Noaidi
slow walker
Storm, Painted Wolf
I too have my doubts about this experiment. A bit more searching indicates that it's not the type of music per se that plants respond to (the 'new age' hypothesis), it's the vibrations produced. If my pupil still wants to do this, I'll get her to use a monotone emitted from a signal generator (using various volumes and frequencies) rather than subject the poor seedlings to 8 hours of Slipknot.
Found this paper, which seems to be popular. Haven't read it all yet, but from what I gather, it's got some relevance for studying mechanoperception in plants:
A unified hypothesis of mechanoperception in plants -- Telewski 93 (10): 1466 -- American Journal of Botany
I too have my doubts about this experiment. A bit more searching indicates that it's not the type of music per se that plants respond to (the 'new age' hypothesis), it's the vibrations produced. If my pupil still wants to do this, I'll get her to use a monotone emitted from a signal generator (using various volumes and frequencies) rather than subject the poor seedlings to 8 hours of Slipknot.
Found this paper, which seems to be popular. Haven't read it all yet, but from what I gather, it's got some relevance for studying mechanoperception in plants:
A unified hypothesis of mechanoperception in plants -- Telewski 93 (10): 1466 -- American Journal of Botany