Imagine you're in the dark and someone taps your shoulder, you turn toward them. Plants do something similar, but they use special sensors to feel light and gravity. When a seed sprouts, it can tell which way is up by feeling gravity, and when it's growing, it turns toward the sunlight like a little sun-chaser. These sensors are called photoreceptors for light and statoliths for gravity.
Examples
- If you plant a seed upside down, it still grows up because it knows gravity is pulling it down.
Ask a question
See also
- How Do Birds Migrate So Far?
- What Causes Hiccups?
- How Can a Single Seed Grow into a Tree?
- Why Do People Have Different Shapes of Faces?
- Why Do We Blink?
Discussion
Recent activity
Categories: Biology · plant biology,growth mechanisms,sensory systems