojo508 Před rokem

      I'm much more scared about the illegal settler colonial occupation of Palestine by the Zionist Regime from which the quoted "scientists" (colonial occupiers who served in the child-murdering IDF) in Adam's video hail than I am from a couple old dead wasps in a fig.

    • @SuperN0vaNexus
      @SuperN0vaNexus Před rokem +17

      @@swedneck I'll forever see "ant's" as nutritious sand now, thank ^_^

    • @katarinajanoskova
      @katarinajanoskova Před rokem +4

      I think the pistachio worms are far worse... :(

    • @autumnwitchmaple
      @autumnwitchmaple Před rokem +1

      fruitn't

  • @angelbabycards3595
    @angelbabycards3595 Před rokem +18

    No worries, Friends. I used to work at a large Fig Picking and Packing Company, here in Central California, (Jura Farms, Fruit Packing). It was my job, to walk around the fig trees in the hot summer mornings and afternoons, take refrigerated figs that had young fruit flies inside, where I would then place [One or Two figs] in a small brown bag, stapled to each fig tree, the tiny fruit flies would come out of the now warm figs, - and begin going from fig blossom to fig blossom, in very much the way We humans use bees to pollinate a variety of trees for fruit, etc. 'Honestly, it''s quite normal for them to do that, as they have done that specific job for probably Millions of years.'
    And so: Yes, I'm 100% sure the small fruit flies will end up in the figs as we harvested them, but nobody gave it one thought, as the fruit flies are beneficial little insects that never gave us a second thought. They don't / can't bite, they don't care at all about humans, but they go straight away to their work as I recall, when I was a young man, back during the Summer of 1984. Yup.
    In essence: the Fig picking process is labor intensive, the harvesting of figs that are placed into large wooden bins was a little dirty, as both Flies and a few Regular flies would naturally land on the figs outside of the warehouse processing room, - but the end result (Yummy Figs) was actually quite good. Mom used to love em. Grew up with Fig Newtons. No worries here, lol. - ' The Fig Newtons always tasted great! - Nuff Said.' - Peace. \\//

  • @sonialam-karunaratna4135

    I'm a food scientist and wow i thought i knew alot about food, but Adam you are just next level knowledge

  • @catylynch7909
    @catylynch7909 Před rokem +1378

    I have only vague memories of a fig tree that was in our backyard, when I was very little. I remember that it was fun to climb, and that it had large, thick leaves that provided shade from summer heat. For years, I heard my Mom recall how difficult it was to keep the patio clean from dropping figs. This was in Livermore, Calif., (east of San Francisco). She said that she would sweep, and hose the patio ... only to walk inside, and hear another "plop." Now it makes sense. The tree was, likely, rejecting the figs that were of no use to it. Fun stuff!

    • @jamescanjuggle
      @jamescanjuggle Před rokem +54

      im visiting croatia and these fig trees are everywhere, its cool to read your comment describing one meanwhile i can look at the real thing just moments after

    • @imstupid880
      @imstupid880 Před rokem +10

      Livermore is a great place to be, good wine country

    • @shanemelott3131
      @shanemelott3131 Před rokem +16

      This reads like something from a novel

    • @prometheus5770
      @prometheus5770 Před rokem +25

      no, those were not unfertilized figs that 'plopped' because they would be unripe, dry or even shriveled. they wouldn't be mess either. the messy figs that bothered her must have been fully ripe soft figs that popped as they fell and dirtied the surface with their juice and flash.
      interestingly, figs and mulberries, probably the two messiest fruit trees that litter surfaces with sweet, sticky and dark red jam-like substances are both from the same Moraceae plant family

    • @Hephera
      @Hephera Před rokem +20

      fig trees dropping their figs is the entire goal of the fertilization process. they get pollinated, grow seeds inside them, and then drop off when theyre ripe so an animal can eat them and spread the seeds. they dont just drop when theyre being rejected

  • @matthiasmohr8138
    @matthiasmohr8138 Před rokem +565

    Sounds like free protein to me.

    • @xFionaWafflesx
      @xFionaWafflesx Před rokem +34

      More like bee protein

    • @traphimawari7760
      @traphimawari7760 Před rokem +37

      Sounds like free revenge to me, extra sweet

    • @potatopie4579
      @potatopie4579 Před rokem +3

      I mean that a positive way to see it I guess

    • @yvanthedrakon
      @yvanthedrakon Před rokem +5

      They are going to start charging for them now that you mention it lmao

    • @geeked24-7
      @geeked24-7 Před rokem +2

      @@potatopie4579 lmao he's an optimist

  • @jilligain3409
    @jilligain3409 Před rokem +1

    That was quite interesting! I planted a fig tree about 24 yrs ago & now every yr I get tons of figs. It’s a beautiful tree. All kinds of birds & other critters come when it fruits

  • @Darkmattermonkey77
    @Darkmattermonkey77 Před rokem +19

    I knew there was a reason I stopped eating figs years ago. Thanks for sharing.

    • @lilblkrose
      @lilblkrose Před rokem +4

      The tasty one is fertilized by wasps and the ones without wasps aren't as "tasty" due to lacking fertilized seed giving crunch. Sadge life for a Fig

    • @DistractedDaisy
      @DistractedDaisy Před rokem

      I love figs.

