Page 9 - Ninja Plants: Survival and Adaptation in the Plant World
P. 9

HOT STUFF


                   The term thermogenesis is derived from two Greek words: thermos (hot, or heat)
                   and genesis (origin, or creation). During thermogenesis, some living organisms
                   create the heat they need for survival. Humans, for example, shiver, forcing
                   their muscles to expend energy and create heat. In plants, thermogenesis has
                   different purposes. The dead horse arum generates heat to create the smell
                   that attracts pollinators. The skunk cabbage generates heat to warm up the
                   soil around it so that its seeds will sprout in the early spring.
                      The dwarf mistletoe is a parasitic plant that lives on the bark of lodgepole
                   pine trees in North America. As the mistletoe’s seeds mature, they heat
                   up. This heat causes the plant’s fruit to explode at speeds of 60 miles (97
                   kilometers) an hour, shooting seeds as far away as 30 feet (9 m). The flying
                   seeds are covered in a sticky substance that helps them adhere to lodgepole
                   pine needles. When rain falls, the seeds slide from a tree’s needles onto its
                   twigs, germinate, and set up root systems in the tree’s bark. A new dwarf
                   mistletoe then grows on the bark as a parasite of the tree. This system ensures
                   that the dwarf mistletoe species survives, although the plant eventually kills
                   the host trees. In the United States, the US Department of Agriculture is trying
                   to control the spread of dwarf mistletoe because of the damage it causes to
                   lodgepole pines.










                       Just because a plant smells disagreeable doesn’t mean the plant
                   is ugly or unappealing. In fact, some plants that smell disgusting
                   are quite attractive. If you were to stumble upon the white plume
                   grevillea (Grevillea leucopteris) in Australia, you might be distracted by
                   the beautiful yellow-white blooms of its flowers. But don’t be fooled.
                   Get close and you’ll discover that this wily shrub’s flowers smell
                   like dirty socks. In fact, the white plume grevillea’s nickname
                   is Old Socks. Maybe this plant would be more at home in your
                   school’s gymnasium.
                       Another smell-o-rific organism is one of the smallest. It is the
                   stinkhorn (family Phallaceae), which is common in tropical regions.



                                                    25
                                             P. U . , Y O U  S T I N K !
   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14