Posted on 01/07/2020 12:08:38 PM PST by Red Badger
Some plants emit a high frequency distress sound when they are placed under environmental stress, a team of researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel has found.
The team, led by Itzhak Khait, examined the sounds emitted by tomato and tobacco plants when stressed by insufficient water or when their stems are cut. Microphones recorded ultrasonic sounds between 20 and 100 kilohertz emitted by the plants in both cases, the study found.
The sounds emitted by the stressed plants are at frequencies unable to be heard by humans, however the team of scientists believes some organisms can hear the sounds from up to several meters away.
A tomato plant emitted 25 ultrasonic distress sounds in the space of an hour when its stem was cut, according to the study. In contrast, tobacco plants emitted 15 distress sounds when their stems were cut.
When deprived of water, the tomato plants sent out 35 ultrasonic sounds in the course of an hour, while 11 were emitted by the tobacco plants. The team observed that the sounds released when the plants were deprived of water were louder compared to the ones when having their stems cut.
In comparison, plants not placed under any environmental stress emitted less than one distress sound per hour.
The authors noted that other plants and animalsand humans with the correct toolscould hear and listen to the plants silent screams. A moth, for example, may choose to lay its eggs elsewhere if it is able to detect that a plant is water-stressed, according to the study, which has not yet been published in a journal.
In other cases, plants could react accordingly to others which lack water, the authors suggest.
These findings can alter the way we think about the plant kingdom, which has been considered to be almost silent until now, the researchers write in their study.
The Tel Aviv University team then took the data and used it to train a machine-learning model to predict the possible frequencies plants could emit while undergoing different forms of environmental stress, such as during intense rain or wind.
The team also believes other plants may release distress sounds when placed under stress.
More investigation on plant bioacoustics in general and on sound emission in plants in particular may open new avenues for understanding plants and their interactions with the environment, and it may also have a significant impact on agriculture, the authors suggested.
The notion that sounds that drought-stressed plants make could be used in precision agriculture seems feasible if it is not too costly to set up the recording in a field situation, Anne Visscher, a fellow in the Department of Comparative Plant and Fungal Biology at the Royal Botanic Gardens in the UK told New Scientist.
Good one
I highly recommend to the authors a simple experiment:
1. Set up your ultrasound detection system in the usual way.
2. Take the audio output of that system and down-convert it to frequencies in the normal human hearing range.
3. Make a YouTube video of this and then call me back.
Sadist!...................
I would put the experiment inside an EMI/RFI chamber so that no outside interference could be detected................
LMAO.
Not screaming but changes to the electrical makeup of the surface of the plant.
One of the shrimp was heard to say that the water seemed a little warm even for them. /s
Awesome! Thanks for sharing. I remember those ads in magazines many decades ago.
No doubt.
Looks like vegans have a choice to make. Starve to death or, um. OK, starve to death
Veganism is so stupid.
The human body NEEDS proteins and fats, and not just from plants.
Many vegans have killed their own children by forcing them to be vegan at infancy...............
“I didn’t need a study to know about this. Every time I cut down a multiflora rose, another multiflora branch grabs and stabs me. EVERY time. Same with burdock. Cut one and another grabs ahold.”
My grandfather planted that scourge all over our farm property at the advice of the DNR. His later opinion of what they could do with it is unprintable. Crossbow herbicide works wonders on it, sumac, and poison ivy. No harm to grass.
Thread winner!
Acid will make you hear that (or so I’ve been told).
Take that, you plant eaters!
You reminded me of recordings of deer mice, made by a scientist studying the use of ultrasound by animals. The mice ‘sing’ above the range where humans can hear (though some people have claimed to hear them, including the naturalist and writer Sally Carrighar) and the recordings have to be slowed-down for the human ear to perceive the sounds:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzAn8fyQ418
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-mystery-of-the-singing-mice-1566363/#ixzz1Kjr6I4OY
So when a Vegan pulls a plant out of the ground will he/she hear the plants pitiful last cry?
Will the said Vegan have an emotional meltdown knowing that they caused a plant “pain?”
“Plants Emit Ultrasonic Screams When Stressed: Study”
hmmm. might explain why i can’t stand Brussels sprouts ...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.