Tomato plants are covered in tiny anti-pest booby traps

Share This Post


The hairs on tomato plants are actually tiny pest traps

Jalaal Research Group/University of Amsterdam

For hungry insects, walking along a tomato stalk in search of a green meal can be like navigating a minefield.

Jared Popowski at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands was trying to measure the mechanical properties of tomato plants in the lab. Then a tiny hair on one of the stalks started oozing liquid – and it happened so quickly that his camera barely caught it. He had inadvertently triggered one of the plant’s pest-protection mechanisms.



Source link

spot_img

Related Posts

Old Space meets New Space: a decade later and beyond

I recently attended the 40th Space Symposium in...

SSDs are fast, but not always the answer. Here’s why

SSDs offer noticeable speed advantages when booting, loading...

Access Denied

Access Denied You don't have permission to access...

Australian regulator sues Google over anti-competitive Search deals

Alphabet's Google was taken to court by Australia's...

Taxman sets out to draw up a crypto code

MUMBAI: India's apex tax body has asked the...
spot_img