Ologies with Alie Ward - Bryology (MOSS) Encore with Dr. Robin Wall Kimmerer
Episode Date: November 15, 2022It’s November and you need chill vibes. And Native American Heritage Month is the perfect time to encore this classic. World-renowned author, botanist, Indigenous ecology professor and bryologist Dr.... Robin Wall Kimmerer, author of “Gathering Moss” and “Braiding Sweetgrass,” talks about her passion for moss. Cozy up for the most beautifully doled-out information about hidden worlds, overlooked mysteries, botanical drama, forests in miniature, Native peoples’ uses for moss and philosophies about science and ecology. Dr. Kimmerer will change the way you see mosses forever, will inspire you to wear a loupe on a rope, and will soothe your soul with her beautiful voice and prose. Also bathmats, lawns and smoothies made of moss? We discuss.Follow Dr. Kimmerer on Facebook at Look for her books at independent bookstores or wherever books are sold (including Amazon): “Braiding Sweetgrass” and “Gathering Moss”Donations went to the ESF’s Center for Native Peoples and the Environment and American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES)More episode sources and linksOther episodes you may enjoy: Indigenous Cuisinology (NATIVE COOKING), Indigenous Fire Ecology (GOOD FIRE), Indigenous Fashionology (NATIVE CLOTHING), Experimental Archeology (OLD TOOLS/ATLATLS), Carnivorous Phytobiology (MEAT-EATING PLANTS), Cycadology (RARE PLANT DRAMA), Bisonology (BUFFALO), Foraging Ecology (EATING WILD PLANTS), Critical Ecology (SOCIAL SYSTEMS + ENVIRONMENT)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, masks, totes!Follow @Ologies on Twitter and InstagramFollow @AlieWard on Twitter and InstagramSound editing by Jarrett Sleeper of MindJam MediaTranscripts by Emily White of The WordaryWebsite by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh hey, it's your neighbor who grows a mustache every November and truthfully it's more reliable,
a seasonal indicator than even the weather. It's Ali Ward. It's also Native American Heritage
Month and there are more episodes with Indigenousologists linked in the show notes,
whole bunch of them and I wanted to take this episode though and just lay it gently on your
pillow. If you've heard it before, listen again because I called it when it originally
aired two years ago. Let's go. This is an episode you're going to listen to more than once. I'm
going to tell you right now. Not because the subject matter demands it for comprehension,
but because it is the very ethos ofologies all wrapped up in the most soothing mellow audio
hug you will ever lay ears on. It's overlooked beauty. It's following bliss. It's myth-busting.
Okay, let me just run through the things. Let's get to the show. Thank you to all the
supporters at patreon.com. You can join for as little as a buck a month and submit questions.
Perhaps here are yours asked in future episodes. Thanks to everyone wearingologies,
shirts and hats and bikinis and new face coverings at oligiesmerch.com. Link is in the
show notes. Tag yourself in hashtag oligiesmerch on Instagram. We'll repost you. Thanks to everyone
who rates and subscribes and leaves reviews. I read all of them. They help oligies stay at the
top of the science charts. This is a fresh review from 2022 from Aver who said,
Allie, if we were in the same state, I would be your friend forever, but if you're ever in Montana,
hit me up. Aver, I'm in Montana sometimes and I need to go there to see a man about a beaver,
so I may holler. Also, hello to the gaggle of restoration nerds who tune in from the South
Salish Sea. Keep doing the sheep science. I read all our reviews. I'm telling you. Thank you so
much. Okay, bryology, moss talk. Brio in Greek, straight up means moss. So thank you, Greek.
That was quick. So this bryologist is perhaps the most beloved in her field. She got her BS in
botany from SUNY, Environmental Science and Forestry, and a master's and a PhD in botany from
the University of Wisconsin. She has published numerous papers on mosses and plants and traditional
ecological knowledge. She is a distinguished teaching professor. She covers botany, ethnobotany,
indigenous environmental issues. She's been a TED speaker. She's an enrolled member of the citizen
Pottawatomie Nation and the author of two huge books, The Gorgeous, Gathering Moss, A Natural
and Cultural History of Mosses, and The New York Times Bestselling, Braiding Sweetgrass, Indigenous
Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants. Many, many people have suggested and begged
that I get her on the show. So thank you to Brain Pickings' own Maria Popova for the nudge
in her direction. We set up a time to meet virtually. I have listened to thisologist's
velvety soft voice via audiobooks so much that I was so nervous. I was afraid I'd be too loud
or jarring or I'd make an air horn noise with my mouth. So I did my best just to keep calm. And
this episode is just a gorgeous stroll through the forest floor, an eye-opening loop, squinting gaze
at hidden mysteries, and an intro to your new hero. We cover what is a moss? Where do they grow?
Can you eat them? Should you have one as a bath mat? Are they soft to nap on? What's up with lichen?
How to incorporate your native teaching into your science work? Or how to recognize and
appreciate Indigenous knowledge without appropriating it? And moss smoothies with the Moss Wonderful
biologist Dr. Robin Wall-Kimmerer.
Of course. Well, there's that. And so, you're talking to me from New York right now? Yes,
I live in upstate New York. How are the seasons changing right now? Oh, it is just the height
of June. I live out in farm country. And so, it's hay-making weather. So the air is just full of
the wonderful scent of new cut hay and wildflowers. It's really sort of the peak of photosynthesis
right now. So it's pretty lovely. I know from reading your books that you've always been,
obviously, drawn to the outdoors. Do you remember some of your first kind of interactions with
looking at plants and looking at wild growth? You know, it's really almost impossible for me to
pinpoint that because I just grew up in the natural world. It was always part of my being
and part of my family experience. And so, it's hard to say there was a moment when I really
connected. But I had the benefit of a rural childhood and parents who were avid outdoors people
and naturalists. And I think that I was mostly shaped by these old farm fields that were around
where I grew up. That meadow kind of array of wildflowers and wild strawberries and all of that
was certainly the formative landscape for me as a naturalist. I'd call it my backyard,
except it was the landscape, not my yard. And what about different plants? What
drew you to mosses in particular? You know, it's an odd story in that I've always been,
of course, drawn to plants. And when I went away to college to be a botany major, I took every
botany class I could get my hands on and there were a lot of them. And the only one I didn't take
was the ecology of mosses. No. Really, I left it till the last. I thought, oh, really, you know,
it's just this tiny little green film. How could that be interesting? So I'm really familiar with
this notion of the overlooked world because I did it myself. Right under my nose. I was really
interested in forest ecology. And so I overlooked the mosses, but then I took one class in it.
