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This is my entry for the fortnightly topic challenge

In Day of the Triffids, many people go blind and the basic summary is this:

  • virulent plague makes most of humanity blind

  • giant, semi-intelligent plants take over.

In the world I am creating, humans have to face off with an intergalactic plant "empire" that has more advanced tech than we do. My question is this:

  • How could a sentient plant logically evolve and what are some key environmental and sociological factors that might come into play or dramatically impact the evolutionary process?

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    $\begingroup$ "I am Groot." -Groot $\endgroup$
    – KSmarts
    Commented Feb 23, 2015 at 20:10
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    $\begingroup$ As I recall, no plague - but looking at comets blinded people. $\endgroup$
    – user3082
    Commented Feb 23, 2015 at 20:34
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    $\begingroup$ This reminds me of this other question: Could plants develop intelligence? $\endgroup$
    – Sheraff
    Commented Feb 23, 2015 at 20:43
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    $\begingroup$ What do you consider to be a 'plant'? $\endgroup$
    – ckersch
    Commented Feb 23, 2015 at 20:45
  • $\begingroup$ Seconding ckersch. How narrowly are you defining this? Do they need to be mostly sessile, or are ents, Groot, the Green Man from The Book of the New Sun effectively plants for the purpose of this discussion? $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 23, 2015 at 23:19

7 Answers 7

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In order to develop 'sentience,' as well as things like technology and civilization, a plant first needs to have use for those things. Plants on Earth didn't really evolve in such a way as to need those things, so plants that developed sentience need to evolve in a very different manner.

What is a plant?

Let's start by defining a plant. Conceptually, a plant is an organism that produces its energy through photosynthesis. (More specifically, plants are everything in the kingdom 'Plantae,' which evolved and lived on Earth, so our organisms are actually plant-like aliens, but that's a semantic quibble.) Most plants derive all of their nutrients from their soil, as well, though some carnivorous plants eat animals to supplement this. Even carnivorous plants, though, don't have an energy-producing metabolism. Animals can provide nutrients, but all energy comes from the sun.

What does a plant need for sentience?

So what does a plant need to do to become sentient? Well, if we assume that plant sentience is similar to human sentience, we'll need to do the following:

  • Have a language capable of abstract communication
  • Have a brain that can store a sense of self
  • Manipulate their environment

We'll also probably need better developed sensory organs in order to perceive the environment.

How could this evolve?

All of this is tough for a stationary plant to evolve on its limited supply of energy, but what if the plant isn't always stationary? What if large plants are the mature form of the species, producing nutrients to feed smaller mobile plants that can clear out competing plants as well as traveling away from the central plant to kill animals for fertilizer?

These creatures would be the 'seed' form of the plant as well. They'd have a large internal reservoir of pure glucose, but no digestive system. They would grow and mature while helping farm their parent plant. When they became too large to efficiently perform their tasks, they'd wander to the edge of their parent grove and root into the ground, growing into another stationary mature plant.

These creatures would be the vector for evolution in the plants. They'd probably start out as simple, flagellar organisms that would writhe around the base of the plant, damaging competitors and wriggling off to find an ideal place to grow. Evolution would extend their motile lives and improve their ability to move around and manipulate their environments, providing their parent plants with a competitive advantage over the other plants in the region. They'd develop brains and nervous systems as part of this, but probably only after developing a method for gaining nourishment from their parents, since brains and nerves are energetically expensive things.

The trees, too, would probably begin to take on some traits of their animal children. A brain, probably rudimentary at first, would develop, as well as some nerves. These would aid the tree in signaling to its children what they need to do. Pheromones would probably be used to start, but eventually, a deeper level of communication could be developed that would allow the intelligent sessile parents to 'program' their dull, but motile, children.

Multiple trunks, one mind

On earth, trees form anastomosis between their roots, allowing them to provide each other with structural support and nutrients. For the aliens, these could also allow individual mature trees to combine into a single larger organism.

Since a tree, based on the limited energy it has available through photosynthesis, can't maintain a large brain on its own, combining multiple trunks together into a single organism that thinks as one would allow intelligence to reach levels that we would consider 'sentient'. Each colony of trees would be a single 'individual', with new mobile seed children produced by that colony acting to grow their parent colony. A colony would not necessarily need to be genetically homogeneous, though. If seed children are produced through pollination, pollen blowing on the wind currents would enable seed children to be born with genes from other colonies, or from multiple stalks in a colony that is not genetically homogeneous.

Controlled evolution

The fact that a single tree colony would be effectively immortal and would possess many different genes would also lead to another really cool fact about these aliens: by using their seed bodies to selectively pollinate their own flowers, they could guide their own evolution. They'd be able to see what the mind of each new stalk they grew was, and choose to plant only seed children that would give them powerful new children and healthy minds.

Different stalk types could also give rise to different kinds of children. Some strains of tree could be selectively bred for producing warrior children, for example, that were stronger and better suited for fighting than their brethren, but less energy efficient. Others could produce workers with dexterous hands, capable of building and manipulating tools.

