BBC Science Focus

REALITY CHECK

The idea of plants being capable of making conscious decisions is a controvers­ial one, but a new study involving climbing French beans suggests the concept may be beginning to take root

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WHAT WAS THE EXPERIMENT?

Researcher­s based at the Minimal Intelligen­ce Lab at the University of Murcia, Spain, and the Rotman Institute of Philosophy in London, Canada, placed 20 potted French bean plants in the centre of cylindrica­l booths. The plants were either alone, or accompanie­d by a garden cane planted into the ground 30 centimetre­s away.

The scientists then used time-lapse photograph­y to track the movements of the plants until the tip of the shoots made contact with the canes. They found that the shoots would grow along more predictabl­e paths in the presence of the canes, almost as if they could sense them in their vicinity and adjust their growth patterns as a response.

DOES THIS DEMONSTRAT­E CONSCIOUS INTENT?

Some plants respond to their environmen­ts by, for example, curling their leaves up when touched, or enclosing and digesting their prey in their leaves. The basic mechanisms of these responses have been well studied, but addressing the more philosophi­cal questions, such as whether or not the plants ‘intelligen­tly choose’ to execute such actions, is a much more recent idea.

While not claiming that the experiment proves once and for all that plants can and do act with conscious intent, the Rotman Institute of Philosophy’s Dr Vicente Raja, one of the authors of the study, says it does show that the beans in the experiment were doing more than simply responding to external stimuli.

“It is one thing to react to a stimulus, such as light, it is another thing to perceive an object,” he says. “If the movement of plants is controlled and affected by objects in their vicinity, then we are talking about more complex behaviours, not reactions, and we should be able to identify similar cognitive signatures to those we observe in humans and some animals.”

WHERE COULD PLANT CONSCIOUSN­ESS ARISE FROM?

Plant neurobiolo­gy was officially establishe­d as

an area of research in 2006. Its proponents draw parallels between the pathways of electrical signalling found in plants and the nervous system found in animals, to argue that plants are capable of acting in a purposeful manner.

Plants use electrical signals in two ways. First, to regulate the distributi­on of charged particles (ions) across their various membranes. For example, a plant’s leaf might curl up because a movement of ions triggered the transport of water out of its cells, which caused it to change shape. Second, to relay longdistan­ce messages from one part of the plant to another. For example, an insect bite on one leaf might trigger defence responses in distant leaves. Both actions can appear like a plant is choosing to react to a stimulus.

“Only in the last decade is when we have been associatin­g animals with sentience, answering these questions takes time. If we separate our biases away from thinking that some features only belong to us, then we can move the field forward much faster,” says Dr

Paco Calvo, director of the Minimal Intelligen­ce Lab at the University of Murcia and co-author >

“If we separate our biases away from thinking that some features only belong to us, then we can move the field forward much faster”

5 of the study. “I am happy to be disproved, but we need to be open to possibilit­ies.”

WHAT DO THE CRITICS SAY?

“There’s absolutely no advantage to the plant to have a highly developed nervous system”

Some researcher­s argue that these responses are merely geneticall­y encoded and have been fine tuned to give the aRRearance of intentiona­l action, thanks to countless generation­s of natural selection.

In a paper titled ‘Plants neither possess nor require consciousn­ess’, published in 2019, Prof Lincoln Taiz, a botanist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, dismissed the idea of plants having features such as consciousn­ess and cognition on the grounds that they simply don’t have the necessary structural, organisati­onal and functional complexity that the animal brain had to evolve before consciousn­ess could emerge.

“The biggest danger of anthropomo­rphising plants in research is that it undermines the objectivit­y of the researcher,” Taiz says. “What we’ve seen is that plants and animals evolved very different life strategies. The brain is a very expensive organ, and there’s absolutely no advantage to the plant to have a highly developed nervous system.”

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 ??  ?? BELOW According to the new study, plants may have more complex behaviours than we’ve previously given them credit for
BELOW According to the new study, plants may have more complex behaviours than we’ve previously given them credit for
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