That moment, I remember, was the first day of my ecology of mosses class and putting a lens
on the mosses and seeing a forest in miniature. And it was love at first sight. So, yeah.
And I remember in Gathering Moss, you mentioned that you had kind of a loop, a magnifying glass,
and you spent some of your money to get your own.
Uh-huh. Yeah. And I still have it. When I think of the innumerable objects I have lost in my life,
I have never lost my loop. And okay, I'm here to ask the not smartest questions for all of us. So
let's do it. Let's just do it. What is a moss for someone who doesn't know? Well, how do you even
define a moss? I'm glad you asked, because when people hear about my passion for mosses,
they look at me really funny and they think, like, you mean that green scum? Like, no, no,
I don't mean green scum. Mosses are the oldest plants on the planet. People say they're primitive,
really, they're very sophisticated, I think, but they're primitive because they're so small
and simple. That's why people classify them that way. But mosses are members of the plant kingdom,
the first plants to colonize land 350 million years ago. When I think about what is a moss,
a moss is really a miniature forest. Did I just purchase a $13 loop to go look at
mosses and pretend like I'm in a movie called Honey I Shrunk the Boreologist? I moss definitely did.
And do they have root systems that are much different than trees? How are they able to
cling to so many surfaces? Well, that's really the important question, you know, when you said,
what is a moss? Oftentimes, the best way to answer that is what do mosses not have?
Ellie, they don't even have roots. Really? Nope. These are not rooted plants, and that's how they
can cling. They do have these little thread-like structures called rhizoids, which allow them
to attach. But they're not absorptive the way roots are. They don't have the capacity to take up water
and nutrients. They're really just points of attachment. So think of a muscle, like a bivalve,
attaching to a rock or a boat. They're not eating through those fibers. They're just hunkered down.
And so when we think about what mosses are, one of the ways to characterize them is by what they
don't have in comparison to all the plants that are around us. They don't have roots. They don't
have flowers. They don't have the xylem and phloem, that vascular tissue, that allows water to be
moved within the plant. They don't have any of that. And yet they're able to occupy virtually every
habitat on the planet and endure all kinds of different kinds of environments. So they're
super simple, but in their simplicity is kind of the key to their success.
And so without flowering, they reproduce with spores?
They do, yeah. Just like in higher plants, there are females and males, there are eggs
and sperm tucked in among the little tiny leaves of the moss. And like of flowering plants, we
know about insects moving pollen around for fertilization. For mosses, they need water
for that to happen. There has to be a continuous bridge of water between male and female for the
sperm to swim along, sometimes just along the surface of a leaf, to go find the female.
So the water acts like the ultimate wingman, just passing along sperm, like a note in class,
like, hey, my friend wanted you to have this, that boom, you're pregnant with moss babies.
And once the sperm does fertilize that egg, yeah, then it sends up this little stalk called
a sporophyte that will puff out clouds of spores that will go off and germinate. They don't make
seeds, but they work from the dispersal of spores. And so all of this is happening
in miniature when we're taking a walk through the forest and we just maybe see a green log
and take it for granted. All of this drama is happening. All of this drama, yes. Yes. And
you know, it's like anything the closer you look, the more drama you see. And if you start to set
aside those notions of what mosses don't have and say, okay, I think of mosses as real rule
breakers in the plant kingdom because they live their lives in ways that are so different than
all of the other plants. But yeah, when you start to pay attention, they are successful
because of their differences, I guess would be the way to say that.
You know, where can they grow? You mentioned that they can inhabit all these places other
plants can't. I'm trying to picture like the outer reaches, like where are some of the
most surprising places mosses have been found.
Mosses can grow pretty much anywhere. The only place that they can't tolerate are salty environments.
So they're not in the ocean. They're not in the seashore. But every place else, they occur. And
we tend to think about mosses as like you said, being on a wet log, they're in a shady forest,
they're next to a waterfall or a stream or a bog wet places. But one of the most surprising
places to find them is in the desert. What? Yeah. Yeah. There are mosses that live off from
morning dew in the desert. That's all the water they ever get. So to me, those are some of the
most surprising. And one of the beauties of when you ask where do mosses live, there's the big
answer of everywhere except for marine environments. But if we go too small to think about the world
like a moss, mosses live on surfaces for the most part. Think about where you see them. They're
on logs, they're on trees, they're on rocks, they're on pavement in city mosses. Mostly they
don't live on the soil, although some do, because they're out competed by the bigger flowering
vascular plants. So they tuck themselves in on all of these surfaces where it doesn't matter
if you don't have roots. Oh, that's so smart. It's so clever of them. I know that we might take
them for granted because our eyesight just doesn't allow us to kind of identify or notice their
differences. But when you're looking through a loop, how are their edges different and how are
their forms and structures different? Well, they are at the scale of a loop and even at the scale
of just being on your knees and looking carefully, one moss is as different from the next as a oak
tree is from a birch tree from a pine tree. Their leaves might have toothed edges, the leaf might
be pleated, the leaf might be round, it might be long, it might be like a hairlike extension,
there's tremendous diversity of form within the mosses. And that alone is a wonderful introduction
to mosses just to see that they have tiny stems and they have beautifully arrayed leaves.
People think about them as a green film almost, like there's nothing structural within it. It's
just like a green textile or something. But no, they're tiny little plants with world leaves and
leaves that might be flattened or spiraled. There's tremendous diversity of ways to be a moss
and that's why I always say to people, people say, oh, there's moss on that rock. Really,
there's no such thing as moss. There are mosses on any given rock. There might be
10 different kinds of moss that until you start to look, it just looks like a green wallpaper.
But then when you stop and look, you see that it's a whole world.
And how are all of those different mosses categorized? I know that they don't have
a lot of common names. True. Unfortunately, mosses within sort of western natural history, shall we
say, have been so overlooked that for the most part, they don't even have common names. Although
there weren't even field guides to them until a few years ago. And there are now some nice
photographic and drawing-based field guides and some attempt to put common names on them.
