My guess would be that plants are not energy-limited.

At the scale of a leaf on a tree in a forest, or a fiber in a tassel on a 
wheat-blade in a field, the delivery rate for wind energy is some tiny number — 
I won’t try to give it here, because I will surely get it wrong — in contrast 
to light-harvesting, which is capturing and trying to hang onto little hand 
grenades.  (The energy in any visible photon is about 10x the bond energy of 
the strongest C-C bonds, so just catching these things and not breaking the 
molecule is one of biology’s major innovations.)  So it may be that the 
complexity of using wind is large enough, and the reward for the energy any 
given mechanism might harvest small enough, that it just never takes.

One could go into a long harangue about the various evidences that plants are 
not energy-limited, just because they are a delightful enlightening window on 
the biology around us, but it doesn’t really add to the main point in the last 
paragraph (the way plants have moved everything onto sugar chemistry because 
they are nitrogen limited, the ways C4 plants concentrate carbonates because 
they are water-limited, or the fact that green is blue in NM because they 
already have more light than they can use at the water levels of high desert 
and mountains).

Interestingly, the chemical free energy that wind delivers by evaporating water 
and then moving it away from the leaf surface is probably larger than the 
mechanical energy of twirling the leaf, though again I should provide numbers 
if I want to make this guess.  Or maybe you are already right: that the 
twirling of the leaf is an evolved property somehow using the mechanical 
energy, and we just don’t know the literature well enough to know if this 
observation has been developed.

I know the above isn’t a great argument, as it is reasonable to harvest big 
energy packages to do big jobs, and small energy packages to do smaller jobs, 
within the same system.  But maybe (?) we would have to go outside energy as a 
simple currency to understand what is or what is not captured?  I do think your 
example of water pumping is a compelling one, since we know the problem is hard 
and plants need a solution, and we know from things like leg-contractions to 
pump blood in mammals, that other organisms capture mechanical energy sometimes 
when it is available. 

Eric


> On Jun 28, 2023, at 5:53 AM, <thompnicks...@gmail.com> 
> <thompnicks...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Thanks Glen,  
> I have no problem with agency in plants if you have no problem with agency in 
> humans.  Plants even have intentionality, meaning that a world can be 
> described relevant to a plant's needs, an umwelt, if you will.  I like 
> Barry's idea that trees are bad collectors energy, but why? Poplar leaves 
> twirl in the wind; at the nano-scopic level, there are all sorts of rotors 
> and turbines.  The poplar doesn't have to collect energy if it can focus it 
> locally, say on bud growth at the bud next to the leave stem.  
> 
> N
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of glen
> Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2023 1:29 PM
> To: friam@redfish.com
> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Trees as wind farms.
> 
> "make use of" imputes agency on the trees. A better way to phrase it would be 
> how/whether trees benefit from wind. But, if I'm a little more generous, 
> maybe you're asking if there are any transduction or energy storage 
> mechanisms triggered by the wind.
> 
> https://bsapubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3732/ajb.93.10.1466
> "Touch, wind, and wounding all induced increased lipoxygenase (LOX) mRNA 
> transcription in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) seedlings (Mauch et al., 1997). 
> The mechanical stress induced response occurred within 1 h after treatment, 
> and the amount of transcript was reported to be strongly dose-dependent. LOXs 
> are involved or implicated in a number of metabolic pathways associated with 
> plant growth and development, ABA biosynthesis, senescence, mobilization of 
> lipid reserves, wound responses, resistance to pathogens, formation of fatty 
> acid hydroperoxides, and synthesis of jasmonic acid and traumatic acid (for 
> review, see Mauch et al., 1997)."
> 
> Maybe?
> 
> On 6/27/23 09:19, Barry MacKichan wrote:
>> I would think the energy is too dispersed to be collectable. At risk of 
>> bending this infant thread … you reminded me of John Muir:
>> 
>> It has been said that trees are imperfect men, and seem to bemoan their 
>> imprisonment rooted in the ground. But they never seem so to me. I never saw 
>> a discontented tree. They grip the ground as though they liked it, and 
>> though fast rooted they travel about as far as we do. They go wandering 
>> forth in all directions with every wind, going and coming like ourselves, 
>> traveling with us around the sun two million miles a day, and through space 
>> heaven knows how fast and far!
>> 
>> —Barry
>> 
>> On 27 Jun 2023, at 11:38, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
>> 
>>    Sitting here at the farm, watching the Normandy poplars bend in the 
>> Southeast wind, I am led to wonder why trees don’t make use of wind energy. 
>> There must be a tangible amount of heat generated by the bending of 
>> branches. Is there no way to use that heat for, for instance, convection of 
>> fluids within the tree?
>> 
>>    Or do they? And I am just too ill educated to know it.
>>    Nick
> 
> 
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