Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

'Friendly' plants become more diverse

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Nov, 2014 10:40 AM
    A study co-authored by Indian-origin scientist Anurag Agrawal has found that when plants develop mutually beneficial relationships with animals and insects, plant families become more diverse by evolving into more species over time.
     
    The researchers conducted a global analysis of all plant families, more than 100 of which have evolved sugary nectar-secreting glands that attract and feed protective creatures such as ants.
     
    "We found that plant groups with nectar glands contain greater numbers of species over time than groups without the glands," said Agrawal, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the Cornell University in the US.
     
    "By attracting bodyguards to plants, these glands can increase plant success in a variety of habitats by protecting them from local pests," added co-author Marjorie Weber from the University of California.
     
    This, in turn, may increase plant survival in remote places, decrease risk of extinction or both.
     
    When ants defend plants against pests, the plants may apply the energy and resources that would otherwise have been used to defend to the development of new traits, Agrawal said.
     
    These benefits may make such plants more successful at migrating to new places, where they can diversify into new species over time.
     
    The analysis was possible because of the DNA sequence data available for many plant species, Agrawal added in the study that appeared in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Favouritism in family linked to drug use

    Favouritism in family linked to drug use
    In families where love and support are generally scarce, even perceived favouritism may lead to use of alcohol, cigarettes or drugs by children, says a study...

    Favouritism in family linked to drug use

    Pterosaur Resembling 'Avatar' Creature Ikran Unearthed In China

    Pterosaur Resembling 'Avatar' Creature Ikran Unearthed In China
    Fossils of a 120 million-year-old winged reptile found in northeast China are gaining celebrity status for resemblance to the aerial creatures "Ikran" in James Cameron's movie "Avatar."

    Pterosaur Resembling 'Avatar' Creature Ikran Unearthed In China

    Get Ready! Facebook Set To Take On Youtube

    Get Ready! Facebook Set To Take On Youtube
    Get ready for a fierce content war between YouTube and Facebook. The social networking site is in talks with some of the biggest video content producers of YouTube to test videos directly on Facebook, media reported.

    Get Ready! Facebook Set To Take On Youtube

    Busted: Sex Toys Preferred By Men Too

    Busted: Sex Toys Preferred By Men Too
    It is a myth that most sex toys are bought by young, single women. In fact, sales of sex toys is split evenly between both the sexes, claims the world's biggest study of sex toy sales.

    Busted: Sex Toys Preferred By Men Too

    Sunshine linked to suicide risk

    Sunshine linked to suicide risk
    According to researchers from the Medical University of Vienna, sunshine is indeed linked to fatal self-harm, independent of the season....

    Sunshine linked to suicide risk

    People send most 'swear' tweets on Monday

    People send most 'swear' tweets on Monday
    According to British researchers, Monday evenings saw a particularly high percentage of tweets containing swear words that may be related to job pressure after...

    People send most 'swear' tweets on Monday