I'll admit they're not very interesting common names, hookers, branched carpet moss,
you know, not really very evocative. But maybe as people start looking more,
they'll have better, more colorful names. So when you call a moss, side note, you usually
call it by its buttoned up formal Latin name. But since Dr. Kimmerer is like the biologist,
I asked, is she going to get to name any like Kimmerer's shag or heckin' cool green floof?
She was like, I'm good. I'm really more of a moss ecologist. And so I'm more interested in their
relationships and their adaptive structures. And the names are convenient ways to discern one
from the other. And of course, they're important in understanding evolutionary relationships.
But my fascination with them is much more in what they're doing rather than who they are
in a taxonomic sense. That's a great way to put it. And what is their role ecologically?
That's a huge question, I realize. But what are they busy doing?
Well, I'm so glad you asked because they're tiny little plants and yet they have
a huge role to play. Where to start? One of the most important things to think about
in terms of the roles that mosses play is that their whole bodies, their whole way of being
is designed at the scale of water drops. They are designed to attract and hold water.
And so one of their major roles is to do exactly that. Mosses are like sponges. They hold the water
and then they release it slowly into the environment. So they create humidity, for example.
They also create a moist seed bed for other plants, to seeds to fall on. And then those
seeds are essentially falling on to a damp sponge that's holding on to that moisture.
Their moisture-holding capacity influences nutrients too. Think about that moss on a log
that you were invoking. Well, if that moss is keeping the log damp by virtue of being a sponge,
that means that the decay fungi are hard at work inside that log, breaking it down,
recycling nutrients much more effectively than if that log didn't have a moss blanket on it.
So they keep the environment moist, which allows many, many other processes to unfold.
That's certainly one of their major roles. You'll have to turn me off, Alec, as I could go on.
I love this. My ears are open. Okay. One of the other things that I think people are
fascinated to know is that mosses have been termed the coral reef of the forest because
within a moss, there are hundreds of little organisms living in that. When we say, well,
the mosses are a miniature forest, they're not only a miniature forest of tiny little trees,
but they have metaphorically birds living in that canopy. There are all kinds of invertebrates
that travel up and down the trunks of the mosses, if you will, from the top of the moss canopy down
to the soil. There are herbivores, there are grazers, there are predators. There's a whole
food chain happening inside a little clump of moss. The most insane festival the world has ever seen.
They're tremendous reservoirs of biodiversity, and that's why they get called the coral reefs
of the forest. What eats moss? Who grazes on it? Yeah, it's a great question.
For the most part, mosses are so well chemically defended that not much eats them.
Within that little microcosm, there are some invertebrates which will eat them.
The invertebrates that have piercing mouth parts will sometimes stick that
stylet into a moss cell and take out the contents. There are some larvae that will actually consume
the leaf, but for the most part, mosses themselves are not consumed. So what do I mean by
grazers? Well, within that little moss forest, there are little algae and bacteria and fungi
that live on the moist moss leaf surface, and there are insects that come along, invertebrates,
excuse me, that come along and actually scrape off the little epiphytic algae and fungi,
and that's what they're eating, not the moss. They're eating the stuff that's growing on the moss.
Okay, side note, epiphytic means stuff that grows on other stuff. So any epiphyte is a plant
that grows on another plant and just needs air and moisture. It's not a parasite, it's just
chilling. It just uses the other plant for support. Few epiphytes are mosses, air plants, orchids,
and Spanish moss, which is not a moss. It's just named after its resemblance to a beard lichen,
but it's also not a lichen, nor is it from Spain. So whenever you feel bad about yourself,
just remember, people had three shots to name Spanish moss, and they screwed up three times,
so you're doing fine, buddy. Oh, and what kind of chemical defenses are the mosses producing?
Well, I guess I should back up to answer that to say that for the most part, vertebrates do not
eat mosses. The only ones that do, birds will sometimes eat the capsules, the sporophytes,
which are protein rich, but they almost never eat the leafy part of the plant. In large part,
because that leafy part of the plant is so low in nutrients, it's mostly just cell wall and water.
There's not a lot of sugars or proteins in those leaves, so it's kind of a why bother.
You shouldn't eat them because they're nothing but fiber, and they have a lot of antimicrobials
in them, and that's where the chemical defenses come in. I mean, if you think about it,
it's a superb adaptation because mosses live on wet surfaces, right? They live on bark and soil
and logs and rocks, and so therefore, they would be subject, you would think, to attack by fungi
and by bacteria, but they have over a long evolutionary history. They have antimicrobials,
primarily polyphenolic compounds and tannins that are in those leaves that make them unpalatable,
as well as not very rewarding for any organisms to eat them.
So, if you're like, yes, yes, a polyphenol, but you don't know what one is, don't worry,
I got you. So, a polyphenol is a carbon-containing chemical, and it's characterized by usually
many repeating phenol groups. A phenol is a C6H5OH, so polyphenols can do things like release or
suppress growth hormones, they can protect plants from UV rays, they can deter moss munchers,
they can even signal to other plants like, hey, what's up, let's ripen. They can also fight infections,
and those last types are called phytoalexins, in case you're ever in need of that word. Now,
a tannin is a type of polyphenol, and if you've ever had like a dry tongue feeling from red wine
or a green banana or God forbid, you eat an unripe persimmon, which is so cringe-inducing,
you might as well just try to get a tongue transplant, because it's brutal, it's game over,
but yeah, then you've had tannins. Now, what if you ate stuff that other people don't want to eat?
Would anyone want to eat you? And have those antimicrobial properties ever been used by
other animals in their own defense against microscopic critters?
There's a hypothesis that exactly that, because the only place in the world that vertebrates do
eat mosses is in the Arctic. Caribou will eat mosses, lemmings and voles will eat mosses,
and some of the studies have suggested that while they might eat them, they can't digest them.
There's really just not much there to digest, but there's a suspicion that they eat them
because of their antimicrobial properties, and that they may do something to regulate
digestion in the animals. It's not well understood, but animals do exploit the antimicrobial properties
of mosses, including things like birds. Mosses are really prime materials for nest building
by songbirds. You'll often see songbirds foraging for mosses, and they'll be flying around with
trailing some brachythesium from their beaks, and they build it into their nest, and it's soft,
it's insulating, but it's also antimicrobial. The birds that primarily use mosses in their
nests are the songbirds whose babies actually poop in the nest. The mosses in the nest are
thought to have a hygienic effect on reducing the microbial load in the bird nest.
