[HN Gopher] Tomato fruits send electrical warnings to the rest o...
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Tomato fruits send electrical warnings to the rest of the plant
when attacked
 
Author : rustoo
Score  : 196 points
Date   : 2021-07-25 13:07 UTC (9 hours ago)
 
web link (blog.frontiersin.org)
w3m dump (blog.frontiersin.org)
 
| pjdkoch wrote:
| So, pain.
 
| jbverschoor wrote:
| Avatar
 
| ourmandave wrote:
| I'm wondering what the rest of the plant supposed to do with that
| warning?
| 
| Remain perfectly still like Drax so it doesn't see us?
| 
| Try to taste bad?
 
  | malwarebytess wrote:
  | Plants can do amazing things. Think about how our own bodies
  | respond to extreme temperature or to shock. We withdraw vital
  | fluids to the core, or bring certain resources to the site of
  | irritation. Plants certainly do things like this.
  | 
  | The research paper's abstract says this:
  | 
  | >The results show with 90% of accuracy that the electrome
  | registered in the fruit's peduncle before herbivory is
  | different from the electrome during predation on the fruits.
  | Interestingly, there was also a sharp difference in the
  | electrome of the green and ripe fruits' peduncles before, but
  | not during, the herbivory, which demonstrates that the signals
  | generated by the herbivory stand over the others. _Biochemical
  | analysis showed that herbivory in the fruit triggered an
  | oxidative response in other parts of the plant._
  | 
  | https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2021.6574...
  | 
  | e: side note, this is the software they used for the
  | computation, including Machine Learning.
  | 
  | >The code libraries used were: Numpy and Pandas for data
  | manipulation; Scipy, Obspy and Math for mathematical
  | calculations; Matplotlib for creating graphics; Sklearn and
  | Statsmodels for machine learning.
 
    | dariusj18 wrote:
    | > oxidative response
    | 
    | does that mean it makes itself more cancerous?
 
      | grawprog wrote:
      | I'm not sure if this paper is talking about the same thing
      | but it discusses the effect of reactive oxides and
      | antioxident balances in plants and their effects.
      | 
      | https://www.hindawi.com/journals/ijfs/2020/8817778/
 
  | 988747 wrote:
  | Probably the latter: Taste bad, and possibly become more
  | poisonous for catepilars. It is quite possible to use that
  | electric signal to trigger some chemical reaction that would
  | accomplish this.
 
  | vages wrote:
  | Perhaps it's just a side effect of some other system in the
  | plant, like an electrical pulse to communicate "the way this
  | branch is growing has little/much sunlight".
 
    | wyldfire wrote:
    | That's a 'phototropism' IIRC and it's not caused by
    | electrical signals but instead by growth hormones called
    | auxins. This is what little I recall from high school
    | biology, anyways. IIRC the auxins inhibit cell division and
    | different ones cause different tropism phenomena.
 
  | vikramkr wrote:
  | Plants have all sorts of defense mechanisms, toxins etc, that
  | they've evolved (since they're sitting ducks). Its a reasonable
  | hypothesis that some energetically intensive to produce toxin
  | could have its production induced, for example (the plant
  | wouldn't want to waste energy on producing the toxins when not
  | needed). I believe there are also plants that have been shown
  | to release compounds that attract parasitic wasps to kill the
  | pest. That could also be triggered here, another reasonable
  | hypothesis.
 
  | dmix wrote:
  | The article mentions releasing hydrogen peroxide. Not just in
  | the one fruit being attacked but the other fruit on the plant
  | also released more chemicals.
 
  | hirundo wrote:
  | > In addition, the authors measured the biochemical responses,
  | such as defensive chemicals like hydrogen peroxide, across
  | other parts of the plant. This showed that these defenses were
  | triggered even in parts of the plant that were far away from
  | the damage caused by the caterpillars.
 
  | aszantu wrote:
  | Anti nutrients :(
 
| SMAAART wrote:
| Sentient tomatoes? PeTA, where are you?
 
  | PretzelPirate wrote:
  | There hasn't been any evidence of sentience presented.
 
