Ivy makes nanoparticlesIvy plants secrete nanoparticles that help them to climb walls, scientists have discovered. The evergreen plants cling onto surfaces using tiny rootlets that spring out from their stems which are very tough to prise off. On the microscopic scale these rootlets end in fingers or disks, hundreds of micrometres long. And as Charles Darwin first reported in 1876 in his monograph Movements and habits of climbing plants: “the rootlets of the Ivy, placed against glass ... secrete a little yellowish matter”.
But what this substance is, and how it helps ivy to climb, has remained unclear since Darwin's time. Mingjun Zhang of the University of Tennessee and colleagues grew Boston ivy on silicon and mica wafers, and analysed its secretions with atomic force microscopy. They found very uniform particles, 70nm across.
6th Apr 2008 |
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