That's so fascinating. I mean, in lieu of diapers, just have that.
You can't body train a tiny bird. It's true, but you're right. But in fact, perhaps you know,
mosses have long been used as diapers by humans. Really? Yes. Tell me a little bit about that,
if you don't mind. Oh, no, of course not. Yeah, because of mosses' absorbance, this ability to
grab onto and hold water like a sponge, they've been very important culturally and ethnobotanically
among indigenous peoples worldwide. And one of the very common uses for mosses
is in diapering. And because the mosses are so absorbent of water, you put that dry moss
around the baby. And in fact, in my culture, in Pottawatomie culture, we talk about wrapping
the baby in what's called a moss bag. And so you stuff that bag with dry moss, and then it's
absorbent. It's like a disposable diaper, but it's also antimicrobial. So you have this absorbent,
antiseptic, soft, insulating, diapering material. So that's just one of the cultural uses of mosses
that exploits their ability to hold water and to have these defensive chemicals in them.
In Gathering Moss, Dr. Kimmerer also mentions mosses' use as a sanitary napkin, which she
describes as difficult information to track down, because ethnographers collecting these stories
probably did not have vaginas, so they didn't ask. But with all due respect, who knows how many
stories have been lost of period havers joking in their native language about having to ride
the green carpet that week? Too many to count, and I'm sad about it. I asked her what else
she came across in her research. If there's anything about that you'd love to share,
I know I'd love to hear it. Sure. There are long lists of the ways that people have traditionally
used mosses. Diapering is certainly one of them, but they're also really commonly used for
insulation. If you think again about mosses as being absorptive, they're holding water,
well, when they're dry, all those little capillary spaces that would hold water when they're dry,
they're holding air. It's airspace. It's contained airspace between leaves and between cells,
and that's essentially like closed cell foam insulation. People for a long time used mosses
insulation in boots and mittens and hats and bed rolls. And so long as it's dry,
it's a really effective insulation. It was even used architecturally in things like
wigwams, traditional wigwams for the wintertime would have one dome and then another dome inside it,
and then that intervening space would be packed with dry moss, an excellent insulating material.
So all kinds of uses for bryophytes. I'm also trying to figure out how they
photosynthesize under such a dense canopy. How are they doing that? It's a great question
because many mosses are thriving at something like 5% of the ambient available sunshine, right?
Living on only 5% sunlight. I keep the dimmer switch. They don't care. They're moss. They got this.
And their balance of chlorophyll A, B, and C is adjusted to the spectrum of wavelengths of light,
which is available to them in the dense shade. So they actually have a different pigment balance and
modified photosynthetic pathway that allows them to be efficient at really low light levels.
But it also comes from the fact that they don't grow very fast. They don't get very big. They don't
have really high energetic demands either. So it's this matter of adapting to the resources
that are available to them and doing it superbly. But at the same time, there are mosses that live
in full sun in the desert. And so they're able to utilize different wavelengths of light and they're
really well adapted to those habitats. So how are these soggy green babies also thriving
in the desert, Dr. Kimmerer dishes? But this gets us to one of the other totally amazing
thing about mosses is that think about that desert moss for a second. It has no xylem and
phloem. It has no roots. It has no way to store water. So what happens to it is that it dries up.
It dries up and becomes this just little black crust on a rock or in a soil crevice.
And if you just walked by it, you'd think it was dead.
Wait, am I dead?
But it's not dead. It's just waiting. And mosses are what are known as poichylohydric,
which is, well, you know, there's poichylothermic, right, for cold-blooded animals, animals whose
temperature is the same temperature as the environment. For mosses, they're poichylohydric,
their water content reflects the water content in the environment. So when it dries out,
the moss dries out. But unlike the plant on your windowsill that gets crisp and it's done for,
right, the mosses are not done for. They go into this state of, I guess we just call it sort of a
suspended animation. And they're dry and crisp and just sitting there. They can't photosynthesize
unless they're wet, but they're just waiting. And then it rains. And within 25 minutes,
they're back to full photosynthesis.
Oh, wow. It's amazing.
You mentioned it as sort of a crust on a rock. And I know a lot of people are so curious.
How can you tell a lichen from a moss?
Hey, great question. Because lichens and mosses often live together, right, at the same scale.
And lichens are not differentiated like a plant into stem and leaves. Lichens are going to be
a phallus, right? Sometimes powdery, sometimes kind of leathery, but they're not going to have
a stem that leaves on it. Whereas mosses do. And lichens, which by the way are also poichelohydric,
have this amazing water stress tolerance. They tend toward the spectrum of gray and blue and
sometimes olive green, as well as the gorgeous orange and yellow ones, colors that you don't see
in mosses. But real grassy greens are mosses, well, except for the ones who live in the desert.
And they are black and crusty. And that the blackness of the mosses are caused by these
flavonoid pigments. And it's essentially sunscreen. The mosses have laid down this pigment layer
to prevent them from having the photosynthesis and the chlorophyll
being photo degraded in the intense sunlight. Oh my gosh, that's so smart.
What about how airflow influences their growth? What a good question. Thank you.
Oh man, I have been so nervous to meet her because she's so cool. And I like her book so much. And
every time she says I have a good question, I just want you to know that I'm just like floating on
air currents inside. Oh my gosh. I'm blushing, talking about it right now. Okay, anyway.
Air flow, of course, is going to make things dry out. It's going to sweep that water away.
It's going to increase evaporation. And because mosses can only photosynthesize when they're both
wet and illuminated, airflow can be a great detriment to the growth of mosses.
And that's one of the reasons they are so small. Because it turns out that there are places in the
world, in the whole landscape, right, where airflow is minimal. Those places of minimal airflow are
what are known as the boundary layer. And a boundary layer is this area of extremely still air
right at the surface of any surface, a log, a rock, a tree, your house. There's this little area of
still air. And because in that space, the wind doesn't blow, there's just so much friction with
the surface. This region of still air is where mosses live. They live within the boundary layer.