| ruffrey wrote:
| My father grew up on a farm that was mostly for subsistence. He
| said to pinch off the first few green tomatoes to improve yields.
| I occasionally do this but have not tried to measure any yield
| differences.
 
  | h2odragon wrote:
  | That's simple pruning; the plant can be encouraged to grow more
  | foliage before it turns its attention to making fruits; thus
  | making more plant mass available to do the fruit growing.
  | 
  | In my experience that tends to encourage more, smaller fruit;
  | which is good cuz it reduces loss to insects etc (they ruin a
  | whole fruit at a time). If you want a single tomato the size of
  | a child's head, tho; let it keep the first few it sets and then
  | pinch flowers before they open after that.
 
  | shakna wrote:
  | This process is called "thinning" [0] (as distinct from
  | pruning), and is employed by farmers the world over. And has
  | been done for several hundred years.
  | 
  | [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thinning#In_agriculture
 
| GuB-42 wrote:
| Does it mean that tomatoes feel pain?
| 
| Electrical signals in response to an attack that trigger a
| defensive response look a lot like pain.
 
  | staticman2 wrote:
  | They don't have brains or central nervous systems so it seems
  | unlikely they feel pain.
 
    | mellavora wrote:
    | why do you assume the need for brains or even central nervous
    | systems for a pain sense to exist?
    | 
    | All the neurotransmitters that are used for our CNS were
    | originally evolved from plants.
    | 
    | some plants scream when cut https://www.sciencetimes.com/arti
    | cles/24473/20191218/a-group...
 
      | PretzelPirate wrote:
      | Reacting to a stimulus doesn't necessitate the need to feel
      | pain. A computer doesn't feel pain when I plug in a USB
      | drive, but it certainly sends an electrical signal to let
      | other parts of the computer know something happened.
      | 
      | This research doesn't suggest that plants suffer or are
      | somehow sentient, just that they react to stimuli in a way
      | that's advantageous to survival.
 
        | nicoburns wrote:
        | There's also no evidence that plants (or computers) don't
        | feel pain. We really have very little knowledge of what
        | does or does not cause conscious experience.
 
      | [deleted]
 
    | Glavnokoman wrote:
    | I guess "feel" might not be the exactly right word here but
    | the "pain" is.
 
    | jfoster wrote:
    | Not sure whether it's centralised, but the finding of the
    | study in the article sounds like it's essentially that plants
    | (or at least this type of tomato plant) do have some form of
    | nervous system or equivalent, isn't it?
 
    | prvnsmpth wrote:
    | If you assume the human-centric definition of the word
    | "pain", perhaps. But I don't think that paints a complete
    | picture - organisms experience and react to negative stimuli
    | in so many different ways.
    | 
    | IMO, what we're seeing here could absolutely be considered
    | "pain" in the plant kingdom, without altering or stretching
    | the definition of the word even in the slightest.
 
      | staticman2 wrote:
      | Why would you use a human term like pain for the plant?
      | 
      | Here's a biologist saying not all humans experience pain,
      | if it's not even a universal human experience I don't know
      | why you'd apply it to plants instead of a more technical
      | term:
      | 
      | "Interviewer: Right, and isn't sensing damage, even without
      | a neural system, essentially pain?
      | 
      | Daniel Chamovitz: The idea that damage has to be pain is
      | mistaken. We feel pain because we have specific types of
      | receptors called nociceptors which are programmed to
      | respond to pain, not to touch. People can have genetic
      | malfunctions where they feel pressure but never feel pain
      | because they don't have pain receptors."
      | 
      | https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.vice.com/amp/en/article/xd
      | 7..."
      | 
      | A different article on the subject on plant pain has a
      | biologist suggesting not to use human terms or animal
      | terms:
      | 
      | ""Plants can detect light, but I don't think you can say
      | plants can 'see.'" The same goes for hearing, tasting,
      | feeling, smelling. The terms we use to describe our own
      | interface with the world don't seem transferable to plants.
      | They describe the contours of a human-centric reality, made
      | possible by our animal anatomy.""
      | 
      | https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-earth/can-plants-
      | fee...
 
        | calibas wrote:
        | "We feel pain because we have specific types of receptors
        | called nociceptors which are programmed to respond to
        | pain, not to touch."
        | 
        | I assume he meant we feel pain as a response to damage.
        | Saying we feel pain because of a response to pain makes
        | no sense.
 
