By adapting their responses to herbivores based on the presence of nearby plants and environmental cues, goldenrods display a form of intelligence, challenging traditional definitions of intelligence, according to a new study.
Goldenrod can recognize other nearby plants without touching them by sensing the proportion of far-red light reflected from their leaves. When goldenrod is eaten by herbivores, it adapts its response based on whether other plants are nearby. Are such flexible, real-time adaptive responses a sign of plant intelligence?
This question is not easy to answer, but in a recent paper chemical ecologist Andre Kessler makes the case for plant intelligence. Plant signaling and behavior.
Defining plant intelligence
“There are over 70 published definitions of intelligence, and even within specific fields, there is no consensus on what it is,” said Kessler, a professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
Many people believe that intelligence requires a central nervous system, with electrical signals acting as the medium for information processing. Some plant biologists equate a plant’s vascular system with the central nervous system, arguing that some centralized entity within the plant allows it to process and respond to information. But Kessler adamantly disagrees.
“Although electrical signals are clearly seen in plants, there is no solid evidence of homology with the nervous system, but the question is how important they are to the plant’s ability to process environmental signals,” he said.
To make the case for plant intelligence, Kessler and co-author Michael Mueller, a doctoral student in his lab, narrowed the definition down to its most basic elements: “The ability to solve a problem based on information obtained from the environment, toward a specific goal,” Kessler said.
As a case study, Kessler cites previous research that looked at goldenrod and its response to being eaten by pests. When leafroller larvae eat leafroller leaves, the plant releases chemicals that signal to the insects that the plant is damaged and a poor food source. These airborne chemicals, called volatile organic compounds (VOCs), are also absorbed by neighboring leafroller plants, prompting them to mount their own defenses against the leafroller larvae. In this way, the leafrollers migrate herbivores to neighboring plants, dispersing the damage.
Experiments and Observations
in 2022 Paper In the journal plantKessler and co-author Dr. Alexander Chauta (’21) conducted experiments showing that goldenrod can also detect a higher proportion of far-red light reflected from the leaves of neighboring plants. When neighboring plants are present and the goldenrod is eaten by beetles, the plant grows faster in an effort to survive the herbivores, but it also starts producing defensive compounds that help the plant fight off the pests. When there are no neighbors, the plant does not accelerate its growth when eaten, and its chemical response to herbivores is significantly different, but it still survives a significantly higher amount of herbivores.
“This fits within our definition of intelligence,” Kessler says, “where plants change their standard behavior in response to information they receive from the environment.”
Neighboring goldenrods also display their intelligence when they detect volatile organic compounds that signal the presence of pests. “Volatile organic compounds emitted by neighboring plants are predictors of future herbivores,” Kessler says. “The plants can use cues from the environment to predict future conditions and act accordingly.”
Kessler said applying the concept of intelligence to plants could generate new hypotheses about the mechanisms and functions of plant chemical communication, while also changing people’s ideas about what intelligence actually means.
The latter idea is timely. artificial intelligence is a topic of current interest. For example, artificial intelligence, at least for now, is not goal-directed or problem-solving. “Artificial intelligence is not even intelligent by our definition of intelligence,” he said. Artificial intelligence is based on patterns it identifies from the information it has access to.
The idea that intrigued Kessler comes from mathematicians in the 1920s who proposed that plants might work like a beehive, where each cell acts like an individual bee and the plant as a whole resembles a beehive.
“What that means is that the plant brain doesn’t need central coordination, it’s plant-wide,” Kessler said.
Instead of electrical signals, chemical signals travel throughout the superorganism, and work by other researchers has shown that every plant cell is equipped with broad-spectrum light recognition and sensory molecules to detect very specific volatile compounds emanating from neighboring plants.
“They can sniff out their environment with great precision – as far as we know, all cells can do that,” he said. The cells may be specialized, but they all sense the same things, communicate via chemical signals, and trigger collective responses in growth and metabolism. “That idea is very fascinating to me,” he said.
Reference: “Induced Herbivore Resistance and Intelligent Plants” by Andre Kessler and Michael B. Mueller, April 30, 2024, Plant signaling and behavior.
Translation: 10.1080/15592324.2024.2345985
This paper was supported by a grant from the New Phytologist Fund.