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Science

Plants Can Hear Animals Using Their Flowers (theatlantic.com) 151

An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from a report via The Atlantic: The latest experiments in this niche but increasingly vocal field come from Lilach Hadany and Yossi Yovel at Tel Aviv University. In one set, they showed that some plants can hear the sounds of animal pollinators and react by rapidly sweetening their nectar. In a second set, they found that other plants make high-pitched noises that lie beyond the scope of human hearing but can nonetheless be detected some distance away. After the team released early copies of two papers describing their work, not yet published in a scientific journal, I ran them past several independent researchers. Some of these researchers have argued that plants are surprisingly communicative; others have doubted the idea. Their views on the new studies, however, didn't fall along obvious partisan lines. Almost unanimously, they loved the paper asserting that plants can hear and were skeptical about the one reporting that plants make noise. Those opposite responses to work done by the same team underscore how controversial this line of research still is, and how hard it is to study the sensory worlds of organisms that are so different from us.

First, two team members, Marine Veits and Itzhak Khait, checked whether beach evening primroses could hear. In both lab experiments and outdoor trials, they found that the plants would react to recordings of a bee's wingbeats by increasing the concentration of sugar in their nectar by about 20 percent. They did so in response only to the wingbeats and low frequency, pollinator-like sounds, not to those of higher pitch. And they reacted very quickly, sweetening their nectar in less than three minutes. That's probably fast enough to affect a visiting bee, but even if that insect flies away too quickly, the plant is ready to better entice the next visitor. After all, the presence of one pollinator almost always means that there are more around. But if plants can hear, what are their ears? The team's answer is surprising, yet tidy: It's the flowers themselves. They used lasers to show that the primrose's petals vibrate when hit by the sounds of a bee's wingbeats. If they covered the blooms with glass jars, those vibrations never happened, and the nectar never sweetened. The flower, then, could act like the fleshy folds of our outer ears, channeling sound further into the plant. (Where? No one knows yet!)

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Plants Can Hear Animals Using Their Flowers

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  • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Sunday January 13, 2019 @02:32PM (#57955318) Journal

    As I recall, Mythbusters did a test of the effect of sounds on plants. When their data surprisingly DID clearly show an effect, they reminded viewers that their experiment wasn't rigorously scientific, and the results could have been caused by some experimental error. It was pretty clear they were not expecting that result, and didn't quite believe it.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      As I recall, Mythbusters did a test of the effect of sounds on plants. When their data surprisingly DID clearly show an effect, they reminded viewers that their experiment wasn't rigorously scientific, and the results could have been caused by some experimental error. It was pretty clear they were not expecting that result, and didn't quite believe it.

      You have to remember that most science is not done by "Eureka!", but instead happens with "That's odd...".

      Thus an unexpected result could mean poor scientific

  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Sunday January 13, 2019 @02:46PM (#57955412)
    ... and yet they are unable to stop the brutal massacres that follow when those herbivores mutilate and maul them alive. Shame on you, Vegans!
    • by Ashtead ( 654610 )

      Actually, many plants have what is known as antiherbivoral compounds, bitter-tasting and even poisonous chemicals that are supposed to discourage animals from eating them.

    • I realize that this was supposed to be funny, but... people who eat meat are responsible for more plant-deaths than vegans (probably 2-3x as many, though that's just a guess) in addition to the animals.
      • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
        If carnivores would stop eating herbivores, the additional alive herbivores would procreate, and their increasing number would eat more plants. That effect is quite visible for example in European forests, where in absence of larger carnivores the herbivores are decimating some plants (like young trees) almost into extinction, would humans not substitute the role of the larger carnivores by hunting. Carnivores are the plants' best friends.
  • Looks like PITA will have to change their name from PETA to PETE. [People for the Ethical Treatment of Everything] And their first targets will have to be Farmers and VEGANS. Plants have feelings too.
    • Thus leading to achievement of their ultimate goal - getting rid of the human race. Only the human race consumes other living matter to survive, or something, so we have to go.

      • Thus leading to achievement of their ultimate goal - getting rid of the human race. Only the human race consumes other living matter to survive, or something, so we have to go.