    • @nahor88
      @nahor88 Před rokem

      I don't mind the wasp; figs make me shite like crazy, worse reason IMO. Eating bugs is considered normal in most of the civilized world.

  • @ZombieWilfred
    @ZombieWilfred Před rokem +447

    I actually found one inside a fig when I was young before I knew about this and thought "that's weird, creepy, and kinda gross," but I just assumed it was some kind of bug that died eating into the fig, picked it out, and ate the rest of the fig. I guess that makes me one of the few people who was actually relieved when they found out it's totally normal for there to be dead wasps inside of figs. 🙃😆

    • @wood7395
      @wood7395 Před rokem +31

      yeah totally normal to eat the bugs!!!!!!! eat them all!!!!

    • @katie7748
      @katie7748 Před rokem +60

      ​@@wood7395 And live in the pods and own nothing and be happy

    • @Chevalier_knight
      @Chevalier_knight Před rokem +9

      Untrue crickets have been known to be bad for human consumption for like 60 years and for the last 30 known to have huge cancer risks

    • @Denelix
      @Denelix Před rokem +1

      So when u were young you just knew what plant was used in making these? You were pretty smart when u were young!!!

    • @ZombieWilfred
      @ZombieWilfred Před rokem +12

      @@Denelix I didn't know why the dead wasp was in there, just found it while eating a whole fig, not a fig Newton, and then later found out that it's how figs are pollinated.

  • @molestingfood
    @molestingfood Před rokem +770

    Hey Adam, it's weird that your box of fig newton's didn't have seeds. Because the other week I got a box and I'm 90% sure it had the seeds

    • @HuginMunin
      @HuginMunin Před rokem +307

      Could be different regional sourcing, different moments in the harvest cycle, etc. There are more regional differences in industrial food products than people think.

    • @ballboys607
      @ballboys607 Před rokem +79

      I've had mixed results, some packages have no seeds at all and some are like 20% seeds

    • @clownjev
      @clownjev Před rokem +3

      fr

    • @gagemonster555
      @gagemonster555 Před rokem +39

      Yet I have never had a fig newton with seeds, only ever without, and across the last 25~ years.

    • @slayerfox2
      @slayerfox2 Před rokem +64

      Ah.. he got the Soft & Chewy, not the Classic.

  • @doubledrats235
    @doubledrats235 Před rokem +3

    I remember hearing Jean Shepherd tell this story on WOR radio in NYC in the 1970s about learning about wasps in figs from one of his teachers. It freaked me out when I heard this as a kid but I didn’t stop eating Fig Newtons because they were good.

  • @PeterTeamExtreme
    @PeterTeamExtreme Před rokem +46

    I think describing inflorescence that way implies that it needs to be inverted but this isn’t the case. Inflorescence simply means multiple flowers on the same stem section. It’s a bit more broad.

  • @johnr6087
    @johnr6087 Před rokem +139

    Say what you will about Adam’s culinary abilities; his selection of weird CZcams titles is so good they belong in a museum of their own. I would put this next to “cucumbers are melons and sometimes they explode.”

  • @irreleverent
    @irreleverent Před rokem +431

    You can very easily argue growing unfertilized fruit isn't bad for the tree but evolutionarily beneficial if humans choose to cultivate those trees specifically for their more consistent yield. Even if they're "wasting" energy on non-reproductive figs, there are few evolutionary forces more potent than human agriculture.

    • @KaitouKaiju
      @KaitouKaiju Před rokem

      People underestimate the evolutionary pressure humans provide and personally I think it's as natural as any other source

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Před rokem +75

      Avocados somewhat famously were dispersed by giant ground sloths, all of which went extinct so why do we still have avocados, human intervention.
      It is certainly a survival strategy to be liked by humans who often will go out of their way to "pamper" plants we like. (Usually to eat them, but we replant and care for them to assure a stable food supply. So a tree "wasting" energy growing useless fruit is really investing in getting some farmers to come pamper it or its children/clones.)

    • @KalebPeters99
      @KalebPeters99 Před rokem +18

      If you haven't heard of Michael Pollan's work you should check it out. He talks about the "plants that have domesticated humans" hahah.

    • @SansBalance
      @SansBalance Před rokem

      Sure we be powerful. Until the next bug figure a way around your forever-cloned fig orchard and the never-sexual figs join their banana bros on the road to annihilation by avoiding genetic recombination.

    • @GreenBlueWalkthrough
      @GreenBlueWalkthrough Před rokem +4

      Also the most successful (by numbers) animal species on Earth are Humans and our pets and farms animals.

  • @jeffro5032
    @jeffro5032 Před rokem +17

    I have a very large 25' tall fig tree in the back , and I harvested about 180lbs of figs off it this year and gave them to a bunch of local people.
    By all the pictures I've seen it's either Calimyrna or Adriatic. My tree produced some the size of baseballs this season. It's become my baby / pet project. I need to learn to prune correctly.
    Hoping next season I can supply everyone with some great figs.

  • @TonyAlbera
    @TonyAlbera Před rokem

    Finally a youtuber who plays his ads at the end of the video. As a paid customer of youtube premium which advertises no commercial interruption, it is frustrating when there is still commercial interruption.

