plants falling asleep

White Oxalis purpurea closing up for the evening

White Oxalis pur­purea clos­ing up for the evening.

Detail of white Oxalis pur­purea think­ing about some shut-eye.

Purple-leaved Oxalis pur­purea clos­ing up in the late after­noon shade.

A lot of the flow­er­ing plants in the gar­den don’t bother open­ing their petals until the sun’s up and then shut their flow­ers as soon as the light begins to fade and tem­per­a­tures drop in the after­noon. Over the week­end I was notic­ing this going on with my oxalis plants and, less dra­mat­i­cally, with my arctotis.

There must be a name for this behav­ior, I thought, and so off I went look­ing for an answer. Before long up pop three inter­est­ing words: pho­tonasty, ther­monasty and nycti­nasty.

Accord­ing to one of the sources, the Text­book of Botany by Chhat­wal and Singh, pho­tonasty hap­pens when a plant senses light and reacts to it by open­ing or clos­ing its flow­ers. Because of this, morn­ing glo­ries open in the…well, morn­ing. Then there’s ther­monasty, where flow­ers react pri­mar­ily to tem­per­a­ture. Tulips will open with a rise of 2–3 degrees Cel­sius, while a cro­cus will zip open when the tem­per­a­ture rises just a half degree.

And then there’s the more com­plex phe­nom­e­non of nycti­nasty, which “is influ­enced by the inten­sity of light and also tem­per­a­ture dif­fer­en­tials, the for­mer stim­u­lus being more pow­er­ful and effec­tive. The foliage leaves and also the flo­ral leaves in many species of plants…attain dif­fer­ent posi­tions at day time and at night viz dur­ing the day, the leaflets remain open or spread up in case of Oxalis, clever beans, alfalfa, etc., while by the onset of dark­ness they close down. This is also known as sleep movement.”

Yes­ter­day after­noon was pretty bright, but cool. The oxalis barely opened before shut­ting back up. So it requires both heat and warmth to open fully. So nycti­nasty makes sense. The arc­to­tis seemed to open more fully, ear­lier in the day. My guess is that they respond more sim­ply, mainly to light, which would mean that they exhibit pho­tonasty. (What’s truly going on could be lots more com­plex than this and really might only be solved by exper­i­men­ta­tion, a point made in an arti­cle, “Flower open­ing and clo­sure: a review” by Wouter G. van Doorn and Uulke van Meeteren in the Jour­nal of Exper­i­men­tal Botany. Read the inter­est­ing text [ here ].)

Next I need to find out what “clever beans” are.

In my web trawl it turns out I’m not the only gar­den blog­ger look­ing at this phe­nom­e­non this week. Tilthy Rich took a quick spin around nycti­nasty [ here ]. Maybe he has the same plants bloom­ing, mak­ing him ask the same questions…

Flow­ers of Arc­to­tis acaulis ‘Big Magenta’ begin­ning to fold up for the night.

Another clone of Arto­tis acaulis clos­ing up in the after­noon: Pho­tonasty? Ther­monasty? Nyctinasty?


February 08 2010 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 13 Comments »

my first wordless wednesday: in macro

[ African daisy (Arc­to­tis x ‘Magenta’), cur­rently in bloom… ]

Arctotis macro
Arctotis x'Magenta' macro closeup

February 04 2009 | Categories: gardeningmy gardenphotography | Tags: | 4 Comments »