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One of the more under-appreciated and ingenious machines evolved by plants is the cavitation catapult of . If that sounds exciting and mysterious, that’s because it is.
This is a leptosporangium, where the fern makes its reproductive cells called spores:
ONF Fig 02 – Sporangium of Polypodium vulgare” by – Our Native Ferns and their Allies Edition 6, 1900. Licensed under Public Domain via .
You’ll notice this one has been broken open and some of the spores formed inside have fallen out. Note also the little striated ring around the upper right, called the “annulus”. It gives the spore capsules the appearance of wearing a .
Fern spores P1180804“. Licensed under via .
The narrator of this video, a co-author of describing the same findings, mentions that the catapult is launched by a phenomenon called that deserves a little more explanation. When bubbles of gas form spontaneously due to pressure changes in a liquid, that is cavitation. If you’ve watched a lot of submarine movies like me, you know that cavitation is a bad thing because a cavitating propeller makes noise that can give away your position to the Russkies. That’s the swift movement of the propeller blades produces very low water pressure along their edges, creating cavitation bubbles in poorly-designed propellers or propellers driven badly or too quickly. These bubbles collapse once the low-pressure zone passes and they experience normal ocean pressure. The stream of collapses produces noisy shock waves that can be picked up by passive sonar.
In plants, the water pressure usually reaches the low levels that can cause cavitation when plants are thirsty but there’s nothing to drink. In wilting or drought-stressed plants that can’t draw more water from the soil, this can cause big problems. As the water pressure reaches critically low levels inside the plant’s water-conducting vessel cells, they cavitate, forming bubbles in the cells that impede further flow of fluids. The cavitation inside trees .
The answer is viscosity. The paper explains the effect using a lesser-known relation called ““. The walls of the annulus are especially thick and spongy. Water moving through the walls as the annulus springs back is subject to a lot of . This drag is created by the difference in the speed of water moving next to walls (slow) and that moving farther away from them (faster), which induces internal friction in the water molecules moving at different speeds.
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