Do plants have the ability to learn?

Plants do not store information the way we humans do, but they have a way of remembering – they store memories “in sophisticated cellular and molecular signalling networks”. Called ‘somatic memory’, it is stored in the plant’s body. And, this is what a plant passes down to its offspring.

The act of learning is usually attributed to animals. A few studies in the past have shown that plants can learn too. However, a new analysis suggests that plants are capable of more than just learning. What is it? Come, let’s find out.

From floods and heat waves to drought and wildfires, extreme weather events caused due to climate crisis have been affecting natural wildlife habitats the world over. Such changes to their environment have forced animals to change their behaviour too – “altering their hunting and hibernation patterns and moving habitats”. But animals aren’t the only ones adapting to change. As the new research indicates, plants too are forced to “quickly adapt to survive. And, as part of this adaptation, they also “transmit these new traits on to their offspring” – in what is seen as teaching.

It may seem impossible that rooted as they are to the spot, plants are able to adapt, much less teach. But this is exactly what is happening. For instance, plants use the winter season to get ready for flowering in spring, which is the next season. With winters becoming shorter, some plants now have mechanisms in place that allow them “to avoid flowering in periods where they have less chances to reproduce”. Plants do not store information the way we humans do, but they have a way of remembering – they store memories “in sophisticated cellular and molecular signalling networks”. Called ‘somatic memory, it is stored in the plant’s body. And, this is what a plant passes down to its offspring. Researchers say this is not a genetic change, rather it is what they call ‘epigenetics”; “they can change how an organism reads a DNA sequence”. This contributes “to the long-term adaptation of plant species to climate change”.

Did you know?

Epigenetics is the study of how your behaviours and environment can cause changes that affect the way your genes work. Unlike genetic changes, epigenetic changes are reversible. They do not change your DNA sequence, but they can change how your body reads a DNA sequence.

Picture Credit : Google 

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