Over the course of the year, there have been a few attempts by our biology classes to grow plants within our crowded classroom. First we worked with fast plants, which grew extremely quickly as the name suggests, then pansies, and we have now moved on to plant an assortment of morning glories and moonflowers. As the morning glories and moonflowers are beginning to develop however, it is plain to see that as their stems shoot up they don’t grow straight, but in a curved line. What is especially fascinating about this pattern of growth is that although the other plants we have grown were placed in similar conditions, except those being used in experimental groups, none of the other groups of plants seemed to have such an intense tendency to slant as they matured. The fast plants we grew did tilt slightly, but not to the same degree as the morning glories and moonflowers being grown now. Below are two images, on the left are fast plants and on the right are some of our moonflowers and morning glories:
Fast Plants Moonflowers and Morning Glories
All of these questions can be overwhelming, but it is the nature of scientists to be curious and pose questions from their observations. As Albert Einstein once said "The important thing is to not stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existence." If scientists were not able to formulate questions and quandaries from the information they gathered, then no new theories or hypothesis would ever arise, and there would be no need for experiments to support or disprove new ideas. Essentially, science would not exist as it does today because there would be a halt in the flow of ideas and experimentation. Scientific discoveries would stop. And although so many unknowns is a lot to process and analyze, forcing oneself to answer them allows a person to realize details that they might have otherwise overlooked. In the case of explaining the phototropism in the morning glories and moonflowers for example, after asking all of these questions I remembered that the grow lights were lower when the fast plants were growing, which could account for the fast plants not having as extreme of a slant. Moonflowers and morning glories also grow on vines, which means that the slant the plants have exhibited thus far could represent the tendency vines have to bend and twist.
Hopefully more investigation will be able to yield a definitive answer to the cause of phototropism in our plants before the end of the year, but whatever the cause it is remarkable that we are able to see some of the information we learned about in our biology class develop on its own before our eyes.
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