WEBVTT 00:00:07.450 --> 00:00:10.074 If you were a jackrabbit hopping through the desert, 00:00:10.074 --> 00:00:15.789 you'd be glad to stumble, well, maybe not stumble, across a cactus. The succulent 00:00:15.789 --> 00:00:20.459 flesh of these plants is a water source for many desert animals. Native to the 00:00:20.462 --> 00:00:22.132 Americas and known for 00:00:22.132 --> 00:00:27.315 their spines and succulent stems, cacti of all shapes and sizes have evolved to 00:00:27.315 --> 00:00:32.896 not just survive, but thrive in some of the harshest desert climates on earth. 00:00:33.451 --> 00:00:39.631 So, how do they do it? A cactus's spines are key to its survival, but not for the 00:00:39.631 --> 00:00:44.615 reason you might think. Take a look at the Prickly Pear. Its spines are highly 00:00:44.615 --> 00:00:50.086 modified leaves. A normal leaf's large surface area would be ill-suited to the 00:00:50.086 --> 00:00:54.319 desert, transpiring massive amounts of water under the baking sun. 00:00:54.319 --> 00:00:55.319 The dramatically 00:00:55.319 --> 00:01:01.246 reduced surface area of the spines limits water loss. They also shade the cactus, 00:01:01.246 --> 00:01:06.302 and reflect the sun's rays, reducing the the plant's core temperature during the 00:01:06.302 --> 00:01:11.532 heat of the day. Then, at night, when air temperatures plummet, the spines act as 00:01:11.532 --> 00:01:16.103 an insulating layer, keeping the cactus from cooling down too much. These 00:01:16.103 --> 00:01:20.862 functions are just as important, if not more, than defending against predators. 00:01:21.922 --> 00:01:28.063 From Cuba to Mexico, and as far south as Brazil and Peru, Melon Cacti grow on 00:01:28.063 --> 00:01:33.581 limestone soils in seasonally dry tropical forests, where they're constantly exposed 00:01:33.581 --> 00:01:39.570 to the beating sun. They rely on another adaptation common to cacti: a thick skin, 00:01:39.570 --> 00:01:44.610 which is coated in a waxy substance called a cuticle that limits water loss. 00:01:44.898 --> 00:01:50.528 Meanwhile, the Stomata, tiny holes that allow the exchange of gases that enable 00:01:50.538 --> 00:01:56.318 photosynthesis, remain firmly closed until night, when they open. The lower 00:01:56.318 --> 00:02:01.048 temperatures at night mean the cactus loses less water from the stem when 00:02:01.048 --> 00:02:06.333 Stomata open. The bulk of the plant acts as a large barrel of water, storing it 00:02:06.333 --> 00:02:11.192 for times of need. But to survive the desert, the cactus can't just limit water 00:02:11.192 --> 00:02:15.623 loss. It has to be prepared to take full advantage of the rare situations 00:02:15.623 --> 00:02:20.974 where water is readily available. In North America's Sonoran Desert, the towering 00:02:20.974 --> 00:02:27.088 Saguaro Cactus can grow up to twenty meters tall and live for up to 200 years. 00:02:28.389 --> 00:02:32.449 Woody tissue, like the kind found in tree trunks, gives the Saguaro its 00:02:32.449 --> 00:02:38.049 height, but the Saguaro survives with way less water than most trees. Most of its 00:02:38.049 --> 00:02:43.795 roots are only a few inches deep, just below the soil's surface. The spread out 00:02:43.795 --> 00:02:49.739 laterally for meters, and hold the plant in place. Even its single deepest root, 00:02:49.739 --> 00:02:56.118 the tap root, extends less than one meter into the ground. After a rain, the lateral 00:02:56.118 --> 00:03:01.417 roots respond in real time, rapidly growing and spreading. They produce 00:03:01.417 --> 00:03:06.454 ephemeral rain roots that quickly take up the available water. The water is then 00:03:06.454 --> 00:03:12.140 pulled up into the plant body and stored in cells that contain Mucilage, a gluey 00:03:12.140 --> 00:03:17.073 substance that clings to water molecules and stops them from evaporating if the 00:03:17.073 --> 00:03:22.460 plant's tissue is ever damaged and exposed. As the soil dries after the rain, 00:03:22.460 --> 00:03:27.683 the small rain roots also begin to dry and wither away, and the cactus awaits 00:03:27.683 --> 00:03:31.952 the next time it can take advantage of a shower. Taken together, these features 00:03:31.952 --> 00:03:36.648 make cacti well-equipped to survive their environments, from the driest desert to... 00:03:37.122 --> 00:03:42.702 a tropical rain forest? The Mistletoe Cactus can live on the branches of trees 00:03:42.702 --> 00:03:47.762 in the rain forest. Though there's lots of water around, not much of it reaches the 00:03:47.762 --> 00:03:52.996 cactus here, and there's nowhere for its roots to go. So, even here, the cactus 00:03:52.996 --> 00:03:53.759 survives 00:03:53.759 --> 00:04:00.409 using adaptations that long ago helped its ancestors survive the desert. Other 00:04:00.409 --> 00:04:06.061 plant adaptations more closely resemble booby traps, from Bedbug Harpoons to 00:04:06.061 --> 00:04:10.949 Fly Swatters. Check out some of the amazing ways plants defend themselves with 00:04:10.949 --> 00:04:12.328 this video. 00:04:12.328 --> 00:04:20.000 ♪ (Music) ♪