Finally: sentience

This selective differentiation of workers would allow the plants to become 'sentient'. They'd grow dull workers, which would produce tools and weapons for warriors to use in battle. Diplomats, with powerful brains that would allow them to act intelligently when disconnected from their parents could be used to allow distant colonies of trees to communicate with one another, though they'd still be dwarfed in terms of intelligence by their parent colonies. Different colonies could forge civilizations together, banding together for mutual defense and aggression. New colonies could be started by sending a child to root outside of the bounds of a colony, allowing the aliens to develop broad alliances and nations of colonies related to one another. Swords, axes, and cannons would be forged for war, but their most potent tool would remain a deep and intuitive knowledge of genetics bio-engineering born from countless generations of directing their own evolution. They would be a fascinating, and sentient, a race of aliens.

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  • $\begingroup$ I was wondering if multiple trunks could form on sentient organism - kind of like moss or some types of ash trees. Great answer! $\endgroup$
    – Josiah
    Commented Feb 24, 2015 at 18:34
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    $\begingroup$ I think that the most potent tool that they have for war would actually be just plain fire... $\endgroup$
    – Mermaker
    Commented Mar 4, 2015 at 20:54
  • $\begingroup$ @ThalesPereira Although that tends to escalate quickly, and is hard to control. $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 23, 2016 at 0:42
  • $\begingroup$ @T.Sar Fire would probably be banned due to Mutually Assured Destruction. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 10, 2019 at 10:23
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Plants store their brains (short term memory, immune memory and transgenerational memory) in their roots, and they communicate via airborne emissions (and root-talking).

Btw, plants have a large number of senses already. They can hear, can see, smell, and a large number of other senses (gravity), motion, etc, etc.

Being root-bound (or having a sessile life style), really limits their mobility.

But. they're really good at biochem. Maybe they make/co-opt insects to do the physical fast work, and are the brains of the operation?

As to needs, they're going to have to compete; most likely with an animal race - as plants tend to work together. They will probably be after our sunlight.

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    $\begingroup$ I like the idea of using insects to do fast work (maybe they already are...) $\endgroup$
    – Josiah
    Commented Feb 24, 2015 at 0:18
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    $\begingroup$ Also, given one way of looking at it, maybe we already are plants' fast workers. We eliminate plant diseases, help them procreate (corn), eliminate herbivores from eating them, put out fires... $\endgroup$
    – user3082
    Commented Feb 24, 2015 at 9:18
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    $\begingroup$ Plants compete with each other for sunlight all the time. Just look at any rainforest. $\endgroup$
    – March Ho
    Commented Feb 24, 2015 at 10:38
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My starting place was to determine what made a sentient plant different from an animal (maybe I'm dense? Took me a while). Here's a starting place for differences between the two. http://www.mcwdn.org/Plants/PlantsDiffer.html

Basically:

A. Plants don't move
B. Plants make their own food
C. Plants give off oxygen and take in CO2
D. Plant cells have cell walls and other "planty" structures
E. Plants have only basic abilities to sense

Of course, I can think of exceptions, for example, some carnivorous plants don't make their own food, can move, and can sense objects pretty well.

Because they're sentient, they need to be able to interact with their environment (smart, paralyzed races don't seem likely to last, and are unlikely to be intergalactic), so A and E are out. So let's say that to make a plant, we'll need them to make their own food from the sun, and they need planty-parts in their cells, viz. chloroplasts to make food and cell walls.

So they're going to be a lot more animal-like than some animals, but with ability to make their own food.

Plants (along with...pretty much any other life form) have 3 major needs:

  1. Reproduction
  2. Food
  3. Water

Reproduction: Most plants reproduce using insects to transfer vital bits of DNA (trying not to be too graphic). Much of the plant's structure is devoted to this - in fact, anything that isn't root or leaf is probably connected to reproduction. So fruits, flowers, sugar-filled-liquid-producing organs, and bright colors would probably cease to exist if plants had a different way of reproducing.

Food: Plants can mostly make their own food. But to do this, they need periods of sun and darkness. Also water, CO2, and O2, if my memory serves correctly. You'll also need a pretty large amount of sun-facing surface. The nice thing with a plant is that mostly they need to make sugar, so carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen are pretty much all they need to function nicely. For repairs, they will need other elements, but these are largely gotten from soil and seem to be widely available. So making food isn't a problem, but storing food could be. Your plant-people will need some type of "camel hump" for sugars. Many plants use roots for this.

Water: Plants need a pretty steady supply of water. This seems to be the biggest problem preventing plants from moving - traditionally, a massive root system ensures a steady water supply. Trouble is, massive root systems are hard to move.

Plant Society

I'm going to keep my imaginary Plantains pretty "planty." Of course, if you want to slap some chloroplasts on an animal, I'm cool with that. But then, it wouldn't really be flora would it?

