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सुनें/Video/SciShow/Plants Have Proprioception and That’s Weird

Plants Have Proprioception and That’s Weird

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0:00Plants need light to grow.
0:02But when a seed is first planted,  it’s underground in total darkness.
0:05Under those circumstances, you or I  would not find our way to the light.
0:11So how do seeds do it?
0:13As it turns out, they have some unexpected ways
0:16of navigating the world and literally growing up.
0:19Here’s how they perform that amazing feat.
0:24[♪INTRO]
0:26Imagine you’re a seed, and you just germinated.
0:28Congratulations! Have a cookie!
0:30The first thing you need to know is
0:32which way is up and which way is down.
0:34Typically light – which you  desperately need to photosynthesize
0:37and start making your own food  – will be up, where the sun is.
0:39And water and nutrients will be down in the earth.
0:42That’s where you generally  want your roots to grow.
0:44So you need to orient yourself. But you’re a seed.
0:47You have no brain, no mammalian nervous system,
0:50nothing that looks like eyes or anything that
0:53I would use to figure out this puzzle.
0:55But you can detect the  gravitational force of the planet!
0:59I know, it sounds bizarre. But  here’s how we know it’s true.
1:03In 1806, a British botanist sprouted seeds –
1:08this is a crazy idea – on a  disk rotating in the dark.
1:12And because it was dark the plants  were not moving toward the light.
1:16Instead, the centrifugal force  generated from spinning made roots grow
1:21away from the center of the disk,  and shoots grow toward the center.
1:25This is a cool experiment. I love it!
1:28It demonstrates that plants  can sense the pull of gravity.
1:31But we need to dig deeper to  understand how they sense gravity.
1:34We need to dig deeper.
1:36It turns out that plants use sensory cells
1:38called statocytes in the shoots and roots.
1:40See, And statocytes are chock-full of statoliths,
1:44which work kind of like snow in a snow globe.
1:47They settle on one side of  a cell, thanks to gravity.
1:50The seedling senses where  its statoliths accumulate
1:54and that’s what tells it where gravity is pushing.
1:56But turns out statoliths aren’t the only things
1:59accumulating on one side  of a young plant’s tissue.
2:02A growth hormone called auxin also concentrates
2:04on one side or another of the growing bits,
2:08spurred on by what’s going on in the statocytes.
2:10And that’s what helps roots grow downwards
2:13toward gravity and shoots push up against it.
2:16The concentration of auxin can make one of the
2:19seedling’s sides grow more than the other,
2:21bending a root or shoot in the right direction,
2:24like a paper fan opening up.
2:26Really good work for a thing that  has no mammalian nervous system!
2:31Just...
2:32Impressive plants.
2:33So the first force that tells a  seedling where to grow is gravity.
2:37But gravity isn’t the only force acting on it.
2:40Mathematical models – and yes,  there are people who do plant math –
2:44suggest that if seedlings only used  statocytes to direct their growth,
2:48they would overshoot the  perfect upward orientation
2:51and need to rebound to correct their angle.
2:54And the thing that helps them wiggle their
2:56way to a straight stem is self knowledge.
2:59You may have heard of a human  sense called proprioception
3:02that helps people know where  their bodies exist in space.
3:06It’s what helps people touch  their nose with their finger
3:09when their eyes are closed, or balance on a bike.
3:11Plants have proprioception too.
3:13And this means they can auto-correct  if they get bent out of shape. . .
3:17Say, if they have too much auxin on one side.
3:19The sense of self helps them know when they’ve
3:22gone too far so they can straighten out.
3:25But before we get to the sense that  we started the video with light,
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4:18At this point in a seedling’s growth,
4:20it has already overcome several obstacles.
4:23It has used gravity to guide it upward,
4:25and proprioception to ensure  it’s growing straight.
4:28Now it’s time to use light to guide its way
4:31to its best photosynthesizing self.
4:33And I know what you’re thinking. The sun is up.
4:35So growing straight up should lead the plant
4:38to light without needing to sense it another way.
4:41But sometimes light isn’t straight up.
4:43Maybe the seed sprouted under a park bench,
4:45or it’s the subject of some  random scientist’s experiment.
4:48Scientists like Charles Darwin helped establish
4:51the idea that plants respond  to light back in the 1800s.
4:55He covered growing grass shoots
4:57in aluminum foil to block out the light.
4:59Or as he probably called it, aluminium foil.
5:02And he found that only the uncovered  shoots grew toward the light.
5:06That’s because, while seedlings don’t have “eyes,”
5:08they do have their own version of photoreceptors,
5:11like the rods and cones in human eyes.
5:13For light, that helpful hormone,  auxin, does its thing again.
5:17It allows the plant to bend  toward that sweet, sweet sunshine.
5:21But even with a sense of gravity, self,
5:23and light, a plant won’t last long without water.
5:27While scientists are still nailing  down how plants search for that,
5:31they know that once they detect it,  they extend their roots right to it.
5:36Researchers figured this out  by putting pea plant roots
5:39in a maze that basically  gave them a fork in the road.
5:42One side of the fork had water  under it and the other didn’t.
5:45And eight out of ten plants  grew in that direction.
5:48…Even when the water was enclosed
5:51in an underground drainage pipe.
5:53So pea plants can sense  something about water running
5:56through pipes even when they  can’t feel the moisture.
5:59However they do it, they seem to use that
6:01as a cue for where they want their roots to grow.
6:04Which means we can add water to the list
6:06of things that tell a plant  which direction to grow.
6:09But so far, I’ve only really talked about
6:11each of those factors on their own.
6:13And out there in the world, a plant will be shaped
6:15by all of these forces at the same time.
6:18They grow their shoots away  from gravity while also
6:21growing them away from  themselves and toward the light.
6:24And often, these effects are  additive in directing growth.
6:28Away from gravity means a plant grows straight up.
6:31And if it’s in an open  field, then away from itself
6:34would mean up toward the  light also grow straight up.
6:37But sometimes these forces  conflict with each other.
6:40A plant can be growing toward the light,
6:43but find itself arching toward its own stem.
6:45When two forces don’t totally agree,
6:48one of them has to take priority.
6:50We’re talking about plants making decisions!
6:53How much a plant bends in response to one force
6:56over the other depends on  factors like how much those
6:59forces disagree with each other  and how powerful the force is.
7:03If light is faint, then gravity will  dictate growth much more than light.
7:07And if gravity dictates that a  plant should grow straight up,
7:10but it only gets sunlight from its  right side because there’s a big tree
7:14blocking the sun from the left,  then it will grow at an intermediate
7:1745 degree angle between the  pulls of gravity and light.
7:21Together, these forces are what shape a plant.
7:24They’re all constantly  interacting in the growth process.
7:27And in the end, there is still so much we don’t
7:30understand about how a seed  goes from this to this.
7:34But we know that they incorporate
7:36a lot of data to reach their final form.
7:39That little seed may not be  able to pick up and walk away,
7:42but it sure knows where it’s going.
7:44[♪OUTRO]