  • @Gamayun.
    @Gamayun. Před rokem +248

    We probably unknowingly eat so many things that we would consider gross, but ehhh if it tastes good and it’s healthy, is there really a problem

    • @BknMoonStudios
      @BknMoonStudios Před rokem +31

      Honey is bee shit, and it's fucking delicious! 😋

    • @SirEmrik
      @SirEmrik Před rokem +55

      I feel like fermentation seems like a weird concept, but damn is it nice to eat yeast farts.

    • @mastod0n1
      @mastod0n1 Před rokem +40

      There are maximum standards for bug bits and rat poop and the like in commercial food products and the maximum allowed amount is almost always not zero.

    • @finallycanchangethenamenot359
      @finallycanchangethenamenot359 Před rokem +3

      @@mastod0n1 wym almost? it is impossible to take away *everything*

    • @mastod0n1
      @mastod0n1 Před rokem +15

      @@finallycanchangethenamenot359 yeah well I don't like talking in absolutes in situations that I'm not 100% confident in my knowledge

  • @dumptrck9285
    @dumptrck9285 Před rokem +293

    I just learned about this after eating some figs from my backyard, and I was very disturbed. thanks for the video, Adam!

    • @moesalamander7012
      @moesalamander7012 Před rokem +7

      Reading this made me audibly gasp

    • @kutter_ttl6786
      @kutter_ttl6786 Před rokem +2

      I hope it hasn't turned you off eating figs.

    • @jonboy9734
      @jonboy9734 Před rokem +2

      @@kutter_ttl6786 extra protein

    • @gorilladisco9108
      @gorilladisco9108 Před rokem

      @@hits_different What if the wasp gene turn him into Wasp Man.

    • @peanutcake.
      @peanutcake. Před rokem

      *"This video made me regret my passion of eating figs. I am no longer satisfied with my views of such, and I will never look at them the same again."*
      "Great video Adam! 😁"

  • @OGSpacely555
    @OGSpacely555 Před rokem

    This was as informational as something I would learn in school or on the Discovery channel growing up back when it had educational programs.

  • @KingMasadaX
    @KingMasadaX Před rokem +1

    You know that's information I didn't need to know, like EVER, so thankyou Adam.

  • @ploegdbq
    @ploegdbq Před rokem +40

    "If we took the dead wasps out it wouldn't be crunchy now would it"

    • @lwcarr3879
      @lwcarr3879 Před rokem

      Ah yes -- featuring only the finest baby wasps, freshly flown from Iraq.... lightly killed...

  • @jfrancium
    @jfrancium Před rokem +68

    I was just telling my mom about fig wasps yesterday! Perfect timing, now I've gotta show this video to her so we can bond some more over weird bug facts

    • @seitanbeatsyourmeat666
      @seitanbeatsyourmeat666 Před rokem +7

      As a mom, that’s the sweetest thing I’ve ever heard 😂

    • @toqa6735
      @toqa6735 Před rokem

      Same ,..but I'll have to translate and she'll get dizzy with my delivery 💀💀

    • @maythesciencebewithyou
      @maythesciencebewithyou Před rokem +1

      So you know, most commercial figs do not have wasps at all. They were cultivated to grow without

    • @haruyanto8085
      @haruyanto8085 Před rokem

      Wait you bond with your parents?

    • @elhatesallofyou
      @elhatesallofyou Před rokem

      how cute!

  • @Z__K217
    @Z__K217 Před rokem

    Adam. Thank you for this. Kind regards.

  • @Kokum11
    @Kokum11 Před rokem

    Thank you! I haven’t eaten figs since learning about the wasps a few years ago. Now I will go back to enjoying them. Great video.

  • @mumimor
    @mumimor Před rokem +247

    OMG, I'm now even more sad than I was about losing my first fig tree. Once upon a time, my gran planted a fig which was perhaps the most Northern fig tree in Europe. This is disputed, but whatever. This fig tree bore ripe figs every three or four years, and our feeling about it was that it was about the weather. A few years before gran died, we decided to plant an offspring in another part of the farm, and it flourished. It still does. All was good. But when my gran was dying, and my cousins and I were at the hospital, my ignorant uncle saw it fit to cut down the original fig tree, and also "treat" all the herbs with Roundup.
    When we returned to the farm, rosemary, lovage, mint (who the f... can kill mint?), dill, parsley, and thyme was gone as well as the roses, and we have never been able to regrow them because it takes ages to get out the Roundup. And the remaining fig tree is no longer able to finish the fruits. I suppose the fig wasps lived in the old tree.
    I've recently posted about this on an other food channel, but never before, and I think it's because its only now, ten years later, I understand the devastating effect my ignorant uncle's actions had. I had never imagined that even today, I can't grow a rosemary bush on a south-facing wall, because there is still Roundup in the ground. Now, I will build raised beds. But goddamit. And think of all the thousands of acres of land that have been treated with Roundup.

