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Plants May be Able to 'Hear' Others
THEY can "smell" chemicals and respond to light, but
can plants hear sounds? It seems chilli seeds can sense neighbouring
plants even if those neighbours are sealed in a box, suggesting plants
have a hitherto-unrecognised sense.
Plants are known to have many of the
senses we do: they can sense changes in light level, "smell" chemicals
in the air and "taste" them in the soil (New Scientist, 26 September 1998, p 24). They even have a sense of touch that detects buffeting from strong winds.
The most controversial claim is that plants can hear, an idea that dates back to the 19th century. Since then a few studies have suggested that plants respond to sound, prompting somewhat spurious suggestions that talking to plants can help them grow.
A team led by Monica Gagliano at the University of Western Australia in Crawley placed the seeds of chilli peppers (Capsicum annuum) into eight Petri dishes arranged in a circle around a potted sweet fennel plant (Foeniculum vulgare).
Sweet fennel releases chemicals into
the air and soil that slow other plants' growth. In some set-ups the
fennel was enclosed in a box, blocking its chemicals from reaching the
seeds. Other experiments had the box, but no fennel plant inside. In
each case, the entire set-up was sealed in a soundproof box to prevent
outside signals from interfering.
As expected, chilli seeds exposed to
the fennel germinated more slowly than when there was no fennel. The
surprise came when the fennel was present but sealed away: those seeds
sprouted fastest of all.
Gagliano repeated the experiment with
2400 chilli seeds in 15 boxes and consistently got the same result,
suggesting the seeds were responding to a signal of some sort (PLoS One, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0037382).
She believes this signal makes the chilli seeds anticipate the arrival
of chemicals that slow their growth. In preparation, they undergo a
growth spurt. The box surrounding the fennel would have blocked chemical
signals, and Gagliano suggests sound may be involved.
In a separate experiment, chilli seeds
growing next to a sealed-off chilli plant also consistently grew
differently to seeds growing on their own, suggesting some form of
signalling between the two.
Though the research is at an early stage, the results are worth pursuing, says Richard Karban
of the University of California-Davis. They do suggest that plants have
an as-yet-unidentified means of communication, he says, though it is
not clear what that might be.
The key question is whether the boxes around the fennel plants really block all known signals, says Susan Dudley
of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. She concedes that
plants make faint noises when water columns in their stems are
disrupted, and that hearing functions in much the same way as the sense
of touch - which plants have - but wants to see the results replicated
before she is convinced that plants can hear. The study, she says, comes
as a challenge to botanists to either refute or confirm.
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