| chiefalchemist wrote:
| This is interesting.
| 
| I do a veg garden, with tomatoes of course. When I water them at
| the end of the day I also spray the tops because I want the
| leaves to tell the roots...get ready, rain is coming.
| 
| I have no idea if this happens or not. But from a survival
| perspective it makes sense that it would.
 
| ineedasername wrote:
| There was a series of documentaries made about a tomato strain
| that developed more active measures against attacks [0]
| 
| [0]
| https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attack_of_the_Killer_Tomatoe...
 
| tastyfreeze wrote:
| The plant world is "smarter" than we give it credit. Some plants
| count, keep time, and communicate with their environment. This
| research is in a similar vein to this TED talk showing some of
| the neat things plant do that we would attribute as features of
| the animal kingdom.
| 
| https://youtu.be/pvBlSFVmoaw
 
| xor99 wrote:
| Cellulose has a small piezoelectric effect so I wonder if that
| has something to do with it. Same with bone.
 
| giardini wrote:
| There were 4 tomato plants in the experimental group and 1 in the
| control group (so 5 in all).
| 
| I don't think we can declare that plants think or even have
| communication among their parts based on this small amount of
| data. Too many other possibilities.
 
| pvelagal wrote:
| I am not sure how this is perceived as attack ? Sending
| electrical signals doesn't have to mean attack by default.
| Pollination happens via bees.. then the fruit grows to attract
| birds or animals who eat them and spread the seeds through
| excretions or else the fruit will fall off and rot...
 
| database_lost wrote:
| Hmm, interesting, this reminds me of recent research where they
| used electrical currents and magnetic fields to enhance tomato
| plants, I wonder how the two findings are linked. (here's the
| article I saw:
| http://horticulturejournal.usamv.ro/index.php/scientific-pap... )
 
  | lpasselin wrote:
  | Does anyone have papers like this to recommend?
  | 
  | I am really interested in building custom systems to experiment
  | with plants. My problem is that I don't know what to test.
 
| gillytech wrote:
| This isn't entirely new. L. Ron Hubbard ran experiments like this
| in the 60's and came to similar conclusions. He found that
| "tomatoes scream when sliced." Check this article a bit over
| halfway down the piece:
| https://www.bostonglobe.com/ideas/2012/06/16/meet-your-veget...
 
| hirundo wrote:
| Imagine rigging your plants with sensors and gardening by
| sentiment analysis. "The zucchini are worried today, give them
| some extra TLC."
 
  | codetrotter wrote:
  | Create a global network of Tomato sensors. Correlate Tomato
  | sentiment with Bitcoin price. Buy and sell Bitcoin based on the
  | feelings of the Tomatoes.
 
    | lsh123 wrote:
    | You forgot to insert AI somewhere
 
    | ftio wrote:
    | And perhaps a fellow Italian will invent the first non-
    | fungible, blockchain-powered pasta sauce, Moneronara, or even
    | its Roman cousin, Carbitnara.
 
    | armenarmen wrote:
    | I'm working on getting my mining rig to run off of clean
    | renewable tortured tomato power already
 
      | ezekg wrote:
      | Lol this made me chuckle
 
    | techbio wrote:
    | Profit by selling shovels.
 
  | stoat_meniscus wrote:
  | That's a fun idea. Although over time this might select for
  | plants that complain more. You could end up with an entire
  | garden screaming for attention all the time.
 
    | derefr wrote:
    | Or you'd just be evolving the plants toward communicating
    | more clearly, ala cat meows (which don't exist in adult cats
    | for any other reason than to allow communication with
    | humans.)
 
      | Siira wrote:
      | References on the cat evopsy claim? It's interesting.
 
      | david-gpu wrote:
      | I've heard adult cats meowing to each other, whether to
      | display aggression or to indicate they are in heat.
      | 
      | Now, it is possible that certain other types of meows are
      | only used to elicit human behavior.
 
