plant-sensing
Plant sensing refers to the mechanisms by which plants detect and respond to environmental signals such as light, touch, gravity, temperature, and chemical cues. Understanding these sensory pathways is fundamental to plant science because they govern critical processes including growth orientation, stress responses, and adaptation to changing conditions. Research into plant sensing reveals how organisms without nervous systems can integrate complex environmental information to optimize survival and reproduction.
open_in_new WikipediaContinuous monitoring of plant water potential: sensor-based approa...
Knowing exactly when the tomatoes in your garden or the trees on your street are dangerously thir...
Advances in root phenotyping: high-throughput imaging, computationa...
The deeper a crop's roots grow, the longer your local farms can stay productive through the kind ...
Plant nanobionic sensors based on near-infrared fluorescent single-...
Sensors that whisper what a plant is feeling from the inside — before leaves wilt, before fruit d...