And that way, they can stay moist. They don't have so much evaporation because of wind flow.
And if the mosses got bigger than the boundary layer, which is created by their surface,
they would dry out. And you can almost measure the depth of the boundary layer
by the height of the mosses. Oh, wow. So that's, ecologically,
that's part of the puzzle then, how it all fits together. Absolutely. Absolutely. And that's why
in the desert on a rock, the mosses are teensy. You know, they might only be a couple of millimeters
tall because they have to stay within the boundary layer of that rock surface. Whereas if they're
living under the shady, moist canopy of a hemlock tree, they could be five inches tall. Because
there's a much bigger boundary layer there because of the trees overhead and the logs
that they might be living on. So they can live within that little area. That little boundary
layer is not only a place where the wind doesn't blow, where theoretically, it's absolutely still
air. But if you think about every surface of having this little boundary layer over it,
it also means that within that area, it's warmer because the sun will shine on the log, let's say,
and then it's re-rated as heat. And that heat doesn't blow away. There's not as much convection.
And so it's caught in this little boundary layer. The moisture that's coming off from that log
gets caught in the boundary layer. So mosses essentially are inhabiting a little greenhouse,
a little greenhouse that occurs naturally over every surface, a place which is warmer,
moisture, and as it happens, richer in carbon dioxide than any place else. And that's where
the mosses live. They're exploiting these little micro-habitats that rather than trying to dominate
and control the habitat, they're taking advantage of the laws of physics and exploiting these
naturally occurring little greenhouses. You know, that brings me to a question. We like to debunk
flimflam. We like to bust myths with all the just when we can. But is there a truth that
moss tends to grow on the north side of trunks or is that total bog? It's so great that the one
thing people think they know about mosses isn't true. No, this idea that moss only grows on the
north side of the tree, no. If you use that for direction finding, you would be going in circles.
It is true. It is true that mosses will grow more prolifically in the cooler shadier place
and are the north sides of trees cooler in shadier than the south side? Sure. Unless there's a
forest gap overhead or unless that tree is leaning in a certain angle, unless there's a ravine over
there. There's so many other factors that influence it. I think the only place that it would really
make sense as a wayfinder is in places that are totally flat with a uniform kind of forest
vegetation. There's greater evidence for this. In the boreal forest, there is more moss growth
on the north side of the tree, but only in those circumstances of flat terrain and homogeneous
vegetation. No, bring a compass instead. Bring a compass. Moss is not your GPS. I wanted to ask
before we get into listener questions a little bit about your writing because it's surreal to talk
to you because I've listened to your audiobooks because you narrate them, you read them, and
you have such a wonderful voice and cadence. When you first decided to write Gathering Moss,
what really moved you to take that sabbatical and put all of this work into words?
Allie, it really came from a certain kind of frustration of only writing for peer-reviewed
technical scientific audience in that I've spent so many wonderful years of my life learning from
mosses, of just being with them, and when I test a hypothesis and report on it in an
article for The Briologist, everything that I've learned had to be boiled down into data tables
and p-values, and there was no room in that kind of writing for wonder or for talking about the
amazing little things that you see and the things that the mosses have to teach you.
And there came to be a place where ironically as a scientist, I felt like I couldn't really tell the
truth by using only scientific writing. And so having been given this privilege of spending my
career among mosses, I felt like I really needed to do justice to the mosses
and tell a little bit more about how they live their lives and their incredible ways
of being and lessons that they have for us. So I set myself this goal to see if I could
write in such a way that people could fall in love with mosses.
And that was really my intent. Tell the truth about mosses in such a way that these overlooked
ancient, wonderful little beings would get a chance to tell their story.
You even, personal experience and observation and setting and atmosphere so well,
as well as your history and your indigenous culture, which braiding sweetgrass also just
hit the New York Times bestseller list too, right? A few months ago. Congratulations on that.
Can you tell me a little bit about what that's meant to you to get to express that to
more public audience than just your students or other biologists?
It has been so gratifying and admittedly very surprising to see the response to both of these
books, in particular Braiding Sweetgrass. For me, it has been so hopeful because I really have this
sense with both gathering moss and breeding sweetgrass that those books are meant to awaken
something in readers, this sense of wonder for sure, but also the sense of wisdom of the living
world, the wisdom that plants have for us. And I'm so gratified to know that people are open to that
idea, that they're open to think about learning not just about plants, but learning from plants
and willing to walk that path with me as a writer of trying on these different perspectives of
let's look at the world through the lens of indigenous ways of being. Let's look at the
world through the lens of a tree or a lichen and what might we learn? And it's just been so rewarding
to have readers from so many different places and cultures and experiences embrace that. It
makes me so happy to think that the plants stories get to be shared so widely and that it might
ignite even more stories of people and their relationship to plants. I've got 16 plants.
And I have so many questions from listeners. Obviously, we're not going to get to all 316 of
them. I hope there's some overlap. There's some overlap, but people are excited. And I'll just
dive in if that's okay. You bet. Okay, so we will get to those questions in just a moment,
but first, a word from sponsors who make it possible for us to donate to a cause close to
the heart of the geologist. And this week, a donation is going straight to SUNY's College of
Environmental Science and Forestry's Center for Native Peoples and the Environment, which was
founded by none other than Dr. Robin Kiver. So they are located within the original territory
of the Haudenosaunee or Iroquois Confederacy, with a mission to create programs that draw on
the wisdom of both indigenous and scientific knowledge in support of shared goals of environmental
sustainability. And the center includes a significant outreach element that's focused on
increasing educational opportunities for Native American students in environmental sciences.
There are also research collaborations, partnerships with Native American communities
to address local environmental problems. There are scholarships and fellowships also available.
We're also sending a donation per Dr. Kimmerer to the American Indian Science and Engineering
Society, whose goal is to substantially increase the representation of American Indian, Alaska
Native, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, First Nation, and other indigenous peoples of North America
in the fields of science, technology, engineering, math, and other related disciplines. Now they
were founded in 1977, and they have awarded nearly 12 million and counting in academic scholarships.
They also offer internships, professional development, conferences, and more. So first
donation was to the ESF Center for Native Peoples and the Environment, and another donation to the
American Indian Science and Engineering Society. Thank you for the heads up on those, Dr. Kimmerer.