    • @toqa6735
      @toqa6735 Před rokem +11

      Wow

    • @reppy
      @reppy Před rokem +22

      If it makes you feel any better, if you lived in Northern Europe, you did not have the fig wasp. So they were never there to be killed. I grow figs in the Pacific Northwest and I do not have fig wasps. Many fig varieties are self-fruitful. They are referred to as common figs, or ficus carica.
      You may be able to take a cutting from the existing plant and grow a clone. However, if the existing plant was grown from seed, then it will not be a genetic copy of the original tree. And may not produce any figs that you'd want to eat.

    • @taylormallory8705
      @taylormallory8705 Před rokem +35

      You may want to look at other sources for your soil conditions, if things still aren't going well after 10 years, because roundup contamination will be almost entirely cleared up after 6 months, for aerobic conditions, or 2.75 years, for anaerobic ones.

    • @frequentlycynical642
      @frequentlycynical642 Před rokem +11

      Just an FYI. Roundup does not hang around. It decomposes within a couple of days.

    • @froschreiniger2639
      @froschreiniger2639 Před rokem

      what a piece of shit, he came to the garden killed all the plants and poisoned the soil so that nothing will grow anymore.

  • @Gregs_World
    @Gregs_World Před rokem +82

    At almost 60 years of age is a wonderful thing that I can learn something new every day
    this (and of course I love your channel very much), is one of the most fascinating things I've ever heard
    thank you for the education
    what an unbelievable story
    thank you

  • @k.kdowning3284
    @k.kdowning3284 Před rokem

    Thanks for telling, truth will set you free

  • @poopmcgee501
    @poopmcgee501 Před rokem

    I love that crunch effect of some figs

  • @ScreamingSicilian70
    @ScreamingSicilian70 Před rokem +193

    This was the most interesting thing I've seen on CZcams.
    I've only heard the urban legends about how everyone was eating wasps.
    When my mom moved out here in Vegas, she planted a fig tree and it would make fruit 4 times a year. Her favorite way to eat them was to wrap them in prosciutto.
    Love your channel, keep up the great content!

    • @starsonapollo2
      @starsonapollo2 Před rokem +2

      She sounds like a neighbor I had in LV names Maria.l, her figs were bomb, and her apricots too

  • @americancheese7383
    @americancheese7383 Před rokem +259

    Can we just acknowledge the fact this man is able to make a living by filming himself climbing a tree,picking figs and eating fig newtons while wearing a super mario shirt? I'm not being sarcastic. Obviously theres a lot more going on, but still. I honestly think thats awesome.

    • @DoremiFasolatido1979
      @DoremiFasolatido1979 Před rokem

      So, another example of how capitalism and social media is hurting everyone? Got it.

    • @Brandon-bc5um
      @Brandon-bc5um Před rokem +5

      Well they always said nerds own the future

    • @nonethelessfirst8519
      @nonethelessfirst8519 Před rokem +1

      Eventually everyone is gonna be a streamer and there isn't gonna be anything to stream.

    • @snakejazz
      @snakejazz Před rokem

      not seeing the part where he climbed the tree

    • @id10t98
      @id10t98 Před rokem +1

      @@nonethelessfirst8519 hollywood ran out of ideas years ago. now it's blow everything up, shoot everything up and show some skin with some hotties and it's a movie. toss in some choreographed fight scenes that would make mike tyson say "uncle" and producers eat it up.

  • @killereria9945
    @killereria9945 Před rokem

    I love figs and fig newton’s so this was super cool to learn about

  • @julesann1773
    @julesann1773 Před rokem

    Just wow! So much information i never thought possible!

  • @Ophidia_Lore
    @Ophidia_Lore Před rokem +337

    Glad to see this being talked about here. Parasitoid wasps are a, very weird branch of the Animalia tree. Hoping this gets people interested in learning more about this branch of hymenoptera (ants, bees and wasps). Fun fact, those wasps you mentioned breifly are Parasitoid, not true parasites! its weird distinction, but it helps to find them if you want to find them. Good work as always

    • @brown9629
      @brown9629 Před rokem +10

      Good to see another fellow who knows his entomology! Parasitoid wasps are a focal point of my research, and this year we finally implemented a system to rear them in large numbers. The IPM potential of these tiny guys are truly incredible.

    • @Ophidia_Lore
      @Ophidia_Lore Před rokem +6

      @@brown9629 Neat! would love to read an abstract on some research. Sadly most of my studies (college, i do lab work now) was comparative anatomy focused, I just have an enjoyment of herpetology and some entomology

    • @ddacoe0
      @ddacoe0 Před rokem +3

      This video was fascinating!

    • @brainbomb.
      @brainbomb. Před rokem +3

      Stop pushing Klaus Schwab's agenda thanks.

    • @wood7395
      @wood7395 Před rokem +3

      @@brainbomb. fr these people love eating the bugs

  • @hephie
    @hephie Před rokem +28

    Jesus Christ why does this piece on figs rock so hard. I love your deep dives and I'm always surprised how much I take away from these. Keep em comin!

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod Před rokem +3

      Speaking of Jesus Christ, maybe this puts his cursing of the Fig Tree into a different perspective. What if it's a just-so story to explain parthenogenesis and how certain figs have virgin births now, and miss out on that hot wasp on wasp action.

