A Plant That Can Smell 119
BlueCup writes "The question of how a dodder finds a host plant has puzzled researchers. Many thought it simply grew in a random direction, with discovery of a plant to attack being a chance encounter. But the researchers led by Consuelo M. De Moraes found that if they placed tomato plants near a germinating dodder, the parasite headed for the tomato 80 percent of the time. And when they put scent chemicals from a tomato on rubber, 73 percent of the dodder seedlings headed that way. Turns out, it sniffs out it's prey."
attack of the killer... (Score:5, Funny)
See, now I would have thought that it would have been the tomatoes that made the first strike...
Re:attack of the killer... (Score:5, Funny)
In sovi.......never mind.
Hmm... sounds dubious.... (Score:2, Funny)
mod (Score:1)
Another name (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Another name (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Another name (Score:4, Funny)
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Such a rosy world we live in, no? :-)
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Well, duh. (Score:2, Informative)
Science 101. (Score:1, Redundant)
1. And assumed the dodders behaviour was explained by "random twisting".
2. This experiment found that "random twisting" can not explain the dodders behaviour.
3. Iff the experiment can be repeated, the assumption is broken. Science will look for a stronger explaination as to how the dodder finds a host.
4. RTFA before "arse spraying" it with that boiling alkaline excretion of yours.
5. ????
6. Pr
Plants that remember people (Score:3, Interesting)
A bunch of scientific equipment was setup to measure plants behaviour/electrical impulses.
They then had 10 people walk through the room and when the man who hacked the plants entered the room the plants sent off strong/furious signals.
I always wondered if this was a true experiment or urban legend...but with this species of plants sensing different kinds of chemicals, it just might have been real.
Yo Grark
Re:Plants that remember people (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Plants that remember people (Score:5, Funny)
Well, of course it's slowly, it takes a very long time to say anything in Old Entish [wikipedia.org].
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Well, I heard it like this: A plant, a Nun, and a Rabbi walked into a bar....
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There are numerous experiments described where the scientists hook up polygraphs to plants, get one person to just think about smashing the plant, burning leaves, that sort of thing, and the plant would go psycho. Other people who loved plants would be put into the same room and the plant would exhibit totally different behaviours.
One guy actually controlled his garage door by hooking up a philodendron to an amplifier, and he could open the door
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What sort of signals does a plant send? Doesn't seem much point if it can't do anything about it.
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The story goes that scientist conected an EKG machine and watched for signs of brian patterns. When the plant apeared excited they interpreted it as emotion. I didn't think it was actualy true but
Re:Plants that remember people (Score:4, Interesting)
Mythbusters actually took a shot at this one [discovery.com] (episode 61). They tried hooking up both a polygraph (as the original guy did) as well as an EKG machine. What they found is that there initially appeared to be a response, but once they isolated themselves from the plant they were testing, the apparent response went away. Kinda dumb, but somewhat interesting.
If you're interested, you can get it here [torrentspy.com] or wait for it to be on Discovery again.
Great (Score:2)
What the hell is left to eat? If it isn't organic, the granola crowd isn't going to bite, and if it's manufactured (genetically engineered), we'll have activists spouting the dangers of modified DNA.
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Eating is so passe. Cut out the middle man, learn to photosynthesize!
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Heads of lettuce can't escape either but according to the above articles and Mythbusters, these plants defintely do send distress signals when being attacked. Make of it what you will, soon there will be a plants right nutjob wanting us to eat some sort meal made from bacteria.
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video on youtube [youtube.com]
wikipedia (under Primary Perception) [wikipedia.org]
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Setting up a bunch of scientific equipment is not what makes an experiment scientific.
KFG
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In the late 1980s, I watched videos of similar experiments performed in the Soviet Union (During a Nova or other PBS program). I remember these experiments pretty vividly-- how could anyone push such fraud?
I remember something more like a lab-like setting--- there was a single plant, or a handful of similar plants. A researcher would enter the room and hack up a single plant while other researchers measure
ObJoke (Score:5, Funny)
How does it smell?
Terrible!
Well, this plant can reallly smell!.. (Score:1)
That is how I interpreted the title.
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Smelling Plants (Score:4, Interesting)
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I walked by that greenhouse every day for 4 years to go to the engineering building, but never once stopped to smell the roses. But I drove 45 minutes to smell a flower that reminded me of dirty diapers and week-old roadkill.
I think that's pretty impressive for a plant... it didn't smell its way to survival, it stunk its way to worldwide growth and protection.
In Soviet Russia... (Score:1, Redundant)
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Attack of the Killer Plants? (Score:2, Interesting)
If the genetic engineering wizards could find out how to transplant this characteristic to, say, aquatic plants, perhaps they could modify them to attack the destructive zebra mussels [gma.org] that are such a major problem in the Great Lakes, or to control problem plants such as hydrilla verticillata [wapms.org].
It's an fun thought, even if I lack the background to evaluate its feasibility.
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when I first saw it (Score:5, Interesting)
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Here's a pic [flickr.com] and here it is flowering [flickr.com]
Good stuff.
FSM lives! (Score:5, Funny)
Already have it. (Score:2)
Asparagus is a plant.
Therefore plants smell!
