When you were little, were you afraid to eat watermelon seeds because you thought they’d sprout in your stomach? Well, it turns out that if you inhale trees you get the same results.
I want to know what they did with the sapling after they removed it. If I were that man, I’d want to plant it in my backyard. “See, kids? That’s the tree that grew in Grandpa’s lungs. Now, anyone want some watermelon seeds?”
The report I heard cast some pretty harsh doubt on this. IIRC, a seed would need a fairly narrow band of the right pH, light, moisture, and temperature to germinate.
Ok, so Snopes may be investigating? Here is a Telegraph story, not sure how credible they are. They say the surgeon’s story has not been independently verified.
I found this story in the Daily Snopes section. Admittably, they don’t guarantee the veracity of DS stories. But I didn’t see it in their regular Urban Legend pages.
It may not be true. I posted the story for the :eek: factor.
There was a thread either here or Fark, ( I think here) where someone had a kid that had chronic sinus issues.
Allergists and a variety of doctors were consulted. Over a period of time, someone got the bright idea to Xray/ or Cat scan the head and found out that the child ( when smaller) had shoved bean seeds up their nose and had sprouted, hence the sinus issues.
A former housemate of mine told me a cousin of hers had done just that–shoved a bean up his nose and left it until it sprouted. The case, she said, ended up in a medical paper, complete with an x-ray of the sprout in situ and photos of the sprout following its surgical removal.
She also said the same cousin once fractured his skull by banging his head on the concrete floor of a supermarket because his mother wouldn’t buy him a cookie. When I asked if he survived his childhood, she said, “Oh, yeah. He’s a pediatrician now.”
No, I don’t have verification of any of this, but I did find her generally reliable.
Germination doesn’t necessarily require light, for all species (and some plants will only germinate initially in the dark) - but plant growth, for green plants, pretty much does require light.
So it’s a pretty tall tale, unless this particular specimen happened to do something pretty damn weirdly and uncharacteristically parasitic, like hacking into the guy’s bloodstream and extracting sugars directly, bypassing its need to synthesise them.
No. Typical seed-dispersal mechanisms result in the seed(s) being deposited on the ground surface; rain and other weather my result in covering them with some soil or ground litter but the majority of seeds in the wild germinate within a few millimeters of the surface. Now, I don’t know if most or even any seeds actually require light to sprout, but it is available to them.