  • @AkiRakuFuji
    @AkiRakuFuji Před rokem +2

    i’m glad i’m not the only one who noticed that figs aren’t the same anymore. I still eat em sometimes, but it’s not the same

  • @davidvincent8929
    @davidvincent8929 Před rokem

    BRILLIANT. THANK YOU. FIG WASPS.

  • @savannaha5038
    @savannaha5038 Před rokem +148

    3:30 Minor nitpick, that's actually a parasitoid, not a parasite! True parasites are detrimental to their host's health, but don't necessarily kill them, while parasitoids kill their host as part of the process.

    • @complainer406
      @complainer406 Před rokem +42

      Parasitoids are a subcategory of parasites. Parasitoid is more accurate, but parasite isn't incorrect.

    • @Keeki549
      @Keeki549 Před rokem +3

      Ok nerd 🤓

    • @deductionsdiary105
      @deductionsdiary105 Před rokem +10

      @@Keeki549 This channel is literally about explaining things

    • @coolcatcastle8
      @coolcatcastle8 Před rokem +3

      @@Keeki549 💀💀💀

    • @yasirahmed1574
      @yasirahmed1574 Před rokem +1

      @@Keeki549 ok discord moderator

  • @TheMillennialGardener
    @TheMillennialGardener Před rokem +75

    Great video, Adam! I had to comment on this one, since "wasps inside of figs" is one of the biggest myths on the interwebs. The fig wasp, or blastophaga psenes, is responsible for pollinating the Common Fig (Ficus carica) and is endemic to the Mediterranean. If you don't live in the Mediterranean (or one of the handfuls of areas that was successfully colonized for commercial fig production), your figs do *not* have wasps in them. Outside of the fig wasp's habitat, you can only grow parthenocarpic figs, or "common" figs, which have a mutated allele for persistence that allow the fruit to ripen without pollination.
    In the late 1800's, commercial farmers were able to successfully import the blastophaga psenes and establish colonies to grow the infamous Turkish smyrna fig in California's Mediterranean climate conditions, and wasp colonies still exist in California today, and figs have become somewhat naturalized within the valleys of California as a result. If you live in these choice areas of California, it *is* possible your figs have have pollinated by the blastophaga psenes. However, pollination occurs about 1-2 months before the fruit ripens, depending on the variety. Therefore, the fig wasps have long been absorbed and broken down by the natural enzymes of the fruits, so figs have "wasps in them" no more than you have "pizza in you" a month after you eat pizza. Long story short: wasps inside your figs is clickbait!
    I have an entire playlist on my CZcams channel dedicated to the fig wasp and how to manually hand pollinate figs for breeding purposes. It's a miraculous process and one of nature's best examples of Mutualism.

    • @woodhonky3890
      @woodhonky3890 Před rokem +11

      Only problem with the pizza analogy is that figs don't shit.

    • @cameronschyuder9034
      @cameronschyuder9034 Před rokem +4

      @@woodhonky3890 but the wasp is totally dissolved, and when you eat a pizza, most of its body you absorb into your body anyway

    • @rainbowosprey1619
      @rainbowosprey1619 Před rokem +5

      thanks for using "mutualism", it bothered me a little when he said symbiosis 😅 both mutualism and parasitism are types of symbiosis
      (no hate to Adam! this is a wonderful video)

    • @Gamerkat10
      @Gamerkat10 Před rokem +4

      Thank you for schooling this fool- I was coming here to say much the same. I was like "Oh man, come on...I thought you were one of the good ones, bro!" But nope, clickbait.

    • @fonseca898
      @fonseca898 Před rokem +5

      @@woodhonky3890 Figs do drip a lot of nectar from their ostiole when ripe. So per your analogy "they piss".

  • @tiazadobbs7475
    @tiazadobbs7475 Před rokem

    We love our fig tree. We put up so many jars of fig preserves this year. We did not see any wasp in the figs. The preserves are delicious !

  • @dieselgrandpa4181
    @dieselgrandpa4181 Před rokem

    This was really cool, very interesting. Other than the crazy timelines that no human could ever know this was a super cool video. Thank you.

  • @bfc9467
    @bfc9467 Před rokem +30

    Never knew this, but now I feel vindicated in my hatred of figs.

  • @Dimension640
    @Dimension640 Před rokem +79

    I researched a bit about caprification, essentially it bear the name from the "caprifico" aka the wild fig, that doesn't make edible figs but is loved by wasps.
    It wasn't just done in that particular occasion, even if you have native figs but you have an hard time getting fruits you could hang some wild figs stems onto your cultivated one and voila you'll - hopefully - have ton of wasps on your tree.
    Ancient romans knew this thing already

    • @OptimusPhillip
      @OptimusPhillip Před rokem +3

      On the subject of etymology, the "partheno-" in "parthenocarpic" is derived from the Greek "parthenos", meaning "virgin". Other terms from this root include "parthenogenesis", meaning when an animal conceives offspring without a mate, and Parthenon, the famous temple to Athena in Athens (because Athena, in addition to being the goddess of wisdom, battle strategy, and weaving, was also a virgin goddess.)

  • @karenparikh4045
    @karenparikh4045 Před rokem

    This was very interesting. Good quality content. I learned a lot, thanks!

