Flexible control of movement in plants

被引:0
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作者
Silvia Guerra
Alessandro Peressotti
Francesca Peressotti
Maria Bulgheroni
Walter Baccinelli
Enrico D’Amico
Alejandra Gómez
Stefano Massaccesi
Francesco Ceccarini
Umberto Castiello
机构
[1] Dipartimento di Psicologia Generale,
[2] Università degli studi di Padova,undefined
[3] Dipartimento di Scienze Agroalimentari,undefined
[4] Ambientali e Animali,undefined
[5] Università degli studi di Udine,undefined
[6] Dipartimento di Psicologia dello Sviluppo e della Socializzazione,undefined
[7] Università degli studi di Padova,undefined
[8] Ab.Acus S.r.l,undefined
来源
Scientific Reports | / 9卷
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摘要
Although plants are essentially sessile in nature, these organisms are very much in tune with their environment and are capable of a variety of movements. This may come as a surprise to many non-botanists, but not to Charles Darwin, who reported that plants do produce movements. Following Darwin’s specific interest on climbing plants, this paper will focus on the attachment mechanisms by the tendrils. We draw attention to an unsolved problem in available literature: whether during the approach phase the tendrils of climbing plants consider the structure of the support they intend to grasp and plan the movement accordingly ahead of time. Here we report the first empirical evidence that this might be the case. The three-dimensional (3D) kinematic analysis of a climbing plant (Pisum sativum L.) demonstrates that the plant not only perceives the support, but it scales the kinematics of tendrils’ aperture according to its thickness. When the same support is represented in two-dimensions (2D), and thus unclimbable, there is no evidence for such scaling. In these circumstances the tendrils’ kinematics resemble those observed for the condition in which no support was offered. We discuss these data in light of the evidence suggesting that plants are equipped with sensory mechanisms able to provide the necessary information to plan and control a movement.
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