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LISTENING IN ON PLANT TALK.


Byline: Laura Beil Dallas Morning News

It may not be audible, but scientists have recently discovered that plants can signal one other to upcoming danger.

It seems that oil of wintergreen oil of wintergreen: see salicylic acid. , a volatile compound made by many plants, may act as an airborne signal that can alert the neighboring plant to activate genes that help give it resistance to disease.

Researchers from Rutgers University Rutgers University, main campus at New Brunswick, N.J.; land-grant and state supported; coeducational except for Douglass College; chartered 1766 as Queen's College, opened 1771. Campuses and Facilities


Rutgers maintains three campuses.
 in New Jersey inoculated a group of tobacco plants with tobacco mosaic virus tobacco mosaic virus
n.
A retrovirus that causes a disease in tobacco and some other plants and is widely used in the study of viruses and viral diseases.
 and discovered that the infected plants released an airborne form of oil of wintergreen. To figure out the role of the substance, the researchers incubated plants in airtight air·tight  
adj.
1. Impermeable by air.

2. Having no weak points; sound: an airtight excuse.


airtight
Adjective

1.
 chambers and pumped in the gaseous compound.

They discovered that the cells in the plants' leaves, after exposure to the gas, had developed some resistance to the virus. The oil of wintergreen had altered the genetic coding of the leaves.

The researchers then connected two airtight containers of plants; one contained infected plants and the other did not. After six days, the plants that shared only the same air with their infected brethren had developed resistance to the virus.

``To our knowledge,'' the scientists reported last month in the journal Nature, the wafting wintergreen wintergreen or checkerberry, low evergreen plant (Gaultheria procumbens) of the family Ericaceae (heath family), native to sandy and acid woods (usually of evergreens) of E North America and frequently cultivated.  ``is the first airborne signal to be shown to be involved in communication between infected and healthy plants.''
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:L.A. LIFE
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 11, 1997
Words:217
Previous Article:UNINVITED GUESTS HAVE ARRIVED ... : AND THEY'RE HUNGRY, SO BE ON LOOKOUT, SAY TERMITE EXPERTS.(L.A. LIFE)
Next Article:UP & COMING.(L.A. LIFE)



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