How Do Trees Talk to Each Other?

Imagine a tree as a big house with roots that go deep into the ground. These roots are like straw tubes. But wait! Tiny fungi stick to these straws and connect one tree to another.

The Fungal Helpers

These fungi are called mycorrhizae. They act like wires in your home. When one tree has too much sugar from sunlight, it sends some down the roots to a neighbor that is hiding under shade. It is like sharing your apple with a friend.

Why Do They Do It?

Trees also send messages through these wires. If a bug starts eating leaves on Tree A, it can send an alarm signal through the fungi to Tree B. Tree B then makes its leaves taste yucky before the bug gets there. This helps the whole forest stay safe and fed.

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Examples

  1. A big oak tree sends sugar through its roots to a tiny maple sapling hiding under the shade.
  2. When caterpillars eat an apple leaf, the tree whispers a warning to neighboring trees so they can make their leaves taste bad.
  3. Underground fungi connect a whole forest like wires in a house, letting trees share water during a dry summer.

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