Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Science

Once Considered Outlandish, the Idea That Plants Help Their Relatives is Taking Root (sciencemag.org) 119

An anonymous reader shares a report: A Canadian biologist planted the seed of the idea more than a decade ago, but many plant biologists regarded it as heretical -- plants lack the nervous systems that enable animals to recognize kin, so how can they know their relatives? But with a series of recent findings, the notion that plants really do care for their most genetically close peers -- in a quiet, plant-y way -- is taking root. . Some species constrain how far their roots spread, others change how many flowers they produce, and a few tilt or shift their leaves to minimize shading of neighboring plants, favoring related individuals.

"We need to recognize that plants not only sense whether it's light or dark or if they've been touched, but also whom they are interacting with," says Susan Dudley, a plant evolutionary ecologist at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada, whose early plant kin recognition studies sparked the interest of many scientists. Beyond broadening views of plant behavior, the new work may have a practical side. In September 2018, a team in China reported that rice planted with kin grows better, a finding that suggested family ties can be exploited to improve crop yields. "It seems anytime anyone looks for it, they find a kin effect," says Andre Kessler, a chemical ecologist at Cornell University.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Once Considered Outlandish, the Idea That Plants Help Their Relatives is Taking Root

Comments Filter:
  • TED (Score:4, Informative)

    by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Friday January 04, 2019 @10:39AM (#57904462) Homepage

    I've heard something eerie similar on TED quite a lot time ago: Suzanne Simard: How trees talk to each other | TED Talk [ted.com], and Greg Gage: Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate | TED Talk [ted.com]. There are many other TED talks about the topic of plants' nervous system, intelligence and communication. This kinda invalidates the whole premise of vegetarianism but I don't want to argue about that now.

    • This kinda invalidates the whole premise of vegetarianism

      No it doesn't, as eating plant based food rarely means destroying/killing the plant. Or do you cut down an apple tree if you want to harvest the apples?

      • Re:TED (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Friday January 04, 2019 @10:46AM (#57904510) Homepage
        What about drinking milk? What about eating eggs which are basically seeds and nothing else? Both don't really kill anything. Meanwhile eating nuts is OK with vegans. Questions, questions, questions.
        • by epine ( 68316 )

          What about eating eggs which are basically seeds and nothing else?

          So regularly harvesting your testicles would be okay, so long as they grow back within a year or two, almost to their former size and glory?

        • You're mixing up vegans with vegetarians. And while eggs don't count as vegetarian food, I know plenty of vegetarians who are okay with the idea of eggs.
      • No it doesn't, as eating plant based food rarely means destroying/killing the plant. Or do you cut down an apple tree if you want to harvest the apples?

        Give me your arm, I want to eat it! You'll be fine, you have another one and people live perfectly well with one or zero arms. Don't be greedy.

        And I don't know about saying rarely. Harvesting an awful lot of veggies entails destruction of the whole plant. Perhaps we should be more concerned about treating plants more humanely and letting them roam instead of constraining them with fences and such.

      • No it doesn't, as eating plant based food rarely means destroying/killing the plant.

        A fruit is basically just a green or red/orange/yellow fetus that you can pluck and peel with a pairing knife.

        You think the plants don't care because they don't reflexively cover their nads whenever anyone shows up with a baseball and a baseball bat? That they exist in pure vegetative bliss, like a steer happily chewing his cud, wondering what all the fuss is about?

        You need to think a little bit harder about vegetative value

      • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

        Thats a fruit. Vegetables are the whole plant or a criticsl part that destroys the plant. Asparagus, broccoli, cauliflower, eggplant, potatoes, turnips, carrots, do I really need to keep going?

        Your usually eating the roots (potatoes, radishes, turnips, carrots,etc)
        Or your eating tge tops (letuces, broccoli, etc)
        Even legumes end up killing the whole plant to harvest.

        • Wait, what? Your point still sort of stands, however your examples are a tad askew...

          Eggplants are fruit. And neither harvesting them, nor beans ("legumes"), kills the host plant.
          Roots can also frequently be harvested without killing the whole organism. They can asexually sprout nodules, which in turn grow into edible produce (which is still considered part of the original organism).

    • And besides that Mr. tree 'wants' you to eat that apple and deposit the seeds somewhere else in your manure. I personally eat meat because in my view everything eats every other damned thing in this cruel old world. But I think vegans remain morally safe eating plants. Janes, an Indian sect, are known to wait under trees until fruit falls. You are welcome.
      • The more cruelly the animal is killed, the more acceptable it is to vegetarians.

        Most cruel -- animals killing and eating alive other animals

        Then, subsitence hunting by bushmen

        Then, western hunters

        Then, factory machine quick kills.

        You can quibble about the middle two's order, but not the ends.

      • Jains.

  • Would that leave scavenging are the only humane method for the acquisition of nutrients?
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      "Feed me, Seymour!"

    • What, and deprive the fungi/molds/etc from needed nutrients?!? You inhumane beast, you!
    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday January 04, 2019 @12:35PM (#57905150)
      carrot juice is murder! [youtube.com]

      Jokes aside nobody's suggestion plants are sentient, just that they seem to have behaviors that favor similar plants. That could just as easily be an evolved survival mechanism. Plants still don't have central nervous systems.

