Scientists debate plant intelligence
By Gary Raham
Nature Writer and Illustrator
Back to Gardening Articles List
Some day just watering and fertilizing a garden may not be enough. The
successful gardener might have to become a kind of horticultural trainer,
utilizing knowledge about plant behavior to keep all the flowers and veggies
happy and healthy.
Plants behave? Yes, though not quite with the speed or panache of animals.
Plants may look like green sticks-in-the-mud, but they do move in response
to light and gravity, send chemical messages to each other and, some researchers
contend, demonstrate a kind of swarm intelligence.
Biologists have described swarm intelligence in creatures like bees and
ants. Basically, good decisions can arise through social consensus without
any individual ant or bee knowing exactly what's going on not terribly
unlike some political rallies or homeowners' associations.
Bees, for example, select new hives using this technique. Thousands of
honeybees will take off with a new queen and temporarily cluster at some
spot while experienced foragers set off as scouts, looking for a suitable
den. When scouts find something promising, they return to the group and
perform a figure-8 dance.
The speed of the dance indicates enthusiasm for the site, the number of
"waggles" in the middle of the performance shows distance, and the angle
of the dance relative to vertical shows which direction to fly.
The speedier dancers enlist more scouts to verify the find. Half a dozen
or more groups may be sending out scout patrols at first, but the bees
tend to collect around scouts who perform the most frenetically. Less excited
scouts eventually give in. (This differs from some human meetings where
no one is willing to concede.) When everyone's dancing the same jig, the
swarm moves to its new home which is almost always the best choice.
A German researcher, Frantisek Baluska, and colleagues believe that plant
roots may act with a similar group consensus. In a paper published in the
December 2010 issue of Trends in Ecology and Evolution, they describe work
done with winter rye. One rye plant possessed 13,815,672 roots plenty
for a healthy quorum.
Baluska wrote, "Growing root apices show complex behavior based on 'intelligent'
decisions about their growth directions. Moreover, growing roots show coordinated
group behavior that allows them to exploit the soil resources optimally."
Baluska outlines three possible mechanisms for this plant behavior: some
kind of neural-like network within plant tissues, secreted or evaporated
chemicals, or electrical fields generated within the roots. The group has
leaned toward the concept of nerve-like electrical impulses because of
the speed of root responses, but this has generated criticism from other
scientists.
Whatever the mechanism, Baluska claims that each root tip acquires information
at least partly independently that is then processed along with information
from other roots to affect where and how the roots grow. This qualifies
as a kind of swarm intelligence, in his view. Plants can thus exploit nutrient
bonanzas they encounter in the soil.
Susan Milius in a Science News article wrote, "In earlier experiments dividing
a plant's roots between two pots, the segment in a private pot still shows
a response if its counterparts in another container meet some nutrient-sucking
intruder."
In another article in the June 20, 2009, issue of Science News, Milius
mentions that the debate over plant intelligence ranges from effusive to
abusive.
Anthony Trewavas of the University of Edinburgh freely uses the phrase
"plant intelligence" as a way to describe plants' abilities to solve the
problems of their existence.
On the other side, David Robinson of the University of Heidelberg in Germany
said, "I see no reason why one can't simply talk about signal transduction
in plants." He challenges plant neurobiologists to train plants to do something
like bend toward a yellow light or avoid a blue one.
"My guess is that neither experiment would work," he said. He described
plant neurobiology as "absolute rubbish, rubbish!"
All the lively discussion is good for plant science and is an integral
part of the scientific process in general. Science progresses through experimentation
and repeated verification, followed by eventual acceptance or denial of
the original hypothesis.
Plants do some amazing things for creatures rooted to one spot, and someday
plant scientists may swarm to a consensus as to how the deeds are done
|