Since the advent of Darwin, we have generally thought of trees as striving

Autor: Sarbajit Roy, Kumar, Rabindra, A, Romus, Vishal Kumar, Pandey, Shailendra Kumar, Purushotam Kumar, Sriijan Joseph Gomes, Kumar, Sudhir, Mishra, Deepshikha
Rok vydání: 2023
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7578384
Popis: Since the advent of Darwin, we have generally thought of trees as striving, isolated entities competing for water, nutrients and sunlight with the victor obliterating the losers. Many humans, especially those in the timber industry, view forests as wood - producing systems. At present, there is an emerging body of qualified scientific evidence that challenges the above idea. They provide proof that trees belonging to the same species are communal and frequently form alliances with other species. Forest trees have evolved to thrive in cooperative, interdependent relationships maintained by communication and a collective intelligence similar to an a colony of ants .We are fascinated by the arboreal splendor above the soil but the action, communicative whispers , which pertain to a language conveyed by networks resembling neural connections all occur below the soil. This paper investigates the process of entanglement in plants, as random light is transformed into entangled photons through Chaos and emerging Complexity and order. The role of entanglement in the production of electrical signals through the roots and fungal mycorrhizae for communication is analyzed. Furthermore, Chaos and order is investigated in the communication process which may produce a certain language for communication
Databáze: OpenAIRE