        Worse than that since there are many things from the smallest microbes up to animals and even other plants consume living matter to survive that the plants ultimate goal is to wipe the earth clean of all "living' matter. Tossing out the baby with the bathwater as it may be, then at least when everything is gone there will be no more pain and suffering and the next round of what gets to inhabit this rock gets a fresh start.

  • Makes me think of the story 'The Sound Machine' [youtube.com] by Roald Dahl (part of the "Tales of the Unexpected" series in the UK) where a botanist invents a machine that lets him 'hear' plants.

    • by Ashtead ( 654610 )

      Yes, unfortunately too much of a mad scientist with some seriously deficient marketing skills -- but there wouldn't have been the suspense and story otherwise.

      It does make me wonder, what can be seen using a wide-band ultrasound microphone and a spectrum analyzer.

    • Nuts, you beat me to it! I'll just add some another link to places the numerous places the story has appeared: https://www.roalddahlfans.com/... [roalddahlfans.com]. There seem to be excerpts of the story in various places, but I believe this is the complete written version: http://fliphtml5.com/ppjz/hbbt... [fliphtml5.com], in case anyone would prefer to read instead of listen.

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Sunday January 13, 2019 @02:56PM (#57955454)

    They have evolved chemical reactions that are linked to vibrations of a certain pattern but they aren't hearing. The difference is that hearing implies cognition which plants lack.

    This may seem pendant but it's like saying your stairs feel you walking up them because they squeak when you step on them.

    • Yeah, this interpretation reminds me of some mumbo jumbo “science” way back in the late 60s or early 70s. Some “researcher” reported that plants knew fear. The scientist put two plants in a room and had a person walk in and destroy one of the plants. Then they monitored the other plant somehow and, whenever the “murderer” would walk in the room, the plant’s stress level would go up.

      My flower-child teacher, who reported this to us kids, thought this was very deep. I

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        On the other hand it's not "impossible". Some trees communicate when a leaf eating 'monster' (giraffe) is nearby and excrete foul or even poisonous (to the giraffe) taste into their leaves. It's not impossible for something to have a 'memory' of sorts, even our computers have inputs, processing, memory, outputs, but that doesn't make it sentient, it's just been 'programmed' (by evolutionary pressures) to behave a certain way.

        • Except what you are describing would happen whenever any giraffe is nearby. The story concocted back then would mean that the plants would only act that way when one particular individual giraffe approached the plants - one that had previously decimated a tree - while nothing would happen if any other giraffe approached.

          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            You're assuming the memory is long-term. If it is short-term, it could be that the plant, when actively dying, secreted something that stuck to the "murderer", and that the other plants could detect that scent whenever the person walked in.

      • You misunderstood the details, but that is solid, well-established research.

        When you cut on one plant, it communicates with other plants through its roots, and other plants increase production of poisons intended to reduce browsing.

        You morons are so busy hating on hippies, you can't even science anymore.

    • by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Sunday January 13, 2019 @03:22PM (#57955552)

      Hearing certainly doesn't imply cognition to me. Hearing was around long before anything like a cerebrum existed, and most life reacts via stimulus/response, and always has. You hear a loud sharp noise, you don't think "hey, maybe I should twitch" - the twitch happens long before you consciously perceive it.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        This is true. It has also been demonstrated that some plants seem to be able to count stimuli. There is a TED talk showing plants only reacting after being stimulated multiple times, meaning their nervous system appears to be able to count in a basic way.

        So to assume plants have no cognative ability may be inaccurate.

        • "Counting" brings in excess implications, though. They can keep track of a state variable, and react at certain thresholds, for sure. But it is unlikely they're actually quantizing the value into countable units; even if sometimes it seems that way because the inputs are quantized.

          Also, does keeping track of a state variable, and reacting at a threshold, count as cognition? Maybe the implication is that less things require cognition than we assumed. This idea is often resisted because people it hurts people

      • Exactly! The naysayers make so many assumptions, when they hear about any sort of research they think it is impwaaaaahsible because it would violate their assumptions. They don't even stop to consider; maybe the implication is that the assumptions are unfounded?