      Though I do think it would be cool in a sci-fi sort of way to evolve beyond the need for consuming living organisms. That said, we ain't there, and while I eat a mostly vegetarian diet it's for health reasons, not for the sake of animals. I've got a dog for Pete's sake, and I ain't feeding her carrots.
      • Worms have a distributed nervous system with no brain, and they react to their environment in a very similar way as creates that have a centralized system. So it might not present the dividing line that is generally presumed.

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      If you want to succumb to darwinism. Survival of the fittest. If you limit yourself to scavenging you’re going to be one of the weak, sickly creatures they get picked off by the faster predator. Plants kill other plants, and when they dont, They still feed on the dead remains of former plants. Ultimately your choice is to either perish or accept that you will always have to kill something in order to survive.

  • by Zorro ( 15797 )

    How and why do you think grasses evolved?

  • But we managed to get some magazine to publish it, and that’s all that matters.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Can recognize each other, why not vegetables? After all they are more intelligent.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Must be embarrassing to be outsmarted into the Trump presidency by a minority population of vegetable intelligence.

    • Can recognize each other, why not vegetables? After all they are more intelligent.

      Hmm, so maybe Trump voters actually are vegetables? Interesting theory. I saw we start eating them and find out.

  • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Friday January 04, 2019 @12:05PM (#57904968) Homepage

    ... that at the very least, many plants attack their foes. Many plants produce chemicals in their roots or leaf litter that hinder plant growth or seed germination but which they themselves are immune to. And when I say "long known", observations of such allelopathathic effects date back to at least Theophrastus in 300 BC, and most agricultural societies have long had rules about how "Plant A will grow well with B but poorly with C", which can generally be seen as allelopathy. In research, most cases of concern are where weeds produce chemicals that hinder commercial crops, but it also works the other way around - for example, rice (which they mention above) creates root exudates hinder the germination of competing seedlings.

    Of course, there are non-chemical ways (such as shade, root growth, etc) to hinder foes without hurting yourself or your brethren, but the chemical ways are usually the most striking, as their purposes are so unambiguous. While shade, root growth, etc can be natural consequences of your own development, you don't invest energy in producing secondary metabolites unless you want them to accomplish something with them.

  • Animal parks have long known that trees who get nibbled at by giraffes and other wild animals go hungry, because the trees alarm their relatives and all of them begin to send bitter poisons into their leaves, making them inedible. If they can't leave the park they die.

  • always remember:

    white men are the only beings capable of loving their children.
    white people are the only beings capable of loving their children.
    men are the only beings capable of loving their children.
    humans are the only beings capable of loving their children.
    no, wait, scratch that. only white arian humans.
    ok, it really needs to be all humans again.
    mammals are the only beings capable of loving their children (or feeling pain, for that matter).
    warm-blooded...
    vertebrates...
    animals...
    now plants.

    Are plants r

  • Imagine what all those cloned Cannabis plants are saying to each other? Probably something about where the hell are all the men?

  • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Friday January 04, 2019 @01:59PM (#57905598)

    If this research means that plants have a degree of sentience, will killing plants be seen as exploitive?

    There is commentary elsewhere in this thread that vegans could still eat fruit and nuts, because these are 'given' by plants as a reproductive attractant, not requiring death of the plant.

    However, I see a big BUT coming. The difference between vegans and vegetarians is that vegetarians eat products nonlethally derived from animals, such as honey and dairy. Vegans consider these products to be 'exploiting' animals, so they are off the plate. The most advanced and morally pure vegan logicians are going to argue, how is an apple different from the milk of a cow? Because Nature intends that apples be eaten by animals that will derive nutrition from the apple while spreading its seeds, humans would be depriving the apple tree's ally species of this natural nutrient. Furthermore, very few apples consumed by humans result in natural apple propagation.

    • As long as you poop outside in the dirt like Americans do in national parks, it's fine.

      But I think you'll find every vegan admits to being morally imperfect, and merely wishes to minimize the harm of their diet to the degree they personally find practical. Everyone has an ecological footprint, carbon emissions, steps on the occasional ant, etc. It's irrational to suggest that the impossibility of doing no harm means people can't make choices about which times of harm they personally feel like participating

    • As a vegan of almost 30yrs, I'd say this: even if plants were sentient (which is a pretty far stretch by all accounts), eating them directly is still much better than eating animals if this is your concern. If a typical stat is that it take 12lbs of grain to produce 1lb of meat, eating animals contributes to significantly more plants being 'murdered', so it's still better (causes less harm) to just eat plants.

      Further, the definition of veganism is explicitly states "animals", not 'sentient life', so even if

  • Most plants also (quite literally) feed the soil microbiome by producing sugars and other nutrients that bacteria and fungi absorb. The microorganisms return the favor by fixing nitrogen, for plants that don't do that themselves, as well as defending the roots from non-friendly microorganisms, and probably a whole host of other things that we don't even know about yet: perhaps even participating in the communication network that plants use to help identify clones vs. same-species neighbors vs. other plants

  • Come on, when we take care of our children, or a wasp stuns, but does not kell a caterpiller before laying its egg on it for its young to feast on, it is not done with the ability to recognize the genetically close relatives. Primates have been taking care of their babies long before we learnt to reason or to plan it.

    Whatever behavior, with forethought or not, with nervous system or not, with mobility and motor functions or not, that helped one set of alleles to survive better than others out competed the

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yet more proof that plants, are living, breathing, thinking, feeling creatures!

    And yet we devour billions of them every day. Worse yet, they are often still alive when they are eaten!

    Unconscionable!

    At least meat-eaters kill their food first.

    Stop the madness! Join PETP (pet-pee) today!

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

Working...