| Literature DB >> 32395195 |
Alexander G Volkov1, Yuri B Shtessel2.
Abstract
Plants can communicate with other plants using wireless pathways above and underground. Some examples of these underground communication pathways are: (1) mycorrhizal networks in the soil; (2) the plants' rhizosphere; (3) acoustic communication; (4) naturally grafting of roots of the same species; (5) signaling chemicals exchange between roots of plants; and (6) electrical signal transmission between plants through the soil. To avoid the possibility of communication between plants using mechanisms (1)-(5), soils in both pots with plants can be connected by Ag/AgCl or platinum wires. Electrostimulation Aloe vera or cabbage plants induces electrotonic potentials transmission in the electro-stimulated plants as well as in the neighboring plants located in the same or different electrically connected pots regardless if plants are the same or different types. The amplitude and sign of electrotonic potentials in both electrostimulated and neighboring plants depend on the amplitude, rise, and fall of the applied voltage. Electrostimulation serves as an important tool for the evaluation of mechanisms of underground communication in the plant-wide web. The previously developed mathematical model of electrotonic potentials transmission within and between tomato plants, which is supported by the experimental data, is generic enough to be used for simulation study and predicting the intercellular and intracellular communication in the form of electrical signals in the electrical networks within and between a variety of plants.Entities:
Keywords: Aloe vera; Brassica oleracea L.; electrostimulation; electrotonic potential; plant-soil-plant signaling
Year: 2020 PMID: 32395195 PMCID: PMC7202782 DOI: 10.1080/19420889.2020.1757207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Integr Biol ISSN: 1942-0889
Figure 1.Electrical responses between Ag/AgCl electrodes in an Aloe vera leaf induced by 1.5 V electrical battery (green line) (a) or a function generator (b) connected to Pt-electrodes inserted to a neighboring cabbage plant. Distance between Pt-electrodes was 0.2 cm and distance between Ag/AgCl electrodes was 2 cm. Both pots with plants located at 10 cm distance were connected by a silver wire. Both of the ends of a silver wire were covered by electrodeposition of AgCl on 10 mm long wire tips without PFA coating.
Figure 2.Experimental setup. Function generator or 1.5 V battery connected to platinum electrodes were used for electrostimulation of plants.