Plant behaviour and intelligence / Anthony Trewavas
- Author
- Trewavas, A. J.
- Published
- Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014.
- Physical Description
- 1 online resource (xii, 291 pages)
Access Online
- Oxford scholarship online: ezaccess.libraries.psu.edu
- Contents
- Machine generated contents note: 1.A feeling for the organism -- 2.Plant behaviour foundations -- 3.The origins of photosynthesis: what are the salient characteristics of living systems? -- 4.The origins of photosynthesis: the evolution of life and photosynthesis -- 5.Why did plants become multicellular? -- 6.Convergent evolution is common in plant systems -- 7.Are angiosperms more complex than mammals? -- 8.Plant behaviour: first intimations of self-organization -- 9.The varieties of plant behaviour -- 10.The self organizing plant: lessons from swarm intelligence -- 11.Self-organization: cambium as the integration assessor -- 12.Self-organizing capacity in leaf behaviour -- 13.Self-organization and behaviour in root systems -- 14.Self-organization in response to gravity -- 15.Signals other than gravity -- 16.Behavioural characteristics of seeds: elements of dormancy -- 17.Games plants play -- 18.Competition and cooperation between individual plants for mates and territory: the recognition of self -- 19.The nature of intelligent behaviour: cognition or adaptation? -- 20.Brains and nerve cells are not necessary for intelligent behaviour -- 21.Intelligent genomes -- 22.Cellular basis of intelligent behaviour -- 23.Cell organization and protein networks -- 24.Instinct, reflex, and conditioned behaviours: characteristics of plant behaviour? -- 25.Intelligence and consciousness -- 26.Intelligent foraging?.
- Summary
- This study takes as its theme the statement by the Nobel prize winning plant biologist, Barbara McClintock in 1984; 'A goal for the future would be to determine the extent of knowledge the cell has of itself and how it uses that knowledge in a thoughtful manner when challenged'. The response to 'challenge' is behaviour and 'thoughtful' responses are intelligent and inextricably linked to fitness. Cellular knowledge derives from the complex self-organising system that constructs the cell from its constituent molecules. This book fleshes out McClintock's superb insight into plant cells and organisms.
- Subject(s)
- ISBN
- 9780191788291 (ebook)
- Bibliography Note
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
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