  • @SF-lf5cu
    @SF-lf5cu Před rokem

    thank you this was great. well done

  • @Faraonqa
    @Faraonqa Před rokem +31

    i absolutely love figs, we have always had a fig tree in our garden,figs are just amazing

    • @bd-fb1ul
      @bd-fb1ul Před rokem +1

      I love figs but their trees are way too big man. We sadly had to cut down our fig tree because it was growing way too big for our yard

    • @jojomojo508
      @jojomojo508 Před rokem +7

      I love Israeli figs especially cause the Israeli farmers who grow them water their soil using the blood of the Palestinian families they've murdered to acquire their farmland

    • @clownjev
      @clownjev Před rokem

      this is very true

    • @blueberry4082
      @blueberry4082 Před rokem

      @@jojomojo508 😂😂😂

    • @jojomojo508
      @jojomojo508 Před rokem +1

      @@gohom3882 Israeli detected

  • @LydiAtheistLady
    @LydiAtheistLady Před rokem +8

    I love the fact that there was a paper published on figs. This is really so cool I’m so glad I clicked on this!

  • @5BIRDOG5
    @5BIRDOG5 Před rokem

    This was absolutely fascinating! New sub!

  • @prashanttrivedi2537
    @prashanttrivedi2537 Před rokem

    One of kind information. Very nice👍

  • @PlanetRylosIV
    @PlanetRylosIV Před rokem +32

    I’ve heard about this before but this was an awesome deep-dive into the actual relationship and process, as well as some excellent macro views! Many thanks, Adam!

    • @blackleague212
      @blackleague212 Před rokem

      its bugs in chocolate too, and the color red for food is made from dead bug blood.
      The more you know
      (Music sound effect)

  • @DahVoozel
    @DahVoozel Před rokem +3

    Blooming internally was my high-school experience.

  • @BuddhaBeanie
    @BuddhaBeanie Před rokem

    Very cool! Something new I learned today.

  • @themiddlepath1516
    @themiddlepath1516 Před rokem +4

    Nice video. Weirdly enough I knew a little bit about this process through King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. They have a track called Big Fig Wasp. So I had to learn learn more from this video lol
    BIG FIG WASP!

  • @cyberherbalist
    @cyberherbalist Před rokem +7

    My parents had a fig tree in our backyard when I was a kid. The figs were purple when ripe. I used to think that all figs were purple, because our tree was the only one I knew about. Now I know differently!

  • @Snuzzled
    @Snuzzled Před rokem +78

    I'm so glad I watched this. I was always afraid of eating figs ever since I heard about the wasp thing, because I had seen a photo (maybe faked) of a fig cut in half with a massive wasp inside. I never wanted to bite into a fig and have that happen.
    Yet I did always love fig newtons and remember them being crunchy, too. Sad.
    Thanks for helping my brain get over my fear of figs.

    • @Rob526
      @Rob526 Před rokem

      Even if full wasps were in figs I would give no shit as long as the ratio is more than like 1 wasp per 20 figs

    • @NoNORADon911
      @NoNORADon911 Před rokem +16

      ''You will eat zee bugs'' World Economic Forum

    • @katie7748
      @katie7748 Před rokem

      ​@@NoNORADon911 You will own nothing and you will be happy.

    • @cliff5043
      @cliff5043 Před rokem +3

      The wasp that do fertilize the figs are very tiny. You almost need a magnifying glass to see them well. So, don't worry. But all figs in the US grown outside of southern California will not have any wasp.

    • @anaz7603
      @anaz7603 Před rokem

      @@cliff5043 So Southern California kept its wasp pollinating fig trees?

  • @Dave3Dman
    @Dave3Dman Před rokem

    The number 1 top video on the internet that nobody needed or wanted.
    Im super annoyed at the CZcams algo for even showing this to me and allowing me to see the title

  • @alexcarter8807
    @alexcarter8807 Před rokem

    I remember the crunchy fig newtons in the late 60s maybe into the 1970s anyway, and the crunch was half of the fun. The delicious taste, and that crunch. Plus finding random seeds in my mouth later.

  • @benbaxter2061
    @benbaxter2061 Před rokem +36

    I lost one of my first teeth biting into a fig Newton and hitting a seed. Had one recently and also noticed there were no seeds, but I dismissed it as just more over processed food. Good to know!

  • @sarahhardy8649
    @sarahhardy8649 Před rokem +17

    Brit here, we used to call Garibaldi biscuits “dead fly biscuits” because that’s what the fruit looked like. Older kids told us they really were dead flies to gross us out, and we in turn, pretended to younger children when it was out time. Ah the power of peer pressure lol.

    • @jamespatrick20906
      @jamespatrick20906 Před rokem

      Hello 👋 I’m really impressed with your comment, if you don’t mind friendship please where are you from?

    • @pithepieoverlord4861
      @pithepieoverlord4861 Před rokem

      @@jamespatrick20906 I'm from hell

  • @mikesmith1910
    @mikesmith1910 Před rokem

    WOW! This is really educational!

  • @AnimatorBlake
    @AnimatorBlake Před rokem +2

    I learned a lot from this video, though I knew the wasps were digested. Still never eating wasp figs again.