So a donation went to them. Thanks to some sponsors who you may hear about now.
Okay, and now on to questions submitted by beloved patrons. Let's see, there's one first
time question asker. Sigwani Dana says, I am Penobscot, a tribe from Maine, and I also teach
high school science, and I find that I feel like I live in two worlds, and they often clash.
How do you mentally bridge indigenous culture and intuition with Western science? And I hope I
read that earlier, and I tried to make sure I pronounced it right, but I'm not sure if I did,
and I will rerecord it if I didn't. No, it was perfect. It was perfect. Yeah.
And I'm really grateful for that question. And I think one of the ways that I try to bridge that,
that I work both in my own writing and with my own teaching, is to think about the fact that
within indigenous knowledge systems, we recognize that human people have at least four different
ways of understanding the world, certainly with the intellect, absolutely mental way of
processing and generating information. We also have physical knowledge from observation,
from measurement, right, from sensing the world. But if we continue around that, think of it as
this medicine wheel model, we have the knowledge of the mind, the knowledge of the body in two of
those quadrants, but then we have the emotional intelligence, and we have spiritual knowledge,
spiritual ways of knowing. And all of those ways of knowing are valid and important. They're like
different tools that you deploy for different purposes, for different questions that you might
have. So that's a very holistic way of thinking about knowledge as embracing all of those ways.
But in Western science, we've truncated that. In Western science, we privilege the knowledge of
the intellect and that which we can measure and very explicitly set aside emotional and spiritual
knowledge and say, that doesn't count, that doesn't matter, that's not the real valid knowledge.
And so the scientific way of knowing is a subset of indigenous knowledge. And that's the way I try to
present it, is that one is a subset of the other. Each of them has these powerful ways of knowing,
engaging different tools that we as people have. And the real key to navigating that
that boundary of two worlds, which I experience and understand, is to think about them as
of different gifts, of different tools. And when you have a true false question,
the scientific ways of knowing and hypothesis testing, that's a darn good tool for a true false
question. But once your question is bigger than that, then you need not only what is true,
but what is right, and what is meaningful, and what are the implications of it. And then the
wholism of indigenous knowledge can bring you to wisdom, rather than just information.
That's great. So to learn more about this, you can look up medicine wheels, which can also
represent the four directions, north, south, east, and west, or the seasons, spring, summer,
winter, fall, the elements of earth, wind, water, and fire, or those four aspects of mind, body,
emotions, and spirit. Now, if you are a non-indigenous person, and you would like to make sure that
your naturalist teachings touch on indigenous knowledge in the right way, patrons Ira Gray,
Olivia Deborsier, Anne-Sophie Caringe, Minnie Thompson, Liz Ropeke, and first time question
askers Lanna Mack, Brigid, Gwen Kelly, and Sagata Darcy, all submitted awesome questions wanting to
know. If you think there are any good tools for non-indigenous folks to sort of incorporate that
into their teaching or their botany courses, or if that's something that Alice and Bray says,
what are some ways that non-indigenous naturalists and educators can engage with or teach about
traditional knowledge about native plants in their area without appropriating native cultures?
Yeah, excellent question. And I think that this, I'll return to that, to the prior question,
because these ways of knowing that we might call indigenous ways of knowing of, you know, mind,
body, emotion, spirit, those are human ways of knowing, you know. And so bringing one's full
humanity to being a scientist and teaching science is, I think, really important. But more
specifically to the question of how to teach about indigenous ways of knowing without appropriating,
one of the most important things to do is what we do in western science as well. And that's
cite your sources, right? Acknowledge where that knowledge came from, and not to portray it as
one's own, but to give full credit to the people who created that knowledge, who learned these
things, passed them on. And to me, that is the first step, is to know where that knowledge came
from, and to honor it, and essentially cite it the way that we do in western science.
I think it's also really important to, when we're avoiding cultural appropriation, to have an
authentic experience of engagement with place, you don't need to say, well, native people tell us to
be grateful for the gifts of plants around us. Yes, that's absolutely true. But the way that you
manifest that gratitude should be in your own cultural framework. You don't have to take
another way of showing gratitude for the gifts of the earth. You can show it your own way.
And so coming up with authentic expressions of your own relationship with the living world
is a way to make your experiences much more powerful because they're your own,
and it avoids cultural appropriation as well. That's a beautiful way to look at it.
By the by, I listened to some of Gathering Moss sitting on a rock under an oak tree
in unceded Tongva Territory in Southern California. Now, 10 out of 10 highly recommend enjoying her
dulcet voice on a blanket, watching squirrels, maybe on your city balcony, looking at a bee,
waggling its butt, or on a walk through the woods, even while finishing your taxes.
Really actually no bad time or place, come to think of it. Anyway, this is a funny question.
Rebecca Pankost says, first time question asker, when I was little, I always imagined
a patch of moss would be the most magical and comfortable place to take a nap.
What species of moss do you think would make the best napping spot? And Emily Roth asked,
also, if you've ever slept on a bed of moss, if it's comfortable.
The answer is, yes, I sure have. And you know, I'm not the only one. Of course, moss as bedding
is a common traditional practice. And even Linnaeus, you know, the so-called
father of Western botany anyway, as if before Linnaeus, people didn't have botany.
That's a different story. But Linnaeus is said to have traveled with a bedroll
made out of polytrachum juniperinum, a wonderful mossy bedroll. So, yeah, I've taken a nap on
all kinds of mosses. But one of the things to be really sure about is to think again about that
notion that they're sponges, they're full of water. So, I have had many a wet bottom thinking,
oh, this will be a really nice place to sit. And like, no.
Slight soggy bottom there. And you know, in terms of the things that are living in there too,
Lillian Ledford and Julian Gibson had similar questions. Lillian said,
this is an adjacent question from their friend Emily Ford. Do you squeal and coo with delight
when you find tardigrades in moss specimens? And Julianne wants to know, how many tardies
can moss hold? Do you ever see little moss piglets? Oh, they're just amazing, aren't they?
Yes, I do squeal with delight. Such remarkable beings. And in terms of how many are in a little
clump of moss, you know, that depends on the moss. Tardigrades especially like sphagnum moss,
peat mosses, because they're consistently moist. They also like the log mosses, those big, robust
wefts that grow on logs. But the shorter turf mosses will hardly have any tardigrades in them.