        | derefr wrote:
        | I believe the hypothesis is that they evolved as a "thing
        | domestic cats _can_ do " for communication with humans,
        | but adult cats that know how to meow, don't _just_ use
        | their meows to communicate with humans. They see it as a
        | general communication tool, and will also try to use it
        | with other cats.
        | 
        | The supporting evidence for this hypothesis, I believe,
        | is that meowing has been observed to be a _learned_
        | communication technique gained _only_ if a cat interacts
        | with humans during development; adult feral cats, living
        | only around other cats during their development, never
        | learn this technique or its social meaning, and so don 't
        | understand the social signal being communicated by
        | domestic cats when the domestic cat meows at them, nor do
        | they try to use it in response.
        | 
        | (Same goes with the domestic cat's social signal of
        | keeping their tail raised when standing to express trust.
        | Feral cats don't develop _that_ habit, either.)
 
| __s wrote:
| Scientologists already figured this out over half a century ago
| with their E-meters
 
  | treeman79 wrote:
  | Good old e-meters and all the hippies that gave speeches at
  | school about how plants have feelings and it was scientifically
  | proven
 
    | f6v wrote:
    | What are we supposed to eat?
 
      | vnchr wrote:
      | Impossible Carrots and Beyond Broccoli
 
      | cf499 wrote:
      | The only morally sound answer to that question is "anything
      | or nothing" because any other choice implies that you have
      | to justify why one organism is more worthy of life than
      | another. Am I wrong or just not fun at parties? :D
 
        | awb wrote:
        | There are many moral ways to eat I can think of:
        | 
        | 1) Eat anything your body can consume safely
        | 
        | 2) Only eat things without brains
        | 
        | 3) Only eat things you hunt/harvest/prepare yourself
        | 
        | 4) Only eat animals that are already dead
        | 
        | 5) Only eat plants and animals that are invasive or over
        | populated
        | 
        | And the list goes on. Some are easier than others, but I
        | don't see the moral dilemma in maintaining a certain diet
        | outside of "anything or nothing".
 
        | cf499 wrote:
        | My point was that there is no list that anyone can make
        | that lets you sidestep the unpleasant fact that you have
        | to kill something to eat (each of your 5 points involve
        | taking the life of something else. Even eating roadkill
        | implies killing bacteria and parasites). On top of that,
        | you'll never know if the thing you killed felt pain so
        | any choice you make is ultimately arbitrary. I'm not
        | saying I feel good about this bleak conclusion but I'd
        | rather be honest about it. My dinner deserves to know
        | that it wasn't an easy choice!
 
      | hprotagonist wrote:
      | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jain_vegetarianism
 
      | dennis_jeeves wrote:
      | Valid question only for a person who is vegan for 'ethical'
      | reasons, who believes that some how plants are exempt from
      | pain and suffering.
 
        | pell wrote:
        | Plants don't have a central nervous system or a brain.
        | What science generally understands under pain and
        | suffering plants simply don't have.
 
        | dennis_jeeves wrote:
        | >Plants don't have a central nervous system or a brain.
        | 
        | So? does that automatically imply that it does not feel
        | pain?
        | 
        | >What science generally understands under pain and
        | suffering plants simply don't have.
        | 
        | Listen, I don't buy the science say this and science say
        | that kind of arguments. ANY living being ( assuming we
        | can settle for what can be called 'alive') will have a
        | mechanism for self preservation, pain is one of them. The
        | onus is on 'science' or people to prove otherwise.
 
        | henearkr wrote:
        | The tomato needs to be eaten to disseminate its seeds in
        | feces.
        | 
        | (Maybe not by insects though.)
 
        | dennis_jeeves wrote:
        | Ah, I replied to another comment along similar lines, so
        | you are correct. Plucking a ripe tomato will most likely
        | set of a little 'orgasm' in the plant, while eating a
        | tomato will most likely set of a thundering earth
        | shattering 'orgasm' in the tomato :)
 
        | OlleTO wrote:
        | If we think about the function of pain from an
        | evolutionary perspective its basically to encourage,
        | well, not doing whatever is causing you pain (e.g.
        | touching sharp objects, standing close to a fire) or
        | provide motivation to fight or flee (e.g. if I am being
        | attacked by a bobcat).
        | 
        | Neither of these are applicable to plants, so there
        | doesn't seem to be any evolutionary reason to evolve pain
        | receptors.
 
