Roark: Have seeds will travel

Published 8:00 am Tuesday, September 24, 2024

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By Steve Roark

Contributing Writer

 

Plant life is absolutely lush in our part of the world.  If land is not paved or has a building on it, it usually has plants growing on it or trying to get a toe hold, which brings up the topic of how plants spread if they are literally rooted to the ground?  The answer is in seed design, and several ingenious mechanisms are used to allow plant embryos (seeds) to move away from the shadows of their mother plant. 

 

Seed dispersal can be divided into several broad categories, including wind, animal, propelled, and dropped.  Wind is known to all who have picked a mature dandelion seed head and blew on it to watch the little parachutes (each with a seed passenger) float off on the wind.  There are lots of plants that use wind for seed transportation:  milkweeds and thistle also use the parachute technique, and several use a single wing that spins around like a helicopter, used by maples, yellow poplar and ash. 

 

Animal transported seeds fall into two categories:  the clinging types are the sticky ones that attach themselves to fur or clothing.  I have cursed seeds like beggar lice, stick-tights, seed ticks, cocklebur, and others that cover your pant legs when walking in weedy places.  The other animal transport mechanism is bribery.  The plant produces a tasty fruit to entice an animal to eat it.  The enclosed seed passes through the gut of the animal unharmed and is pooped out somewhere away from the mother plant with fertilizer to boot.  

 

Propelled is where the seed has a mechanism that physically throws the seed away from the mother plant.  Touch-me-nots are a good example, having seed pods that are spring loaded, and when mature will explode and throw the seeds all over the place.  Witch-hazel, wisteria, and winter-cress all use this method.  

 

Gravity can probably be listed as a seed transport mechanism, and heavy round seeds like acorns, hickory nuts, and walnuts could drop off the tree and roll down the hill.  But with most of our nut seeds, another animal transporter more likely comes into play.  Squirrels eat many nuts, but also stockpile them for winter use, hiding them in the ground (referred to as caching) in various places.  Thankfully they don’t remember them all and some get to sprout and grow a new tree some distance away from the mother tree. Blue Jays and mice will also tuck seeds away for later use.

 

Observe seeds out in the wild and see if you can figure out the transportation method it uses.  They are further proof that in nature there is purpose in all things.