So the answer is the answer to most ecological questions. It depends.
It depends. And if you're like a tardigrade, what's that? Oh, well, welcome to the best thing
you're ever going to learn ever. So they are water-dwelling, eight-legged, segmented microanibals.
They're also called water bears or moss piglets. And they look like kind of little loaves of bread,
but with stumpy little legs. And then they have a face that looks kind of like a robot's butthole.
I love them. They can live in space. They can live completely desiccated for long periods of time.
Maybe they're aliens. They're not. But what if they were? Anyway, I've never seen one IRL. But now
I know to go for the bigger, more robust, longer soggy mosses. Don't mess with the shorter turf
mosses. There's no water bears there. Not to know where the tardy party is at. And don't be tardy
to the tardy party. Or your ass is grass. Hey, speaking of, Andrea Kendall-Bernel
Elmical, Lee Sarah-Lou Chessie Evan-Jude, Amanda Mueller, whose name I say wrong every time I
think it's Mueller, I'm sorry, Courtney Ryan, Jay Gordon, John Sandstone, Ellen Skelton, Colleeny B,
Jessica Mazzola, Amelia Hines, Maggie Bender, Emily Elaine LeBord, Samantha Heinecke, John
Sandstone, Nicole Wackery, Corlaino, and not a cephalopod. I'll ask this next one. It's a good
question. That's why so many people asked it. A bunch of people had questions about moss lawns
replacing your lawn with something more sustainable and less water hungry. How do you feel about that?
The answer there is also it depends. My take on moss lawns is that if the mosses come to your lawn,
encourage them, help them become a moss lawn. But in most cases, it is very difficult and not
sustainable to try to replace a grass lawn with a moss lawn because mosses will almost always lose
to lose out in a competition to rooted plants. There is this movement to, well, let's go buy mosses
and install them in our lawns so that we can have a lawn that we don't have to mow or water.
If those mosses were capable of growing in that setting, they would probably already be there.
I am really not a fan of the notion of transplanting mosses from the places where they are perfectly
happy in doing their work and bringing them to places where they are not going to thrive.
You can create the conditions for them. What I always say to people when they ask me about this,
if you build it, they will come. If you make a place which is moist and shady
and not conducive to grass or ground cover, mosses will come there and they will colonize it very
happily. But for the most part, transplanting, there are some exceptions to this, of course.
For the most part, transplanting mosses or using this moss milkshake method for getting moss
lawns started is, I think, unfair to mosses. That's good to know. If you're like, did she
just say moss milkshake? Did I hear that right? She did. You did. A moss milkshake is something
that you can purchase in what looks like a milk carton or you can just frappe up one yourself.
You can just grind local moss and water with a little cornstarch. Sometimes yogurt, people do
all kinds of things. You make a bubbly slurry and then you just paint it on objects and cross
your fingers. But remember, right place, right moss is the key. Know your moss. Also, some folks
use this method to create alive murals. And if you don't believe me, you can Google Moss Graffiti.
So is your home even cute if it doesn't have a moss mural? Also, speaking of Pinterest design
aspirations, a lot of people, so many, including Amy Carr, Adam Weaver, Madison Johns, Molly Johnson,
Lacey Ayrton, Addy Capello, Brittany Panos, Megan Lucien, Elle McCall, Katherine Warren, Kimberly
McCall, and first-time question-asker, Secura, wanted to know about this next one. What about
bath mats? Have you seen this? I have. No, no, and no.
And to summarize, no. In conclusion, no. No.
I put that in the realm of a moss torture. Will they absorb water? Sure they will.
Will they like chemicals and soap scum and fluorescent light? No, they will not. And they
will just die. Leave them in the forest and have a cotton bath mat.
And that kind of brings me to my last question from listeners. Well, two people wrote in,
Addy Capello and Carrie Simo. I'm not sure if those names are familiar to you, but they are
both students of yours. That's kind of saying like those are familiar names.
And Carrie is a former student, says, I took biology and ethnobotany with Dr. Kimmerer at
ESF 2008 to 2010. I love you, Dr. Kimmerer. You've been such an inspiration, just mossom.
And they are a restoration practitioner in Boulder County now. And one of the questions
that Carrie had was, is unsustainable harvest still an issue in the Pacific Northwest? Can we
kind of discuss taking moss from one area and using it for something else? What should we
know about that? Thank you so much for that question. Because one of the unintended consequences,
of course, of people coming to love mosses is that they want to commodify them. They want to have
them around in much of the unsustainable harvest of the epiphytic moss communities of the
temperate rainforest in the Pacific Northwest is for horticultural work. You know, people are
harvesting these old, beautiful moss carpets out of the woods and using them to line flower baskets
or flower pots or in some cases, sewing them on to fabric to make these moss carpets for displays
and so forth. And the mosses grow back really quite slowly. It is, I think, an unsustainable
practice at the current level. And especially when you think of everything that's lost by
taking them, all those invertebrates, the coral reef of the forest, you know, made to line a
flower pot. That doesn't seem to me to be an honorable way to relate to forest briophites.
And there is a permit system in place in the Pacific Northwest to regulate moss harvest. I am
not current at the moment state of affairs. But the last time I really looked into this,
it was largely unenforced. There's a permit system, but nobody there enforcing it. So
again, it's something that I would say is an unsustainable practice.
Oh, and one more question. People are going to be so mad if I didn't ask. How, well, Casey
Sisterson wants to know, does the proverb, a rolling stone gathers no moss bother you?
In terms of as though gathering moss was a bad thing, I guess?
I've never understood that proverb. Somebody told me that what it really means
is that if you don't stay put, you'll never get rich. You'll never accumulate wealth, i.e. gather
moss. I don't know if that's really what it means. I don't know what its original intent was.
But one of the beauties of mosses is their ability to remind us about being still,
about staying in place. Mosses have a very high fidelity and loyalty to their home places,
which is why they don't transplant well. They want to live here, not somewhere else. They're
very specific and invested in their places. And I think that's one of the wonderful teachings
that they have for us. So yeah, a rolling stone gathers no moss. Okay.
