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From: Citizen Winston Smith <sss@example.de>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.usenet.kooks
Subject: Re: OFF
Date: Tue, 5 Nov 2024 17:29:35 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider

On 11/5/2024 4:17 PM, % wrote:
> Citizen Winston Smith wrote:
>> On 11/5/2024 4:01 PM, % wrote:
>>> Citizen Winston Smith wrote:
>>>> On 11/5/2024 3:19 PM, % wrote:
>>>>> Citizen Winston Smith wrote:
>>>>>> On 11/5/2024 3:14 PM, % wrote:
>>>>>>> Citizen Winston Smith wrote:
>>>>>>>> On 11/5/2024 3:11 PM, % wrote:
>>>>>>>>> Citizen Winston Smith wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> On 11/5/2024 1:17 PM, Siri Cruise wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Where in Georgia are they extending poll hours
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> FUCK
>>>>>>>>>>      OFF
>>>>>>>>>>          AND
>>>>>>>>>>              DIE!
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> what a great talent
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> what a mental midget you are
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> and what a tall one you are
>>>>>>
>>>>>> a strong tree grows to the light and leaves the moldy undergrowth 
>>>>>> and trash litter behind
>>>>>
>>>>> no it doesn't
>>>>
>>>> yes it does
>>>
>>> prove it here now in real life or no it don't , smuck nasal
>>
>> https://biology.stackexchange.com/questions/10402/why-is-it-beneficial-for-trees-to-grow-that-tall
>>
>> There are some obvious costs:
>>
>> Need much Carbon and other nutrients
>> maintenance cost
>> energy cost (for growing, to bring water (and nutrients) up to the 
>> higher leaves, etc...)
>> Sensitivity to wind
>> etc...
>> Potential benefits I can think of:
>>
>> Competition for sunlight
>> Better dispersal
>> protection against predation
>> Some birds (maybe especially those that are potentially good seed 
>> dispersers) prefer to land on high trees (avoiding the cost of 
>> regaining altitude). Being high attract these birds which eat the 
>> fruits and disperse the seeds.
>>
>> https://academic.oup.com/treephys/article/41/1/1/5900576
>>
>> For trees in forests, striving for light is matter of life and death, 
>> either by growing taller toward brighter conditions or by expanding 
>> the crown to capture more of the available light.
>>
>> A shortsighted maximization of growth based on initial light 
>> conditions can result in arrested height growth, preventing the tree 
>> from reaching the canopy. The previous result can explain canopy 
>> stratification, and why canopy species often get stuck at a certain 
>> size under a shading canopy.
>>
> i said real life that ain't real life you lose

you are a moron amongst the simps of this world.