Share The Seeds
Botany and Research => Plant Science => Topic started by: isaak on January 15, 2014, 06:23:21 PM
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http://www.news.uwa.edu.au/201401156399/research/move-over-elephants-mimosas-have-memories-too (http://www.news.uwa.edu.au/201401156399/research/move-over-elephants-mimosas-have-memories-too)
Dr Gagliano and her team show that Mimosa pudica plants can learn and remember just as well as it would be expected of animals, but of course, they do it all without a brain. Using the same experimental framework normally applied to test learnt behavioral responses and trade-offs in animals, they designed their experiments as if Mimosa was indeed an animal.
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Wow, this is amazing.
And we think we know everything about plants. Hehe.
Thanks for sharing.
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Very interesting isaak!
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I always found it extremely interesting how they seem to learn when lights turn on/off. On a couple occasions I left my lights on for a 48 hour stretch and they still opened and closed around the normal times the light would switch on/off. Also how they adjust to a new cycle within a couple days if I flip the schedule around on them.
Fascinating stuff:)
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I noticed that as well. Even though I use artificial lighting and it doesn't fade in and out like the sun would they start to close about an hour before the lights turn off and open about an hour before they turn on. They adjust whenever i change the timings.
Pretty amazing stuff. How do they store these memories? This completely changes how I view what makes a living thing conscious.
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To shamanism this is not a novelty.
For example, shamans like to use old grow Caapi to prepare ayahuasca, even though old Caapi is less strength then a 10 year old one (10 year old is said to be the maximum strength). It is because a very old Caapi have more knowledge…it is like an Elder.
But this evidenced in an occidental scientific paper is amazing.
We are trained to only believe in occidental science…and this is corroborating traditional knowledge.
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This is amazing!
It's nuts how much we think we know about plants, but how little humans honestly know about them. We are learning new things about plants, and everything else for that matter, every day, when we think that we have learned all there is to learn.
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I also noticed how quickly my pudica adjusted to the sun from a window after first bringing her home from the nursery, and then to a cfl that I'd leave on after sunset, and now she's about as accurate as my timer!
She also no longer reacts much to a pinch on the end of a petiole (which I did a lot at first) but move a whole leaves if touched with a stroking motion.
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The paper in the article, and another paper by the same author.
It is interesting work, I would like to see more elucidation for a mechanism for this "learning". Also I think it might be misleading to anthropomorphize plants. Although they may learn and be conscious even, I think it might be misleading to view it in the same way as animal learning or consciousness.
The second article by the same article is about plant bio- acoustics and has a little section on this in regards to shamanism.