we are not alone

Can plants communicate between each one?

  • YES

    Votes: 14 77.8%
  • NO

    Votes: 4 22.2%

  • Total voters
    18
Hi! Well, i wonder what is your opinion about communication between MJ plants ?

could be possible they could transmit vibrations (magnetic waves or something like that) to the closest plants through gases released from leaves, for example?



thanks and sorry for my bad english :S trying learn more! :D
 

ZaraBeth420

Well-Known Member
Hi! Well, i wonder what is your opinion about communication between MJ plants ?

could be possible they could transmit vibrations (magnetic waves or something like that) to the closest plants through gases released from leaves, for example?


thanks and sorry for my bad english :S trying learn more! :D
No. They communicate via pollen only. And mine don't even communicate that way. :)
 

cindysid

Well-Known Member
I live in a tropical area and grow bouganvillea and other vines. I train many to tree form, but if they are anywhere near another taller plant they will send out shoots in their direction and they will soon be climbing into it I don't catch it and do a trim. I don't know if they communicate, but they definitely sense each other's presence.
 

420monster

Well-Known Member
I got chased by trees once on a lsd trip don't tell me they can't talk they plot they plot against all of us the one that fell in my back yard and broke my pool the branch that smashed my windshield evil evil bastards

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Rollitup mobile app
 
I got chased by trees once on a lsd trip don't tell me they can't talk they plot they plot against all of us the one that fell in my back yard and broke my pool the branch that smashed my windshield evil evil bastards

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Rollitup mobile app
jajaja im sure you had nice experience!



i think they can feel all around them, and im sure in the future we'll learn to hear them,maybe through special machines designed by scientists, who is know?? ^^ we'll have to wait....
 

2ANONYMOUS

Well-Known Member
You may not think of plants as particularly chatty or active organisms, but they’re not as passive as they might seem. Plants can’t run away, so they have to develop other strategies to stay alive, as James Cahill, an environmental plant ecologist at the University of Alberta, explains in “What Plants Talk About,” a documentary from the PBS show NATURE. They’ve evolved the use of chemicals to communicate with insects and each other in order to thrive. Here are five behaviors that show how active plants can be.

1. PLANTS CAN CALL FOR HELP
When you inhale the sweet smell of freshly mown grass or cut flowers, what you’re actually smelling is the plant’s distress call. “It’s the plant's way of crying out for help,” Cahill says. The scent attracts insects that will eat the pests currently munching on their plant-bodies. For instance, the wild tobacco plant can identify a hornworm caterpillar by its saliva. When attacked by this caterpillar, the tobacco plant emits a chemical signal that appeals to the insect’s enemies. Within hours, caterpillar predators like the big-eyed bug show up, ideally driving the pest away.

2. PLANTS CAN EAVESDROP
Plants can eavesdrop on the chemical signals of their brethren, and sometimes respond to another plant’s SOS cry by ramping up their own defenses proactively, knowing that a hungry insect is nearby. A 2013 review found 48 studies support the idea that plants increase their defenses after their neighbors are damaged. For instance, when wounded by a hornworm, sagebrush releases defensive proteins called trypsin proteinase inhibitors (TPIs), which prevent the insect from digesting protein and stunt its growth. When neighboring plants—even other species—are exposed to the chemical signals of damaged sagebrush, they begin readying their defenses. Wild tobacco, scientists found, begins prepping to make these TPIs when it senses a distress call from sagebrush, giving it a head start on defending itself if the caterpillar comes calling.

3. PLANTS CAN DEFEND THEIR TERRITORY
Plants compete with each other for sunlight, jostling for position among their neighbors. They also can push out competition in other ways. The invasive knapweed plant—native to Eastern Europe but wrecking havoc on U.S. grasslands—has roots that release certain chemicals to help the plant take in nutrients from the soil. Those same chemicals also kill off native grasses. Thus, the knapweed ends up taking over large territories and killing off its competitors, much like some animals do. Some plants, however, have formed a defense. Lupin roots secrete oxalic acid, which forms a protective barrier against the toxic chemicals given off by knapweed. Lupin can even protect other plants in its vicinity from falling prey to the invasive species.

4. PLANTS CAN RECOGNIZE THEIR SIBLINGS
Plants can sense when other plants are growing around them. This helps them compete for resources like sunlight, growing more if another plant is shading them, for instance. But like animals, they tend to recognize and support their kin. In an experiment with sea rocket, a plant that often grows close together with its siblings, plants that were grown in pots with relatives had more restrained root growth than plants grown with random strangers. The plants in the stranger condition grew more roots in order to better compete for food, whereas the sibling plants were more considerate of each other’s needs. Further experiments showed that sibling plants recognize each other via chemical signals.

5. PLANTS CAN COMMUNICATE WITH MAMMALS
Plants go out of their way to attract more than just insects. A carnivorous pitcher plant native to Borneohas evolved to hijack bat communication systems, turning the bats’ echolocation to its advantage. According to a new study in Current Biology, Nepenthes hemsleyanhas a concave structure that is specially suited to reflect bat echolocation, helping the bats find the plant. The bats roost in the pitcher plant, and provide important nutrients by way of the bat guano that gets distributed in the soil nearby.
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
Can plants communicate between each one?

This is growing 101

to believe not would make a very poor grower of you

to accept this fact, would make you at least tell the difference

between a thirsty plant and one with pythium

much reading ahead for this newbie?
 

whitebb2727

Well-Known Member
I got chased by trees once on a lsd trip don't tell me they can't talk they plot they plot against all of us the one that fell in my back yard and broke my pool the branch that smashed my windshield evil evil bastards

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Rollitup mobile app
Lmao!

Some friends and I were tripping balls one night and trying to make it home. I lived out in bfe. There were these trees on both sides of the road. The trees were laying down blocking the road. I would give the truck gas and move toward. The trees would stand up and lay back down as I passed. It was a long drive home.
 
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