Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Sensative Plant


Seymour Botanical Conservatory
Do you have any plants that bring back memories of your childhood? It isn't that long ago for me, but there was one plant I'll never forget. I always called it a "sensative plant" because the leaves close whenever you touch them. I was never able to find them over the last few years, but I wanted to show them to my wife, who had never seen them and, of course, our girls. There was a nice one at the plant conservatory by Mary Bridge hospital, the Seymour Botanical Conservatory; but it wasn't for sale.
(By the way, if you are ever in the Tacoma, Washington area and have time, this is an amazing place to visit. Well worth the time!)

However, back to the story. This last friday I was in Watsons Greenhouse, the place that has every plant you need and about a hundred more that you didn't know existed. There is a botanist there who is growing these sensative plants from seed. She didn't have much success the first two tries, but this last attempt was working well. The plant is very small and I'm coddling it along. It is quite amazing. I have attatched a video of it. It may not look like much, but to me it's memories come to life.




 
THE SENSITIVE PLANT

Common names:
Sensitive plant, Humble plant, Mori vivi (West Indies) and Shame Plant (Africa, Vietnam).  

Scientific  name        Mimosa pudica
There are over 300 species of Mimosa that belong to the bean (pea) family Leguminosae.  This species, Mimosa pudica, is native to Brazil but is naturalized throughout the tropics of the Americas, Africa, and Asia.  It runs wild as a weed in the Gulf States.
Mimosa pudica is a perennial but is often cultivated as an annual in gardens.  The shrubby plant will grow to 18 inches outdoors with hairy and spiny stems.  Its flowers resemble little purplish puffs that give rise to ½ inch-long pods containing 3 – 4 seeds. 
Movements by plants have fascinated people since the days of ancient Greece.  Written accounts describing movement by a plant (probably a species of Mimosa) in response to touch have been documented to be over 2000 years old.  Although viewed as an interesting phenomenon for many years, a serious investigation into these movements was not started until the 19th century when it was discovered that the movements are the result of a rapid loss of pressure in strategically situated cells that cause the leaves to droop right before one’s eyes.  This evidence led to the rejection of the then widely held hypothesis that Mimosa pudica plants had nerve and muscle tissues similar to those found in animals.
The exact mechanism of how the specialized cells in the pulvini of the leaves lose their internal pressure (turgor pressure) to cause leaf movement has not been discovered.  However, researchers have found that as the leaves are stimulated to fold together and droop downward, changes in membrane permeability of the cells in the pulvini occur that allow for the rapid movement of calcium ions.  This has been related to increased cell wall pliability in the pulvini, which when coupled with decreased turgor pressure allows for movement.
The stimulus to fold and droop leaves can be transmitted from one part of the plant to another.  Upon stimulation, changes in electrical potential progress from the site of stimulation to other parts of the plant.  In addition, an as of yet unidentified chemical transmitter substance (hormone) can also be measured to move from the site of stimulation to distant parts of the plant.
No one has tied all these bits of information together to come up with a plausible, all encompassing hypothesis to explain the movement of Mimosa pudica leaves, but a number of researchers around the world are actively working on this mystery.
We can only guess as to why Mimosa pudica and a few other species have evolved to exhibit nyctinastic and seismonastic movements.  It has been observed that folded and drooped leaves are not attractive to herbivores, and are often passed by in favor of more normal appearing leaves to eat.  Also, folded and drooped leaves exchange less heat and water than fully expanded leaves, and this might have some survival value when the plants are under environmental stress.

1 comment:

  1. Very fascinating plant! My husband had these in the garden as a kid and calls them touch-me-nots. We got some seeds for them off of Ebay, but I still haven't planted them, so I don't know if I'll have any success or not!

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