        They think you need a brain to understand when your body is threatened, or to seek out food, or whatever. They should pay some attention to the fucking worms on the sidewalk; they don't even have a brain, only a spinal cord, and yet they respond to t

        • No one currently grasps the extent to which stimulus response guides even human being's actions and where reflexes leave off and active conscious thought begin. It's not like a bacteria requires self-awareness to actively respond to environmental stimuli, and its my opinion that the difference between them and us is mostly a matter of degree - many orders of magnitude.

          Not to give credence to Stephen Wolfram and his raging egomania, but it is well-known that complex behavior can evolve

      • by noodler ( 724788 )

        "Hearing certainly doesn't imply cognition to me. "
        Well, it does to me. Hearing is first and foremost a SENSATION.
        A sensation generated by a clump of neurons.
        These plants react to sound, but it's not hearing. There is no brain to produce a sensation.

        We should invent a new word for this because the mechanism for how the information from the air pressure is processed by these organism is just completely different from how animals do it.

        I mean, you wouldn't say that plants are able to walk because they manage

    • Isn't thinking for humans also the result of "evolved chemical reactions"?

    • I came here to say just this. When you overstate something in these kinds of terms - the word hear has a very specific meaning not applicable in this case - you immediately lose credibility to those of us that are scientifically minded. Like the guy who builds those wind sculpture things that move under wind power, and talks about them as living creatures with nerves and muscles and such. Loose analogy is not a good form of scientific description to talk about something you've observed.

      We already know that

    • They have evolved chemical reactions that are linked to vibrations of a certain pattern but they aren't hearing. The difference is that hearing implies cognition which plants lack.

      If correct then it's a response in response to a sound based stimulus. That's pretty much like hearing. Why does it have to imply cognition?

      This may seem pendant but it's like saying your stairs feel you walking up them because they squeak when you step on them.

      That's not a stimulus.

      • by noodler ( 724788 )

        "Why does it have to imply cognition?"

        Because that is how it's defined.
        The mechanism by which sound is processed is just completely different.
        Hearing is a distinctly neural activity.

        But, you know, people are prone to anthropomorphize things that look similar to them.

    • You can also say only chemical reactions happen in our brain when we think so we're really not thinking but our brains are chemical-reacting. A word means something if it is useful. If saying plants "hearing" is useful -- if it is -- why not say it.

      That said, we don't understand what life is, not even plant life, so some may well find it useful with respect to this matter to go with the Sufi mystic's saying, "God sleeps in the rock, dreams in the plant, stirs in the animal, and awakens in man."

    • by digibud ( 656277 )
      You posted my thoughts fairly well other than saying "pendant". Hearing doesn't -necessarily- imply cognition. Some lower classes of animals may have organs with neuronal structures that communicate with vibration sensors to provide feedback that the animal reacts to and I'd probably include that as hearing. But however you define human like hearing, plants don't do it. They react to light. To temperature. To soil types and without any amazement, they react to a vibration pattern that is followed by pollina
  • Their views on the new studies, however, didn't fall along obvious partisan lines.

    How on Earth can this have a partisan divide?

    I don't even know my member of parliament's stand on the issue.

    • Congratulations! You have an opportunity right now, today, due to this mistake that you made, to learn that words can, and usually do, have more than one meaning!

      Please scroll down to the 2nd definition of partisan. And if you're really up for some shockers, try to get all the way to the end of the definitions. Wow, look at all those different uses for a single word! Holy smokes!

      • by Livius ( 318358 )

        I gave you the benefit of the doubt and looked it up, and "obvious partisan lines" is still ludicrous.

  • Nothing new here except they're calling it "hearing" because people can hear a bee's wings beating. Another case of anthropomorphism click bait.

  • Did they make noise or didnâ(TM)t they? Itâ(TM)s not like we donâ(TM)t have the ability to reliably detect sound.

    As for hearing, of course the petals vibrate. The question is whether the vibrations have any effect. I canâ(TM)t imagine how temporal correlation between sonic emissions and chemial changes couldnâ(TM)t be found conclusively if the phenomenon exists.

  • what will they eat now, that plants can communicate, listen and react... and they might not be cool with harvest
    • Fruit. Pods. As long as you plant the seed contained within. Not all plant matter that is consumed is detrimental to the plant. (now let me get back to my bacon...)
  • How does this research impact marijuana growth?

  • It seems to me this implies some sort of nervous system and a primitive brain to process the information. Really?

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