Why Do Tumbleweeds Tumble? | Deep Look

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The silent star of classic Westerns is a plant on a mission. It starts out green and full of life. It even grows flowers. But to reproduce effectively it needs to turn into a rolling brown skeleton.

DEEP LOOK: a new ultra-HD (4K) short video series created by KQED San Francisco and presented by PBS Digital Studios. See the unseen at the very edge of our visible world. Get a new perspective on our place in the universe and meet extraordinary new friends. Explore big scientific mysteries by going incredibly small.

Tumbleweeds might be the iconic props of classic Westerns. But in real life, they’re not only a noxious weed, but one that moves around. Pushed by gusts of wind, they can overwhelm entire neighborhoods, as happened recently in Victorville, California, or become a threat for drivers and an expensive nuisance for farmers.

“They tumble across highways and can cause accidents,” said Mike Pitcairn, who tracks tumbleweeds at the California Department of Food and Agriculture in Sacramento. “They pile up against fences and homes.”

And tumbleweeds aren’t even originally from the West.

Genetic tests have shown that California’s most common tumbleweed, known as Russian thistle, likely came from Ukraine, said retired plant population biologist Debra Ayres, who studied tumbleweeds at the University of California, Davis.

A U.S. Department of Agriculture employee, L. H. Dewey, wrote in 1893 that Russian thistle had arrived in the U.S. through South Dakota in flaxseed imported from Europe in the 1870s.

“It has been known in Russia many years,” Dewey wrote, “and has quite as bad a reputation in the wheat regions there as it has in the Dakotas.” This is where the name Russian thistle originates, said Ayres, although tumbleweeds aren’t thistles.

The weed spread quickly through the United States — on rail cars, through contamination of agricultural seeds and by tumbling.
“They tumble to disperse the seeds,” said Ayres, “and thereby reduce competition.”
A rolling tumbleweed spreads out tens of thousands of seeds so that they all get plenty of sunlight and space.

Tumbleweeds grow well in barren places like vacant lots or the side of the road, where they can tumble unobstructed and there’s no grass, which their seedlings can’t compete with.

--- Where does a tumbleweed come from?

Tumbleweeds start out attached to the soil. Seedlings, which look like blades of grass, sprout at the end of winter. By summer, Russian thistle plants take on their round shape and grow flowers. Inside each flower, a fruit with a seed develops.
Other plants attract animals with tasty fruits, and get them to carry away their seeds and disperse them when they poop.
Tumbleweeds developed a different evolutionary strategy. Starting in late fall, they dry out and die, their seeds nestled between prickly leaves. Gusts of wind easily break dead tumbleweeds from their roots and they roll away, spreading their seeds as they go.

--- How big do tumbleweeds grow?

Mike Pitcairn, of the California Department of Food and Agriculture, said that in the state’s San Joaquin Valley they can grow to be more than 6 feet tall.

--- Are tumbleweeds dangerous?

Yes. They can cause traffic accidents or be a fire hazard if they pile up near buildings.

---+ Read the entire article on KQED Science:

---+ For more information on the history and biology of Russian thistle, here’s a paper by Debra Ayres and colleagues:

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---+ About KQED
KQED, an NPR and PBS affiliate in San Francisco, CA, serves Northern California and beyond with a public-supported alternative to commercial TV, radio and web media.

Funding for Deep Look is provided in part by PBS Digital Studios. Deep Look is a project of KQED Science, which is supported by the Templeton Religion Trust and the Templeton World Charity Foundation, the S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation, the Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation, the Vadasz Family Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Fuhs Family Foundation Fund and the members of KQED.
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I just want to see the behind-the-scenes footage of getting a camera to stay inside of a tumbleweed.

lawrencecalablaster
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1:45 that was so funny watching them tumbling away

rentin
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My grandparents were poor when they were young and decorated tumbleweeds each year instead of Christmas trees 🎄

gratituderanch
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Me at 3 AM trying to get sleep
Deep Look: Why do Tumbleweeds Tumble?
Me: *I don’t need sleep I need answers*

joshirabin
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I always thought tumbleweed was just a bunch of dead weeds and fallen branches that get tangled up when wind blows lol

hidayaamani
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The combination of the bgm + the rolling different sizes of tumbleweeds + tumbleweeds rolling over each other makes me laugh for some reason haha

Konpeito
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1:45
Everybody gangsta until the TumbleWeeds start chasing you

neon
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These tumbleweeds are hilariously cute lol

sairenuka
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Pretty cool, I've always assumed that tumbleweeds were just a clumped up variety of dead plants, not an actual plant on its own. :)

JJ_
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Am I the only one who haven't seen a tumbleweed IRL?

ruffruffjunior
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1:45 this is what happens when tumbleweeds raided area 51

itsmebrick
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1:48 Now that is tumble weeds marathon...

dimitrymordeo
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they actually look kind of cute when they're

iinumae
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The soundtrack made this video. Just perfect.

Boborbot
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We had so many tumbleweeds, mostly close to the railroad tracks, One year I didn't have the money to buy a Christmas tree, so I walked to the railroad tracks and found a medium sized, perfectly round tumbleweed. I brought it home, took a water hose and gently sprayed off any dirt on it, left it outside to dry for a couple hours then went to work. I bought a spray can of silver paint, when it dried I brought it in and put a couple strings of clear Christmas lights around it, and finished off with small gold & red bulbs. It was amazing looking 😀. So I guess their good for something lol...

rhondamcbath
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Why am I laughing when the tumbleweeds start racing each other?

com.phantom
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Tumbleweeds always appear in any fights in any Wild West movies. They're iconic!

godzillaboy
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1:46 everyone’s gangster until the tumbleweeds start tumbling

delaney
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*Because Western Cowboys' Films Look Almost Booring Without A Tumbleweed Passing By!*

raz
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My father is like a tumbleweed, he tumbles everywhere spreeding his seed :I

santiagocarreno
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