Iran Daily

Plants can secretly send undergroun­d electrical signals

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A new study offers a better understand­ing of the hidden network of undergroun­d electrical signals being transmitte­d from plant to plant — a network that has previously been shown to use the Mycorrhiza­l fungi in soil as a sort of electrical circuit.

Through a combinatio­n of physical experiment­s and mathematic­al models based on differenti­al equations, researcher­s explored how this electrical signaling works, though it’s not clear yet exactly what messages plants might want to transmit to each other, scienceale­rt.com reported.

The work builds on previous experiment­s by the same team looking at how this subterrane­an messaging service functions, using electrical stimulatio­n as a way of testing how signals are carried even when plants aren’t in the same soil.

“We can use the math model for simulating the studied processes on a computer instead of running expensive and lengthy experiment­s,” said electrical engineer Yuri Shtessel from the University of Alabama in Huntsville.

Together with biochemist Alexander Volkov from Oakwood University, Shtessel tested communicat­ions between different types of plants in separate pots, both with and without an air gap.

Without an electrical conductor connecting them, the connection was broken. With a silver wire in place, the network was back up and running, which suggests any sort of electrical conductor can be utilized for these plant-toplant chats.

What’s more, the message networks seemed to stay in place and to take a similar form across different types of plant — Aloe vera and cabbage plants were used in the new research, while previous experiment­s looked at the same kind of signaling between tomato plants. The models suggest different types of plant may be able to communicat­e in the same way. “I think that it is definitely possible that signals can propagate through the root network and spread in the common ground or soil from a tomato plant to, let’s say, an oak,” said Shtessel.

“The soil plays the role of a conductor.”

While this newest study doesn’t reach any firm conclusion­s about what’s being said between plants, or how much of the communicat­ion is intentiona­l or not, it does show the potential for messages to be sent about threats to plants, their growth, or plant movement.

It also shows that the Mycorrhiza­l networks in the soil previously identified in other studies aren’t necessaril­y required for a plant-wide web of communicat­ion to be establishe­d — all of which poses some interestin­g questions for future study.

Add this to the list of interestin­g discoverie­s about plants — from how they respond to touch to how we might eventually be able to communicat­e with them — and the study throws up all sorts of interestin­g avenues for future research.

“No study of the cognitive processing of the electric signals passed and received by the plants was accomplish­ed,” said Shtessel.

“Another issue is to study the plants’ communicat­ions via electric waves through the air. This is a different story that has not been deeply studied yet.”

The research has been published in the journal Communicat­ive & Integrativ­e Biology.

 ??  ?? SARAYUT THANEERAT/GETTY IMAGES
SARAYUT THANEERAT/GETTY IMAGES

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