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30 votes
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Making farming better for bees: can we breed crops that produce more nectar and pollen?
4 votes -
Pangolin-inspired robot poops tree seeds into holes it digs
15 votes -
Botanists identify thirty-three global ‘dark spots’ with thousands of unknown plants
16 votes -
Star botanist likely made up data about nutritional supplements, new probe finds
11 votes -
Why are plants green? To reduce the noise in photosynthesis.
25 votes -
The hazy evolution of cannabis
3 votes -
Bioluminescent houseplant hits US market for first time
46 votes -
Attempts to plant new Joshua Trees after destructive fires assisted by load carrying camels
16 votes -
Tiny ant species disrupts lion's hunting behavior
11 votes -
Anna Atkins' photographs of British algae
13 votes -
French wild pansies are producing smaller flowers and less nectar than twenty to thirty years ago, study shows
25 votes -
Genetic engineering was meant to save chestnut trees. Then there was a mistake.
23 votes -
Floral time travel: Flowers were more diverse 100 million years ago than they are today
12 votes -
Gardeners observations are confirmed as US Department of Agriculture updates plant hardiness zone map
25 votes -
Deep in the Arctic permafrost, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is protecting Africa's food supply
12 votes -
In 1886, a US agency set out to record new fruit varieties. The results are wondrous
18 votes -
A revelation about trees is messing with climate calculations
21 votes -
Study: Air pollution prevents pollinators from finding flowers
13 votes -
Saguaro cacti collapsing in Arizona extreme heat, scientist says
17 votes -
A seed survival story: How trees keep 'friends' close and 'enemies' guessing
12 votes -
When the war came to Kherson, a small group of scientists ventured into the ruined city to rescue a unique herbarium
16 votes -
Is it true that plants begin to consume oxygen around 45°C?
I used to work with a guy who had three PhD's. (two in Europe, one in the US). He had them in math, chemistry and biology. He said a few fairly outlandish things over the timeframe that I knew...
I used to work with a guy who had three PhD's. (two in Europe, one in the US). He had them in math, chemistry and biology. He said a few fairly outlandish things over the timeframe that I knew him, but every one I ever dug into it turned out was basically accurate.
One of the things he mentioned in passing, but which I haven't been able to confirm to my satisfaction is that when plants reach certain high temps, they start producing H2O2 instead of H2O. (around 45 Celcius)
I've read a few papers that seem to indicate that part at least is true, but I've never found anything that says whether or not this puts plants into the 'consumer' column for oxygen.
Anyone here able to point me to something that has this answer? or anyone here know the answer, even if it's not specifically been published yet?
12 votes -
The first two botanists who surveyed, and survived, the Colorado River
5 votes -
Purple variety of cannabis could save pot farms struggling with diseased plants
10 votes -
Buried deep in the permafrost, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is opening its doors to the world with the launch of a new virtual tour to mark its fifteenth anniversary
9 votes -
Bucking convention to track the upside of invasive species
6 votes -
Putting the Icelandic Lupin debate under the microscope to try and find out the good and the bad about this invasive species
8 votes -
From high-protein food to plastics and fuel, Swedish scientists are attempting to tap seaweed's huge potential
8 votes -
How our hills got golden. The floral colonization of the Americas.
3 votes -
Any good resources on Morphogenesis and related areas?
I recently began thinking about how plants get their shape and discovered "morphogenesis" after some inept googling. It seems like a fascinating subject so I'd like to learn a bit more. I have...
I recently began thinking about how plants get their shape and discovered "morphogenesis" after some inept googling. It seems like a fascinating subject so I'd like to learn a bit more. I have some A-level university courses in chemistry and microbiology, but never dug too deep. So I am looking for suggestions on what to read up on in order to gain some understanding of how plants and other organisms get their shape. The ultimate goal is of course to plant my own house.
4 votes -
Excerpts from the Atlas of Poetic Botany
5 votes -
I touched the world's most painful plant - Gympie gympie (the suicide plant)
10 votes -
How will plants cope with fewer pollinators?
6 votes -
This robot has applications to archaeology, space exploration, and search and rescue — with a simple elegant design inspired by a plant
4 votes -
Rise of the 'robo-plants', as scientists fuse nature with tech
6 votes -
Welcome to Pollinator Park
6 votes -
There are signs the world might be running out of natural rubber. Disease, climate change and plunging global prices have put the world's rubber supplies into jeopardy.
4 votes -
The demise and potential revival of the American chestnut
4 votes -
Yaupon: The rebirth of America's forgotten tea
9 votes -
A first for the International Space Station: A plant transplant
9 votes -
Breathing life into the corpse flower
7 votes -
Nanotechnology for plant genetic engineering
6 votes -
How Dutch plant breeders built our brussels sprouts boom
7 votes -
Decoding the mathematical secrets of plants’ stunning leaf patterns
6 votes -
The life that springs from dead leaves in streams
4 votes -
Detection of electrical signaling between tomato plants raises interesting questions
10 votes -
Will climate change upend projections of future forest growth?
6 votes -
Tree ring records show increase in extreme weather in South America
4 votes -
The true story of Kudzu, the vine that never truly ate the South
8 votes