Shut up! A thunderstorm’s on the way
By Susan Milius
For the first time, biologists have shown that a flower pinches shut during thunderstorms, shielding its reproductive parts from pounding, drowning rain.
Despite their reputation as a stick-in-the-mud, most plant species can move some part of their anatomy, explains William K. Smith of Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, N.C. However, little research has focused on movements of blooms themselves.
Lab experiments in the 1930s showed that flowers of the narrow-leafed gentian, Gentiana algida, close when temperatures drop. A native of high-mountain and northerly zones in North America and Asia, the gentian’s small, tubular flowers typically open in threesomes, sticking upright from tufts of leaves. Smith decided to take a closer look at the plant at the behest of a long-time hiker in the Rocky Mountains who suspected that gentian blooms close during summer thunderstorms.