Week 0️⃣ 3️⃣

Tropisms

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When we think about movement in nature, we usually picture animals. Plants, by contrast, seem still and rooted in place. Yet plants actually move in many fascinating ways, some slow and steady, others surprisingly quick.

Some of these movements are based on growth, and they are known as tropisms. In phototropism, stems and leaves grow toward light to capture more energy for photosynthesis. In gravitropism, roots grow downward in response to gravity. Finally, in thigmotropism, climbing plants like peas and grapevines wrap their tendrils around supports, reaching sunlight without building thick, heavy stems.

Other plant movements happen much faster. The sensitive plant, Mimosa pudica, folds its leaflets within seconds of being touched. The Venus flytrap closes its jaws on unsuspecting insects, and the sundew curls sticky tentacles around its prey. These quick reactions are called nastic movements, caused by rapid shifts in water pressure inside the cells rather than by growth.

In 1880, Charles Darwin and his son Francis published The Power of Movement in Plants. Through clever experiments, they showed that plants can sense light and touch. Darwin even suggested that the tip of a plant acts almost like a tiny brain, directing how the rest of it bends and grows.

Some plant movements are astonishingly fast. The white mulberry tree launches pollen at speeds of over five hundred kilometres per hour, close to the speed of sound. And the seed pods of the touch-me-not explode when disturbed, scattering seeds in tiny botanical fireworks.

Moving plants have also inspired art and fiction. The Day of the Triffids is a classic science fiction novel, written by John Wyndham, which imagined killer plants roaming the earth. The Little Shop of Horrors is a 1960 American horror comedy film, in which a florist's assistant cultivates a plant that feeds on human blood. These stories exaggerate reality, but they echo genuine plant behaviour. While plants can't walk or run, their movements are vital for survival, growth, and reproduction.

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🔑 Key Vocabulary
  • Auxin – A plant hormone that regulates growth by controlling cell elongation and directional responses such as tropisms.
  • Gravitropism – Growth response to gravity; roots grow downward, shoots grow upward.
  • Heliotropism – Daily turning of plant parts, such as sunflower heads, to follow the sun.
  • Mimosa pudica – The “sensitive plant” whose leaves fold rapidly when touched, an example of thigmonasty.
  • Nastic movement – A rapid, non-directional movement in plants triggered by stimuli such as touch, light, or temperature.
  • Nyctinasty – Daily rhythmic folding and unfolding of leaves or flowers in response to day–night cycles.
  • Phototropism – Growth toward light; stems bend toward a light source.
  • Polarity – The inherent spatial orientation within a plant, such as root vs. shoot or upper vs. lower leaf surface.
  • Pulvini – Swollen structures at the base of leaves or leaflets that control rapid movements by changes in water pressure.
  • Statoliths – Starch-filled organelles in plant cells that help detect gravity for gravitropic responses.
  • Tendrils – Slender, coiling structures in climbing plants that wrap around supports.
  • Thigmotropism – Growth response to touch or contact with a solid object.
  • Tropism – Any directional growth response of a plant to an external stimulus.
  • Venus flytrap – A carnivorous plant that snaps shut when trigger hairs are touched, an example of rapid nastic movement.
  • White mulberry – A tree whose male flowers explosively launch pollen at extreme speeds.

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💬 Conversation Questions
  1. Have you ever seen a plant move? What did it do?
  2. Why do you think plants move even though they cannot walk?
  3. Which is more surprising to you: slow growth movements or fast movements like the Venus flytrap?
  4. Do you know any plants that open or close their leaves or flowers at night?
  5. If you could grow a plant that moves in your house, which one would you choose and why?
  6. What are some ways plant movements help them survive in nature?
  7. How do you think Darwin studied plant movement without modern technology?
  8. Which plant movement do you think is the most useful for humans to study?
  9. Have you ever heard of plants in movies or stories, like Triffids or Devil’s Snare? What do you think about them?
  10. If plants could walk like animals, how would our world be different?
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