[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Gunman Ambushes Border Patrol Agents In Texas Amid Anti-ICE Rhetoric From Democrats

Texas Flood

Why America Built A Forest From Canada To Texas

Tucker Carlson Interviews President of Iran Mosoud Pezeshkian

PROOF Netanyahu Wants US To Fight His Wars

RAPID CRUSTAL MOVEMENT DETECTED- Are the Unusual Earthquakes TRIGGER for MORE (in Japan and Italy) ?

Google Bets Big On Nuclear Fusion

Iran sets a world record by deporting 300,000 illegal refugees in 14 days

Brazilian Women Soccer Players (in Bikinis) Incredible Skills

Watch: Mexico City Protest Against American Ex-Pat 'Invasion' Turns Viole

Kazakhstan Just BETRAYED Russia - Takes gunpowder out of Putin’s Hands

Why CNN & Fareed Zakaria are Wrong About Iran and Trump

Something Is Going Deeply WRONG In Russia

329 Rivers in China Exceed Flood Warnings, With 75,000 Dams in Critical Condition

Command Of Russian Army 'Undermined' After 16 Of Putin's Generals Killed At War, UK Says

Rickards: Superintelligence Will Never Arrive

Which Countries Invest In The US The Most?

The History of Barbecue

‘Pathetic’: Joe Biden tells another ‘tall tale’ during rare public appearance

Lawsuit Reveals CDC Has ZERO Evidence Proving Vaccines Don't Cause Autism

Trumps DOJ Reportedly Quietly Looking Into Criminal Charges Against Election Officials

Volcanic Risk and Phreatic (Groundwater) eruptions at Campi Flegrei in Italy

Russia Upgrades AGS-17 Automatic Grenade Launcher!

They told us the chickenpox vaccine was no big deal—just a routine jab to “protect” kids from a mild childhood illness

Pentagon creates new military border zone in Arizona

For over 200 years neurological damage from vaccines has been noted and documented

The killing of cardiologist in Gaza must be Indonesia's wake-up call

Marandi: Israel Prepares Proxies for Next War with Iran?

"Hitler Survived WW2 And I Brought Proof" Norman Ohler STUNS Joe Rogan

CIA Finally Admits a Pyschological Warfare Agent from the Agency “Came into Contact” with Lee Harvey Oswald before JFK’s Assassination


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: Why talking to plants may not make you such a Charlie after all ( scientists said they had found "a set of sound-responsive genes in plants")
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://news.scotsman.com/uk.cfm?id=1376042007
Published: Aug 30, 2007
Author: IAN JOHNSTON ENVIRONMENT CORRESPONDENT (
Post Date: 2007-08-30 11:49:32 by gengis gandhi
Keywords: None
Views: 140
Comments: 7

Why talking to plants may not make you such a Charlie after all IAN JOHNSTON ENVIRONMENT CORRESPONDENT (ijohnston@scotsman.com)

WHEN Prince Charles suggested plants responded to his words of endearment, it was dismissed by many as eccentric nonsense.

But now researchers in South Korea claim to have discovered evidence that the heir to the throne may have been right all along.

The scientists said they had found "a set of sound-responsive genes in plants" in what other experts said would be an astonishing finding.

Plants are known to respond to light, temperature, touch and vibration, and the South Korean team, led by Dr Mi-Jeong Jeong, decided to investigate whether they could also respond to sound in some way.

They played classical music, such as Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, Clair de Lune by Debussy and Winter from Vivaldi's Four Seasons, to a rice crop. The plants appeared unmoved.

However, when single notes were played, the scientists noticed an effect on two genes known to respond to light, New Scientist magazine reports today. These became more active when exposed to a high-pitched sound and less active when a low one was played.

"Although there are many reports about sound responsiveness at the physiological level, not many investigations have been performed regarding sound responsiveness at the gene level," the researchers wrote in the journal Molecular Breeding.

"As far as we know, this is the first report of characterisation of plant sound-responsive genes."

This might cast a different light on the comment by the Prince of Wales, who reportedly told a television interviewer in the mid-1980s: "I just come and talk to the plants, really. It's very important to talk. They respond, don't they?"

Dr Jeong's team plans to look into the matter further.

"Touch and sound stresses are basically very similar externally applied mechanical stresses. Although none of the known touch-inducible genes have been isolated by the methods we have performed, further investigation on how our sound- inducible genes will respond to other stresses such as touch and hormones will give an insight on the relationship between various mechanical responses," they said in the journal.

They believe the means by which the plants "hear" could be used to alter the expression of a range of genes if they were genetically modified, with potential benefits for agriculture. They could, for example, be "told" to come into flower with the playing a certain note.

Dr Philip Wigge, of the John Innes Centre, an internationally renowned plant science and microbiology research unit in Norwich, was sceptical but refused to dismiss the paper out of hand.

"I would be astonished if plants could tell the difference [between types of music]. But you never know," he said.

"This would be of large interest to the plant community in general if it were true, but

it's a very big claim."

Dr Wigge said vibration caused by sound waves might have something to do with the Korean team's results, but added the effect on the genes was so small it could also be "natural variation".

"We know plants are responsive to wind and sense touch and vibration, so that could be having an effect," he said.

Dr Wigge said people had looked "very hard" for decades for signs of something more to plants.

"There was a claim that plants were sensitive and they had feelings; plants had a mood and it depended on electrical currents," he said.

"All these studies, unfortunately, have never panned out." ROOTS OF PLANT EMOTION CLAIM

GUSTAV Fechner is credited with the idea that plants have feelings and emotions.

In the mid-19th century, the German professor said talking to plants and generally being nice to them would help them grow.

In 1900, Sir Jagdish Bose concluded plants had a nervous system and would go into spasm when given a shock. Playwright George Bernard Shaw, a vegetarian, is said to have been distressed by the "violent convulsions" of a cabbage as it boiled in Sir Jagdish's lab.

Others have tried to explain away some apparent effects of talking to plants by suggesting they benefited from an increase in from human breath.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.

#2. To: gengis gandhi (#0)

I talk to my six-foot tall pepper and eight-foot tall tomato plants...they are STILL blooming and producing. They like heavy metal, as well...

who knows what evil  posted on  2007-08-30   11:51:47 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 2.

#3. To: who knows what evil (#2)

As a senior in High School, my experiment was plants and rock music. That was totally dismissed as not credible. The girl who measured how much water is used by a drippy faucet won. I got "F". F for fuck 'em.

angle  posted on  2007-08-30 11:54:35 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: who knows what evil (#2)

another belief system bites the dust

gengis gandhi  posted on  2007-08-30 11:55:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 2.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]