Uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber

<p>Rapid movement is rare in the plant kingdom, but a prerequisite for ballistic seed dispersal. A particularly dramatic example of rapid motion in plants is the squirting cucumber (<em>Ecballium elaterium</em>) which launches its seeds explosively via a high-pressure jet. Despite...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Box, F, Moulton, DE, Vella, D, Lowe, T, Goriely, A, Thorogood, C, Bhagotra, Y
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: National Academy of Sciences 2024
_version_ 1826316895383453696
author Box, F
Moulton, DE
Vella, D
Lowe, T
Goriely, A
Thorogood, C
Bhagotra, Y
author_facet Box, F
Moulton, DE
Vella, D
Lowe, T
Goriely, A
Thorogood, C
Bhagotra, Y
author_sort Box, F
collection OXFORD
description <p>Rapid movement is rare in the plant kingdom, but a prerequisite for ballistic seed dispersal. A particularly dramatic example of rapid motion in plants is the squirting cucumber (<em>Ecballium elaterium</em>) which launches its seeds explosively via a high-pressure jet. Despite intriguing scientists for centuries, the exact mechanism of seed dispersal and its effect on subsequent generations remain poorly understood. Here, through a combination of experimentation, high-speed videography, quantitative image analysis, and mathematical modeling, we develop a full mechanical description of the process. We quantify the turgor pressure driving ballistic ejection, and uncover key mechanical interactions between the fruit and stem both prior to and during seed ejection, including the unique feature that fluid is redistributed from fruit to stem prior to ejection, a developmental event that goes against the paradigm of rapid seed ejection but which is of key importance in successful dispersal for&nbsp;<em>Ecballium</em>. Combining modeling elements, we quantify and simulate the ballistic trajectories of seeds, which are dispersed over distances greater than 2,000 times their length. We demonstrate how together these mechanical features contribute to a nearly uniform distribution of seeds away from the parent plant. Parametric variation of key developmental events in the modeling framework indicates how a suite of adaptive features in combination drives the spatial distribution of offspring over consecutive generations, and suggests that ballistic seed dispersal has a stabilizing effect on population dynamics by reducing intraspecific competition.</p>
first_indexed 2024-12-09T03:16:54Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:7e63fb49-7fda-4295-8a6b-71fa7c69efd4
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2025-02-19T04:30:06Z
publishDate 2024
publisher National Academy of Sciences
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:7e63fb49-7fda-4295-8a6b-71fa7c69efd42024-12-19T08:15:58ZUncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumberJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7e63fb49-7fda-4295-8a6b-71fa7c69efd4EnglishSymplectic ElementsNational Academy of Sciences2024Box, FMoulton, DEVella, DLowe, TGoriely, AThorogood, CBhagotra, Y<p>Rapid movement is rare in the plant kingdom, but a prerequisite for ballistic seed dispersal. A particularly dramatic example of rapid motion in plants is the squirting cucumber (<em>Ecballium elaterium</em>) which launches its seeds explosively via a high-pressure jet. Despite intriguing scientists for centuries, the exact mechanism of seed dispersal and its effect on subsequent generations remain poorly understood. Here, through a combination of experimentation, high-speed videography, quantitative image analysis, and mathematical modeling, we develop a full mechanical description of the process. We quantify the turgor pressure driving ballistic ejection, and uncover key mechanical interactions between the fruit and stem both prior to and during seed ejection, including the unique feature that fluid is redistributed from fruit to stem prior to ejection, a developmental event that goes against the paradigm of rapid seed ejection but which is of key importance in successful dispersal for&nbsp;<em>Ecballium</em>. Combining modeling elements, we quantify and simulate the ballistic trajectories of seeds, which are dispersed over distances greater than 2,000 times their length. We demonstrate how together these mechanical features contribute to a nearly uniform distribution of seeds away from the parent plant. Parametric variation of key developmental events in the modeling framework indicates how a suite of adaptive features in combination drives the spatial distribution of offspring over consecutive generations, and suggests that ballistic seed dispersal has a stabilizing effect on population dynamics by reducing intraspecific competition.</p>
spellingShingle Box, F
Moulton, DE
Vella, D
Lowe, T
Goriely, A
Thorogood, C
Bhagotra, Y
Uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber
title Uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber
title_full Uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber
title_fullStr Uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber
title_full_unstemmed Uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber
title_short Uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber
title_sort uncovering the mechanical secrets of the squirting cucumber
work_keys_str_mv AT boxf uncoveringthemechanicalsecretsofthesquirtingcucumber
AT moultonde uncoveringthemechanicalsecretsofthesquirtingcucumber
AT vellad uncoveringthemechanicalsecretsofthesquirtingcucumber
AT lowet uncoveringthemechanicalsecretsofthesquirtingcucumber
AT gorielya uncoveringthemechanicalsecretsofthesquirtingcucumber
AT thorogoodc uncoveringthemechanicalsecretsofthesquirtingcucumber
AT bhagotray uncoveringthemechanicalsecretsofthesquirtingcucumber