  • @needamuffin
    @needamuffin Před rokem +16

    Growing up 25+ years ago, I don't ever remember Fig Newtons having seeds in them. Not that I ever ate particularly many of them, but I still distinctly remember the ones I did eat being chewy all the way through.

    • @lightningkitten
      @lightningkitten Před rokem

      maybe the ones you ate came from a different farm or farms? i'm not sure where they're all sourced from and i'm not old enough to know what old fig newtons were like

    • @blackleague212
      @blackleague212 Před rokem

      @@lightningkitten This person grew all the way up 25 years ago lmao you talking to a Ouija board bro lmaoooo its a zombie relived.

    • @lightningkitten
      @lightningkitten Před rokem

      @@blackleague212 lmao

    • @Albedo_vsp
      @Albedo_vsp Před rokem

      @@blackleague212 how old are your parents then? Are they too living zombies?

    • @needamuffin
      @needamuffin Před rokem

      @Forgotten Hope I'm squarely a millennial, not a zoomer. And 25 years is still more than enough time to make significant changes in a recipe. Adam isn't that much older than me, less than a decade.

  • @jaredbush1866
    @jaredbush1866 Před rokem +17

    Completely unrelated; that is an absolutely beautiful fig tree.
    I'm actually jealous.

  • @DemonzSlayer49
    @DemonzSlayer49 Před rokem

    Nice i like hearing that wasps mate with their siblings, makes me something to make more fear of

  • @jannvillalba6387
    @jannvillalba6387 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Newtons stopped putting the seeds in. That explains why I like Little Debbie’s Fig bars better….they left the seeds in there and give you that tiny crunch. ❤

  • @jamescanjuggle
    @jamescanjuggle Před rokem +5

    Im in croatia visiting my gfs family and every street has fig trees, theyre growing everywhere here!
    Its really nice to be able to watch a video like yours then go out "in the real world" and see it in action!

    • @kay-collins
      @kay-collins Před rokem

      I hate that they plant our trees here in the US to not produce any fruits smh you can find almost NO trees around here with fruits growing on them. They say it’s because they’re hard to keep the walk ways clean with fruit producing trees. Idk... seems like they could feed a lot of people if they did let them grow. But some people will defend their decision not to. So who knows. We love capitalism here & have been brainwashed to believe any other way is “wrong”.
      Smh

  • @verabaked
    @verabaked Před rokem +5

    So glad you made this, I've been rambling about this to my friends since middle school.
    Definitely a hyper focus of mine and so glad to hear more about the lil wasps.

    • @wood7395
      @wood7395 Před rokem +1

      you should hyperfocus on some b*tches

  • @ThorTyrker
    @ThorTyrker Před rokem +1

    Such a lucky situation: fig wasps don't live in my country but the figs are still riping - the rain does the job of fertilization, as I heard.

  • @dudester873
    @dudester873 Před rokem +6

    This was interesting information and I love to eat figs; thank you for posting this 👍.

  • @MrBcardinal35
    @MrBcardinal35 Před rokem +27

    As a hater of wasps, this makes me want to try figs more

    • @Finwolven
      @Finwolven Před rokem

      You don't hate all wasps, do you? I mean, it's understandable for the absolute B%¤#rds who seem to have a chip on their shoulder and murder in their eye, but harmless fig wasps, just going about their time, or the parasitic wasps that just remove moth larvae from the world? Why would you hate those, except on general principle of 'kin of my enemy'?

  • @incogneat0901
    @incogneat0901 Před rokem +3

    My grandma had lots of plans in her garden, but the thing that I miss more than anything else were her fig trees and the fig preserves she made. she made enough to have them year round and I swear they had seeds in them.

  • @willt3223
    @willt3223 Před rokem +2

    buy the plant base figs bars from costco. they are plant base which meab they grow their figs in an enclosed place because if a wasp is in there it cant be plant base.

  • @loweffortproductions1985

    Fig wasp: Coincidentally a great snack AND a fantastic song from my favorite King Gizzard album

  • @exploshaun
    @exploshaun Před rokem +18

    Very informative. Finally learned how figs work. Kinda wacky that nature evolved inverted flowers.

  • @benrybczynski5798
    @benrybczynski5798 Před rokem +9

    That's amazing! I was just helping my uncle pick figs earlier and I noticed little bugs on one that I assumed were just gnats, but maybe they were actually wasps!

    • @blackleague212
      @blackleague212 Před rokem

      did you eat the bugs? that is what is most important

  • @Achilla_PR
    @Achilla_PR Před rokem

    Good job CZcams algorithm! I have absolutely no idea why I got recommended this video, but it was soo interesting!

  • @annabeckman4386
    @annabeckman4386 Před rokem

    Wow....... this was fascinating

  • @PureAsbestos
    @PureAsbestos Před rokem +10

    To me, the most important part is that even if your fig had a wasp in it, it was dissolved and absorbed by the plant. People trying to ick you out usually leave that part off. It also means figs are kinda carnivorous plants which is interesting

    • @cmo5807
      @cmo5807 Před rokem +2

      Did you catch how he says if its crunchy its got a wasp in it then immediately goes and says its not the actual wasp its a seed. That is so damn confusing I notice this guy makes tons of mistakes..... crazy he has so many subscribers oh well.