Not really (Score:3, Insightful)
rubber (Score:1, Funny)
Maybe the dodder seedlings just needed a rubber before approaching the tomato plants?
Here's the NPR audio and pictures (Score:5, Informative)
Acacia (Score:3, Interesting)
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Ah, but here we have a plant that can not only sense the existence but also the direction of airborne chemicals. That makes a big difference.
And that surprises anyone? (Score:5, Interesting)
Even *single-cell* flagellates have what can be considered a rusimentary sense of smell, and the capability of changing their locomotion in order to lead them to food. That sort of ability is present all the way up through the multicellular ladder, and "smell" (or response to airborne chemical signals) have been well-known for quite some time in plants.
Frankly, I'm susprised that they didn't start out with an assumption that smell was involved.
steve
Is that surprising? (Score:5, Insightful)
in the air. The fact that some species of plant have evolved to
perform very specific kinds of chemical detection to ensure their
survival doesn't seem surprising to me. Plants grow towards the
light - why not towards other things that are essential for their
survival.
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With smell, on the other hand, you have to detect very minute gradients in a trace amount of chemical that's being dispersed in the air. When the front half of your plant is facing a tomato, it's really only seeing a tiny amount more tomato-smell than the back half due to the dispersion
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Basically, you need a threshold value and it needs to be stronger across
50% of your field of sensivity. If you grow 1cm per day, you grow in the
direction in which the signal is strongest for one day. The next, you grow
in the direction again. And again, again, again, etc, etc. It only takes
being approximately right every day, and since your prey is stationary,
you get to it eventually.
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Sample size? (Score:3, Interesting)
I can toss a coin 4 times, and let's say I get tails 3 times. Simultaneously, if I was tossing another coin nearby, and happen to get 3 tails out of 4 again on it too, can I conclude that the second coin supernaturally knew what the result on the other one was? BTW, the probability that the above happens is 1/16. Also, I can repeat this experiment many times to get this case.
Obviously, those researchers are smart enough. My question is: how can they write such a big article without mentioning about the sample size?
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Thats one complex plant.. (Score:1)
Now if only we can genetically modify them to attack other Dodder plants.
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Now if only we can genetically modify them to attack other Dodder plants.
In related news, the 2010 Darwin Awards have been announced. .
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Hmmm.... (Score:2)
Uhhh... (Score:1)
I kid, I kid...
Dodder (Score:2, Interesting)
obligatory monty python (Score:2)
-How does it smell?
Terrible!
Choice of quotes / author. (Score:5, Informative)
Here's the abstract:
Volatile Chemical Cues Guide Host Location and Host Selection by Parasitic Plants
Justin B. Runyon, Mark C. Mescher, Consuelo M. De Moraes*
The importance of plant volatiles in mediating interactions between plant species is much debated. Here, we demonstrate that the parasitic plant Cuscuta pentagona (dodder) uses volatile cues for host location. Cuscuta pentagona seedlings exhibit directed growth toward nearby tomato plants (Lycopersicon esculentum) and toward extracted tomato-plant volatiles presented in the absence of other cues. Impatiens (Impatiens wallerana) and wheat plants (Triticum aestivum) also elicit directed growth. Moreover, seedlings can distinguish tomato and wheat volatiles and preferentially grow toward the former. Several individual compounds from tomato and wheat elicit directed growth by C. pentagona, whereas one compound from wheat is repellent. These findings provide compelling evidence that volatiles mediate important ecological interactions among plant species.
And here's the actual paper for those with access to Science articles:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/313/5795/19
Reminds me of an old joke (Score:2, Funny)
Person 2: How does it smell?
Person 3: Fucking awful.
Yawn (Score:3, Insightful)
So, if there are unique chemicals that the prey species give off, there is no surprise the doddler can detect them and react to them. Cool that scientists did the study and found this example, though
Return of the killer tomatos ? (Score:2)
"It's" is a contraction of "it is" (Score:2)
There is no charge for this editing service.
My plants can smell? (Score:1)
Smelly socks anyone? (Score:1)
Argh grammar! (Score:2, Informative)
Ok flame-proof suit on, but "it's" is short for either "it is" or "it has". In this case the apostrophe isn't needed to denote ownership any more than you need an apostrophe in the words 'his' or 'hers'. More info at the Apostrophe Protection Society [fsnet.co.uk].
Artful Dodders (Score:3, Interesting)
The shocking revelation is that 7% of the dodders weren't fooled by the simulated tomato smell. Those dodders are seeing the fake tomato patches as a trick. Those are the dodders to watch.
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I thought this was fairly evident when..... (Score:1)
Even more interesting trivia... (Score:2)
about plants that smell [funtrivia.com]
re:FIRST (Score:1, Funny)
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I agree (Score:1, Insightful)
Is this really smelling? (Score:2)
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Re:Is this really smelling? (Score:4, Informative)
I don't have any studies, but I believe I've seen plants that shifted significantly after a change in the direction of the source of light (such as if you turn the plant 180 degrees after being in front of a window), a shift that occurred much too quickly to be explained away by the speed at which different sides of the plant grew.
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Osmotic pressure in the leaves/stalk.
aka "turgor changes" or "turgor movement"
I thought everyone knew that.
It's why droopy plants will 'perk up' when you water them
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