        | dennis_jeeves wrote:
        | Assuming that I did not misunderstand you, while fight or
        | flee does not exist in plants in the same sense as
        | animals they do react by producing chemicals/sap etc.
        | that works as a defense. So it's more 'fight', but a
        | chemical warfare at that.
 
        | staticman2 wrote:
        | Pain is a subjective experience. It requires a self to
        | feel it.
        | 
        | No central nervous system does imply no mind to feel
        | pain.
        | 
        | If you were to scoop my brain out of my body and keep my
        | lower body alive below the neck the nervous system would
        | not feel pain as there is no mind to feel it.
 
        | nicoburns wrote:
        | How do you know that? Science has no idea how the brain
        | produces consciousness (and therefore strong basis to
        | claim that other entities don't). There might be all
        | sorts of selves that you simply can't observe.
 
        | staticman2 wrote:
        | We don't know how the brain produces consciousness but we
        | have a good idea from observing people suffering brain
        | damage from accidents how a functional brain is directly
        | linked to consciousness.
        | 
        | Science can't prove the world is not the dream of a giant
        | turtle- so technically I can't "know" anything- so asking
        | "how can you know that?" Is kind of a boring line of
        | questioning. It has no answer other than "Well I guess
        | technically I can't know that, or anything," But that
        | doesn't mean turtle dreams are going to get equal weight
        | with our empirical models of the world.
 
        | shakna wrote:
        | > Plants don't have a central nervous system or a brain.
        | What science generally understands under pain and
        | suffering plants simply don't have.
        | 
        | Quite a number actually do have nervous systems [0],
        | using neurotransmitters that have actually been found in
        | mammals. They respond to wounding, both with efforts to
        | repair it, and with chemical deterrents to the cause.
        | 
        | Now, that isn't to say that they necessarily have pain
        | and suffering, but it wouldn't be surprising to learn
        | that some plants possess that capability.
        | 
        | [0] https://science.sciencemag.org/content/361/6407/1068
 
        | ben_w wrote:
        | Central nervous system is a particular type of nervous
        | system:
        | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_nervous_system
        | 
        | Jellyfish have a nervous system but not a CNS.
        | 
        | I have no idea where the ethical line _ought_ to be here,
        | but if plants have meaningful capacity to suffer then
        | it's also likely that PETA should be campaigning to limit
        | the mistreatment of even the tiny AI we make while doing
        | MOOCs on the basics of machine learning.
 
        | nicoburns wrote:
        | Science generally _doesn 't_ understand pain or any other
        | conscious experience.
 
        | nkozyra wrote:
        | Typically this is where fruitarians would come in, but if
        | the _fruit_ feels pain we 're all out of options.
 
        | lr4444lr wrote:
        | Breatharians will triumph at last.
 
        | dennis_jeeves wrote:
        | Until they learn that the nano-consciousness exists in
        | the air molecules...
 
        | nicoburns wrote:
        | > Breatharians
        | 
        | Is that another word for plants?
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | dennis_jeeves wrote:
        | Unlikely, unless the fruit is raw. Some ripe fruits are
        | most likely meant to be eaten because that's the
        | mechanism that plants have evolved to disperse seeds, so
        | it would actually be "rewarding" for the plant. Perhaps
        | it would be similar to a little orgasm. Now a raw fruit
        | will most likely feel pain.
 
      | ImprobableTruth wrote:
      | "A green salad?" said the animal, rolling his eyes
      | disapprovingly at Arthur.
      | 
      | "Are you going to tell me," said Arthur, "that I shouldn't
      | have green salad?"
      | 
      | "Well," said the animal, "I know many vegetables that are
      | very clear on that point. Which is why it was eventually
      | decided to cut through the whole tangled problem and breed
      | an animal that actually wanted to be eaten and was capable
      | of saying so clearly and distinctly. And here I am."
      | 
      | - Douglas Adams, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
 
        | selimthegrim wrote:
        | Someone needs to poll them about Plantasia.
 
  | vnchr wrote:
  | I think you're conflating this phenomenon with the condiment
  | research of L. Ron Mustard.
 
| [deleted]
 
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