P.S. Side note, I always thought that meant that you have to keep on your hustle or else you'll
just become green and hairy. And yes, I looked it up and it was originally supposed to mean
that a tree that's moved a bunch bears no fruit. Also, side note, the Rolling Stones just got that
name when a journalist on the phone was like, hey, what are you called? And Brian Jones saw a
Muddy Waters album on the floor and read off one of the tracks being like, rolling stones,
like Jan Brady, George Glass style. Also, if you think that the Rolling Stone gathers no moss
proverb is confusing, consider also that in the 1950s, psychiatrists would read this idiom off to
you. And if you couldn't explain what it meant metaphorically, they would diagnose you with
schizophrenia. According to the 1956 publication, Clinical Manual for Proverbs Test by one Montana
based psychological test specialist. What? This proverb doesn't even know what this proverb means.
Anyway, I don't think they do that anymore, because it sucks. Now, in that vein, the last
two questions I always ask a neologist is what is the hardest part about your job or about being
a biologist or what what's frustrating or even if it's petty or even if it's, you know, deep or
silly, what's one thing that is kind of sticks in your car? Hmm. I have never been asked that
question. And I so love being a biologist that I have a hard time thinking of that.
I honestly, I can't think of anything. In a way, I suppose the thing that frustrates me
is that that people overlook mosses. There are times in the plant ecology literature when
scientific literature, when they're describing a forested community, they'll have a category
called moss. Like really, that's all you got. That's a category kind of like tree.
Because mosses have so much ability in their specificity to tell us something about that
place, just to lump all these 17,000 species of beings into a category called moss is frustrating.
Yeah. That's so valid. And then this is going to be hard, but what is your favorite thing about
moss? What is the thing that just gives you the butterflies the most or just makes your heart
swell? Hmm. Straight up their beauty. I've been looking at mosses for, oh man,
half a century. And, and it still gives me a thrill when I put my lens on them and think,
oh my gosh, this, this perfection in, in miniature. They're beautiful intimacy with water. They're,
they're quiet kind of elegance. I admire them. That's beautiful. That's awesome. I think there'll
probably be a lot of people inspired to invest in a loop. And I hope so. Do you have one Ellie?
Not yet. No, but I was like, I, I was thinking about it and just looking at the rocks in the yard
and thinking, oh gosh, I want to see so much. So yeah, I think that's next on my list. I,
Yeah. Oh, do it. Yeah. Absolutely. I can't, it's just this idea that there's this magical world
that's right underneath you. That, you know, that if you just kind of open your eyes and get
still enough to look, I love it. Yeah. Exactly. I thank you so, so much for talking to me and,
and doing this. And you've just been, you've been on my list as someone I've wanted to talk to
for so long. And it just, yeah, it feels surreal hearing your voice talk to me.
That person who reads you to sleep at night, I know it's weird. Yeah, you've been with me on
hikes and all kinds of things. You've done the dishes with me as well. And to have an interaction,
interaction is really surreal. But thank you so, so much for doing this. So ask
awesome biologists great questions. And just know that there's a universe around you that is
unfathomably large, and it keeps expanding. And then there's also worlds in miniature, underfoot,
just living out love and drama. Now Dr. Robin Kimmerer's books, once again, are gathering
moss and natural and cultural history of mosses, and braiding sweet grass, indigenous wisdom,
scientific knowledge, and the teachings of plants. Both are wonderful. So if you just fell in love
with her words and her cadence and her outlook, get them in audiobook form, if you like. And you
can just have her in your ears as you go about your days. You can also become her fan at facebook.com
slash braiding sweet grass. There will be links to those in the show notes, as well as a link to
donate to the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment. Should you choose, you can follow
oligies at oligies on Twitter and Instagram. I'm on both as Ali Ward with 1L. Come be friends.
You can join the oligies podcast Facebook group. It's full of 14,000 very loving,
accepting humans, and that's adminned by the wonderful Ernie Michelle Campbell Talbert,
my friend since we were four. You can also wear oligies merch by going to oligiesmerch.com.
Thank you to Shannon Feltis and Bonnie Dutch. They host a very charming comedy podcast called
You Are That, and they help with merch, which is agonizingly delayed at the printers warehouse
due to the pandemic. So thank you for your patience. Thank you Emily White for cranking out
transcripts with all the folks in the oligies transcriber group. I love you all. Kayla Patton
bleeps the episodes, so they're safe for kiddos. Those and transcripts are up for free at alleyward.com
slash oligies-extras. There's a link to that in the show notes. Thank you to everyone on Patreon
for helping me pay these amazing people to help out. Also, Noel Dilworth helps with all the
scheduling. She's an angel on earth. Kelly Dwyer updates the website at alleyward.com.
Injured Sleeper does the first pass edits and cuts out all my alms and other nonsense,
and the wonderful Stephen Ray Morris stitches all the pieces together to make the moss quilt
you hear today. Nick Thorburn of the Band Islands wrote and performed the theme music,
which I think we should get on the iTunes store. What do you say? Should we do it? Okay. Now,
if you stick around to the end of the episode, you know I tell you a secret, and this week's secret
is that sometimes when I eat a carrot, I eat like all the way up to the butt of it, you know?
Sometimes I'll even munch the butt a little bit. And I was telling my friend Micah about this once,
and he was like, you can do that? I'm like, I think. And anyway, he ate the whole carrot butt,
and then he got terrible food poisoning. And now whenever I eat a carrot up to the butt,
I think, oh man, poor Micah. I probably shouldn't eat the top of the carrot.
Sorry, Micah. Yikes. Anyway, I guess at some point you could just got to stop eating the
carrot and get another carrot. Please, nobody do this and get food poisoning. Okay. Thank you
for listening to this public service announcement. So the second secret is that it's 2022 now. I
was going to cut that secret out and replace it with a new one, but it's just a good secret.
It's a quality secret. That one stays. So now I guess the third secret is that if you've been
listening to 2022 episodes, you may know that your beloved grandpa, my dad, passed away in July,
and it has been tough. But the good news is, is that I have dreams about him a lot. And I kind of
wake up feeling like we've gotten to hang out. And that's really nice. So I thought I'd tell you.
All right. Bye-bye.
I'm experienced at foraging. I used to find edible mushrooms on my bath mat.