DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Plants Can Talk to Each Other When They Touch, and It Makes Them Stronger

January 18, 2026
in News
Plants Can Talk to Each Other When They Touch, and It Makes Them Stronger

For a plant on the forest floor, sudden exposure to light can be like someone opening the curtains in the morning when you’re trying to sleep. It’s a jarring shock that, according to new research, plants are facing together, similar to humans in times of need. When they grow close enough to touch, they appear to warn each other that trouble is on the way, and that warning makes them tougher.

In a new study published in bioRxiv, researchers led by University of Missouri plant biologist Ron Mittler grew the thale cress either alone or packed together so their leaves overlapped. When exposed to intense light, isolated plants showed more cellular damage. Plants that could touch their neighbors fared better, as if they had time to brace themselves.

We know plants have demonstrated an ability to communicate with one another through their underground root networks. Above ground, they can release airborne chemicals or even transmit electrical signals through leaf contact. Mittler’s team wanted to know whether that leaf-to-leaf contact actually mattered for survival.

It did. Within an hour of touching, plants activated more than 2,000 stress-response genes, covering everything from light and cold to flooding, salt, and physical injury. When the stress finally arrived, these plants were prepared, the leafy embodiment of “stay ready so you don’t gotta get ready.” The lonewolf plans were not so prepared.

The researchers identified the key messenger at play here: hydrogen peroxide. The same stuff you’ve kept in that dusty brown bottle beneath the bathroom sink for so long that you’re starting to suspect it came with the house is naturally produced in plants when under stress. This is the first time scientists have seen it moving directly from one plant to another as a warning signal. Plants that had been genetically altered were unable to pass the chemical and share its dire warning.

This might help explain something farmers and gardeners have been noticing since humans started farming tens of thousands of years ago: crops do better in groups. Maybe that’s a little lesson we can apply to all species, especially us.

The post Plants Can Talk to Each Other When They Touch, and It Makes Them Stronger appeared first on VICE.

Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Can Get You Drunk
News

Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Can Get You Drunk

by VICE
March 13, 2026

3I/ATLAS is the gift that keeps on giving. Even after all of the hype has died down, after all of ...

Read more
News

Starbucks union lowers proposed wage floor to $17 in bid to restart contract talks

March 13, 2026
News

There’s a new wedge issue playing out in Senate Dem primaries

March 13, 2026
News

This Is Why You’re So Anxious in Your 30s

March 13, 2026
News

I’m an American living in the UK. I didn’t expect grocery shopping to be filled with so many surprises.

March 13, 2026
MS NOW hosts pounce on ‘hysterical’ Hegseth and ‘where his mind is’ after angry tirade

MS NOW hosts pounce on ‘hysterical’ Hegseth and ‘where his mind is’ after angry tirade

March 13, 2026
White shoe law firm Fried Frank quashes rumors that it’s slashing hires because of AI bots

White shoe law firm Fried Frank quashes rumors that it’s slashing hires because of AI bots

March 13, 2026
FBI Investigating Steam Games for Malware – Players Asked to Check Their Libraries

FBI Investigating Steam Games for Malware – Players Asked to Check Their Libraries

March 13, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026