    • @PureAsbestos
      @PureAsbestos Před rokem +1

      @@cmo5807 I mean technically that's not a mistake, right? But I get where you're coming from.

    • @darkhelmet12e47
      @darkhelmet12e47 Před rokem +5

      ​@@cmo5807The crunch means there was a wasp, but the crunch is not from the wasp.

  • @munjee2
    @munjee2 Před rokem +55

    You know, when I first heard this fact, I started to wonder : if this means figs should be classified as carnivorous plants?

    • @ChickentNug
      @ChickentNug Před rokem +23

      Wouldnt it be more of a decomposer than a carnivore? The wasp is already dead

    • @munjee2
      @munjee2 Před rokem +3

      @@ChickentNug I mean the animals that vultures eat are typically dead too, it feels different to me here since the wasp becomes a part of the fruit after, it gets digested

    • @maythesciencebewithyou
      @maythesciencebewithyou Před rokem

      Most commercial figs don't need wasps

    • @munjee2
      @munjee2 Před rokem +1

      @@maythesciencebewithyou yes, but they have the ability to

    • @ErikHinrichsen
      @ErikHinrichsen Před rokem

      I don't think so, because as I understand it, the fig just dissolves the dead wasp. I don't think the tree actually gets any nourishment from the wasp, so it's not exactly feeding on it.

  • @aecusregen4614
    @aecusregen4614 Před rokem

    Interesting how I just, an hour ago, saw a post about this on facebook and now I see this recommended.

  • @DanielGBenesScienceShows
    @DanielGBenesScienceShows Před rokem +27

    You taught me a few things about figs I did not know! I have, however, purposely eaten Oak Gall wasp larvae, small white grub worm-like larvae that grow inside round “galls” that the parent wasps create on Oak tree branches here in Texas. The larvae taste very much like almonds and are packed with protein.
    Here’s a fun fact: To defend themselves against infestation from Gall wasps, and the swollen galls they create for their larvae to live in, oak trees will force large quantities of tannins (tannic acid)-astringent, polyphenolic biomolecules-into the galls. Oak galls are the main source of the tannic acid (C76H52O46 ) and gallic acid (3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoic acid) used to create a famous, historic ink known as Iron Gall Ink, which was used to write not only the oldest known Bible in existence, but also the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution, along with thousands of other famous documents. Leonardo da Vinci used iron gall ink to draw most of his famous drawings. Iron Gall Ink is easy (and fun) to make and a super cool, eye opening science experiment you can perform safely with your kids at home. The Townsends channel has a great video on the ink and the process. All this from a small wasp!
    Science All The Things!! 🤘😍🤘

  • @astrokits
    @astrokits Před rokem +5

    We finally have an answer to why my parent's fig tree isn't yielding any fruit at all. Thank you Adam!!

  • @JohannGambolputty22
    @JohannGambolputty22 Před rokem +4

    I haven’t had a dog newton in many years and I literally can feel how crunchy they are. That’s crazy they don’t have seeds anymore! That crunchy texture was part of the experience.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Před rokem +3

      I find this interesting as growing up in the 2000s i never once experienced a crunchy fig newton and definitely would have been weirded out by one. I'm not opposed to the idea but its just not what i mentally expect from one.

    • @JohannGambolputty22
      @JohannGambolputty22 Před rokem +2

      @Don Eli I was going to edit that, but now I can’t because I like your response. :)

  • @Grump.y-OldMan
    @Grump.y-OldMan Před rokem

    Awesome video.

  • @Nettsinthewoods
    @Nettsinthewoods Před rokem +5

    Love figs,I’ve got five trees. I also love fig rolls and I have noticed a tad of crunchiness with them, but if its waspy that’s fine. Thank you, that was so interesting!

  • @pablohuarina2928
    @pablohuarina2928 Před rokem +34

    Any wasp I see
    It's a fig wasp
    Pearly guillotine
    It's a fig wasp
    When the harvest's clean
    It's a fig wasp
    It's a winged machine
    It's a fig wasp

  • @ameliawilder28
    @ameliawilder28 Před rokem +3

    Same with strawberry yogurt. Bugs are used to make that pink colour.

  • @actuaiiyyou
    @actuaiiyyou Před rokem

    I like the crunch

  • @sushantkadam
    @sushantkadam Před rokem +7

    If a lot of people from the Jain community watches your video, they might yet another thing to add to their Do Not Eat list.
    Leaving us to enjoy this wonderful fruit!

    • @jpe1
      @jpe1 Před rokem +4

      I very much doubt that any of this is news to anyone in the Jain community. They already don’t eat fruits with seeds, and figs have sees, so figs are prohibited regardless of wasps or not.

  • @sodamanthegr8
    @sodamanthegr8 Před rokem +5

    Nobody has ever told me that figs have baby wasps in them and now I'll never unthink about it again.

  • @caibarnett5093
    @caibarnett5093 Před rokem +1

    Adam Ragusea has entwred the Gizzverse

  • @jesussaves21
    @jesussaves21 Před rokem +1

    It’s almost like this symbiotic relationship was designed and not a product of random/mindless chance

  • @lleytonyang9207
    @lleytonyang9207 Před rokem +8

    Bruh why have I never heard of this