Dispersing seeds is a challenge when you’re stuck in one spot, but plants have evolved all sorts of mechanisms for it. Some rely on animals to carry their offspring away, others create their own vortex rings. The hairyflower wild petunia turns its fruit into a catapult. As the fruit dries out, layers inside it shrink, building up strain that bends the fruit outward. Once a raindrop strikes it, the pod bursts open, flinging out around twenty tiny, spinning, disk-shaped seeds. That spin is important for flight. The best-launched seeds may spin as quickly as 1600 times in a second, which helps stabilize them in a vertical orientation that minimizes their frontal area and reduces their drag. Researchers found that these vertically spinning seeds have almost half the drag force of a spherical seed of equal volume and density. That means the hairyflower wild petunia is able to spread its seeds much further without a larger investment in seed growth. (Image and research credit: E. Cooper et al., source; via NYTimes; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)
Tag: plants

Self-Digging Seeds
Some plants in the Pelargonium family produce seeds with long helical tails. These appendages, formally known as awns, are humidity-sensitive. On humid nights or after rainfall, the awn begins to straighten. With its end anchored on the ground, this unfurling spins the seed and helps it burrow into the soil. A study looking at the physics of this system found that rotating reduces the drag a burrowing seed experiences in a granular material. Normally much of the force that opposes motion into a granular material is the result of intergranular contacts creating what are known as force chains. (Many science museums have great displays that visualize force chains.) The rotating seed drags grains near its surface along with it, helping to break up the force chains and reduce resistance. (Image and research credit: W. Jung et al., source)

Drawing Up Dew
Desert plants have evolved to efficiently collect and capture whatever water they can. Each leaf of the moss Syntrichia caninervis ends in a hairlike fiber called an awn (seen in white in the top image). Tiny as they are, awns are vital to the moss’s water collection, correlating to more than 20% of their dew collection. Extremely tiny grooves on the surface of the awn provide nucleation sites where dew condensed from fog collects. Once a droplet forms on the awn, it grows larger as more fog condenses (middle image). When the droplet grows large enough, the conical shape of the awn will cause surface tension to draw the droplets along the awn and toward the leaf (bottom image).
(Credits: Syntrichia caninervis moss image – M. Lüth; videos and research – Z. Pan et al., Supplementary Videos 3 and 4; h/t to T. Truscott)

How Plants Move

Though most plants don’t move at speeds that we humans notice, many plants are remarkably active, as seen in the timelapse animations above. Much of this motion is driven by water flow inside the plant. The two plants above are phototropic–they move in response to light. The motion is actuated via a specialized motor cell called the pulvinus, which is located at the base of the leaf where it meets the stem. Unlike animal cells, plant cells have stiff outer walls that allow them to maintain an internal pressure–or turgor pressure–that differs from the outside environment. In fact, it’s not unusual for a plant’s cell to hold a pressure equivalent to 5 atmospheres! The plant manipulates this turgor pressure by controlling the transport of ions across cell membranes. Pump more ions into a cell, and osmosis will cause water to flow into the area of high solute (ion) concentration. This causes the cell to swell and raises the turgor pressure, resulting in the plant’s leaf moving. (Image credit: L. Miller and A. Hoover, source; additional research credit: J. Dumais and Y. Forterre)

Spore-Spreading via Vortex
As it turns out, animals aren’t the only ones to have figured out the usefulness of vortex rings. A team of physicists and biologists have captured peat moss using vortex rings to project their spores to a height where the wind will catch and carry them further afield. #







