Thursday, 9 June 2011
Carnivorous bladderworts
Utricularia are carnivorous plants and capture small organisms by means of bladder-like traps.
High-speed cameras give scientists the chance to see carnivorous bladderworts suck in their prey — all in about half a millisecond.
Credit: Interdisciplinary Physics Lab/CNRS and Joseph Fourier University, Plant Biomechanics Group/University of Freiburg
High-speed cameras give scientists the chance to see carnivorous bladderworts suck in their prey — all in about half a millisecond.
Credit: Interdisciplinary Physics Lab/CNRS and Joseph Fourier University, Plant Biomechanics Group/University of Freiburg
Labels:
Biomimetics,
Carnivorous plant,
Video
Wednesday, 8 June 2011
Sunday, 5 June 2011
How computer science meets plant world
It is interesting to see how biologist and computer scientists share their expertise to study the complex world of the early responses of higher plants to abiotic stresses such as drought, flooding, heat, cold, ozone, and salt.
The key to understanding the stress responses is signal transduction pathways, and the way researchers of the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech are addressing the problem is quite unusual:
They will archive signaling pathways for abiotic stress responses in a database, ”Beacon", a new systems biology tool that allows the plant biologist to construct and edit signaling pathways. With this information, it will be possible to integrate current and future data over multiple scales of a cell’s organization and across species.
Let's wait and see how things will go!
http://www.eng.vt.edu/news/plant-biology-meets-computational-wizardry
Labels:
Plant physiology
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