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ลำดับตอนที่ #5 : Can your plants really hear you if you sing to them
We
all know that plants respond to light, gravity and touch. But is there any merit in singing to them?
We
put this question to the BBC
Earth Facebook audience. Anecdotally, a few of you
seemed to suggest that singing to plants was helpful.
"I
had a yucca that I
used to wash the leaves of once a week and sing to as I did it," says Heather
Louise Goodall. "It grew from being about 2 feet tall to 7 feet tall
in just a couple of years. In the end it got too big for the house."
"My
best friend's dad is the best plant grower I know. He swears you should sing to
them. He didn't explain why," says David
Michael Goeke.
Several of you had some ideas of how singing could help.
"Singing, or even
talking, produces carbon dioxide," says Chelsea
Garcia Ortega, a point echoed by David
Souther. "Plant[s] convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. Even if there
is no benefit to the plant, there could be benefit to yourself by producing
more [oxygen] inside."
Come on, says Marshal
Huang. There has got to be more to it than carbon dioxide levels.
Perhaps there could be good
vibrations, suggests Christie
Ley. "Back in the early 70s a friend's son experimented with plants,
playing classical and hard rock to plants," she remembers. "The ones
he played classical to thrived.
The hard rock ones died..."
Caroline
Wall has a neat hypothesis. It need not
be anything to do with sound at all.
Instead, maybe people who sing
to their plants are just better at looking after them. "You're more likely
to remember to water and care for the plant if you're taking the time to serenade it, even
potentially noticing issues sooner than you might otherwise," she says.
As intriguing as all this is, we are getting
ahead of the science. What does that tell us?
"This is quite a near-esoteric subject,"
says Wolfgang Stuppy,
research leader of comparative seed biology at Kew Gardens in London, UK.
"There is precious little scientific research into the subject and
certainly no scientific proof that plants could benefit from anybody singing to
them."
But
Stuppy does not rule it
out. "This doesn't mean that it is impossible."
Charles
Darwin was similarly open-minded. He once noted that seedlings appeared to be sensitive to the
vibrations of the table on which their pots were standing.
Intrigued,
he devised what he
called "a fool's experiment" to see if the seedlings responded to sound.
"I shan't be easy till I've tried it," he told his son Francis. But
when Darwin's son Francis played his bassoon to the plants, the results were inconclusive.
More
recently, evidence has emerged
that some sounds may cause subtle
changes in some plants at some stages of their life cycles.
Ultrasound, with frequencies higher than those in the audible spectrum, may enhance seed germination. Experiments on chrysanthemums suggest that audible sound can alter levels of growth hormones in cells.
What's
more, the roots of maize seedlings appear to
turn towards sounds at a certain frequency. Researchers in Korea have also
found that some frequencies increase the expression of
some genes.
Clever
experiments with young
chilli plants show that they
can sense the presence and identity of neighbouring plants, through some unconventional and
as-yet-unidentified mechanism. Vibrations might play a role.
"Some
plants even produce oils to scare off insects when played the sounds of an
insect chomping on
some leaves," says Matthew
Portelli. It might sound nuts, but he is right. In 2014, scientists
reported that the mere sound of chewing caterpillars was enough to prime hale cress plants
to release more defensive chemicals in a subsequent attack.
So
the idea that plants might be able to respond to song is perhaps not as barmy as it sounds.
Whether
it is good for growth is another question entirely. "Any plant would curl up and die if I sang
to it," says Denise
Howes.
merit (n.)
the quality of being good and deserving praise
Anecdotally,(adj.)
Anecdotal information is not based on facts or careful study:
yucca (n.)
a plant with long, stiff leaves on a thick stem and sometimes white, bell-shaped flowers
thrived (v.)
to grow,
develop, or be successful:
hypothesis(n.)
an idea or explanation for something that is based on knownfacts but has not yet been proved:
serenade (v.)
to play a piece of music or sing for someone
otherwise
(conj.) used after an order or suggestion to show what the resultwill
be if you do not follow that order or suggestion:
(adv.)differently, or in another way:
except for what has
just been referred to:
(adj.) used to show that something is completely different from what you think it is or from what was previously stated:
intriguing (v.)
to interest someone a lot, especially by being strange,
unusual, or mysterious:
esoteric (adj.)
very unusual and understood or liked by only a smallnumber of people, especially those with special knowledge:
rule it out.
to prevent something from happening:
seedlings (n.)
a very young plant that has grown from a seed:
devised (v.)
to invent a plan, system, object, etc., usually
using yourintelligence or imagination:
bassoon (n.)
a large musical instrument that is played by blowing into a long, curved tube
inconclusive.(adj.)
not giving or having a result or decision:
emerged (v.)
to appear by
coming out of something or out from behind something
to come to the end of a difficult period or
experience
to become known,
especially as a result of
examiningsomething or asking questions about it:
subtle (adj.)
not loud,
bright, noticeable, or obvious in any way:
achieved in a quiet way that does not attract attention to itself and is therefore good or clever:
enhance (v.)
to improve the quality, amount, or strength of something:
germination (v.)
to (cause a
seed to)
start growing:
to start developing:
chrysanthemums (n.)
any of several types of garden plant, including some with many small flowers and some with few but very large flowers
maize (n.)
a tall plant grown in many parts of the world for its yellowseeds, which are eaten as food, made into flour, or fed to animals
chomp (v.)
prime (adj.)
hale
= healthy
cress (n.)
any of various plants with small, green leaves, used especially in salads:
subsequent (adj.)
happening after something else:
barmy (adj.)
behaving strangely, or very silly:
curl up
(POSITION)
› to sit or
lie in
a position with your arms and
legs close to
your body
(EDGES)
› If something flat,
such as paper, curls up,
the edges start to
become rounded.
Basson (n.)
a large musical instrument that
is played by blowing into a long,
curved tube
Caterpillars
(n.)
a small,
long animal with many legs that feeds on the leavesof
plants, and develops into a
butterfly or moth
Unconventional (adj.)
different from what is usual or from the way most people do things:
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