I can see two possible primitive plant societies. Later histories could be extrapolated from these initial points.

  1. Plant Nomads. A group of (probably) small sentient plants with minimal root systems that move around, following water sources and rainy seasons.

  2. Stationary Plant Societies. Plants develop a way to pass along knowledge to seeds and send them out, much like coral polyps, to establish new colonies. The older plants would be stationary once their roots developed. Some motion might be possible by selective growth and allowing parts to die. But that would be on a months-to-centuries timescale.

In either case, I can think of a few interesting features of such a society:

No family units. Since plants have almost no control over breeding, there wouldn't be families. Sexual prohibitions would not exist, generation differences would not be nearly as obvious. Genders roles would be more balanced. Mixed races could be an interesting social problem (half-sentient plants?), though many plant combinations can't produce viable offspring.

Relationships. Inter-plantain-ial relationships could get interesting. "Hermit" plants by choice would probably be rare, but once you're in a group, you're pretty stuck. Plants would have great emphasis on applied psychology and conflict resolution skills.

Reduced desire for exploration. Because plants need water, huge swaths of the world would remain unexplored, at least until specially engineered plants with water-carrying abilities could explore rockier/less rainy areas. Maybe this wouldn't become a cultural norm, but it would be the initial mindset.

So what would plants do? Plants really wouldn't have the "survival struggle" animals have. Food production is pretty passive. There would be a high emphasis on proper shelter (windbreaks, erosion prevention, temperature stabilization). Aesthetics would be important. Lots of thinking would occur, so plants would focus on philosophy before applied sciences. "Thought is cheap, action is expensive" would probably become a mantra.

No need-based economy. Because food is free, and necessities are minimal, the focus wouldn't be on needs as much as on services (like a doctor for when you get buried in a landslide). Maybe plants are the perfect candidates for a communist system.

Honestly, I don't see anything that can fly a spaceship being very plant-like. That's probably just the limits of my imagination, but a plant's sheer mass-to-movement ratio seems to preclude the rapid responses needed to develop early flight.

But, they'd be tough to beat. Once they came to a new world, seeding it could be done easily, and from a high altitude. And plants are notoriously tough to kill. Especially since they have the advantage of cell walls and the ability to regenerate from small pieces.

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An analogy to fern's "alternation of generations" is possible. This is how it works on Earth: Ferns disperse spores, which grow independently into a prothallus, the active reproductive part (Gametophyte). The prothallus is fertilized (hopefully by a prothallus from another plant), and yields a new plant - the sporophyte, the one we know as the fern we encounter at the nursery.

In your sci-fi model, the gametophyte, may be a motile animal-like creature. This allows it to wander and search for mates. Once it mates, it forms the "seed" to a new plant which will grow and make new gametophytes. Now is the fun part: which one is more long-lived, the motile gametophyte, or the tree-like sporophyte? If the gametophyte lives long enough, it may become more andvanced and sentient.

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    $\begingroup$ But why would it get sentient? What evolutionary pressure? $\endgroup$
    – Mołot
    Commented Aug 3, 2017 at 9:45
  • $\begingroup$ To clarify my last sentence: longevity all by itself does not guarantee a creature will evolve into a "sentient". I just meant it is an important prerequisite in the evolutionary process towards sentience. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 4, 2017 at 9:40
  • $\begingroup$ Cephalopods are quite intelligent and relatively short lived, you know... $\endgroup$
    – Mołot
    Commented Aug 4, 2017 at 9:54
  • $\begingroup$ Cephalopods are quite intelligent indeed, but a species having its own culture and the equivalent of a stone-age civilization is one thing, while having a high-teck civilization is another thing. If humans lived, suppose, up to 20 years, would we have time to make breakthrough researches? I find it hard to go much beyond college. You may need an outstandingly high intelligence and learning ability to make-up for such a deficit. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 6, 2017 at 7:29
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The Biology Part

It appears that plants already do appear to communicate with each other and with animals, just not on the timescale of animals, and mostly via hormones. That being said, for something without a brain or muscle fiber, plants can react rather quickly. Acacia Trees, for instance, are known to react very quickly to grazers, producing a hormone which not only triggers tannin production in that plant, but in other nearby trees as well. Venus Flytraps, as another example, are quick enough to catch flies and other insects.

Anyways, the plants in question will need reason to be faster than they currently are. Are they predatory? That seems to be the reason why venus flytraps can act so quickly. Are there herbivores? Maybe they have something also slow moving that they're trying to avoid, so they develop defenses which act more and more quickly.

What about developing intelligence? Increasing Plant Perception will play a role in this. The developing intelligence, though, would require some sort of evolutionary pressure to do so. It could easily go hand-in-hand with dealing with predation or prey capture.

I would start by looking at a book and some articles. Specifically, the Communication of Plants and the academic article Rapid Changes in Tree Leaf Chemistry Induced by Damage: Evidence for Communication Between Plants to see evidence on how plants currently communicate, and if you can call any of those communications intelligence.

The Social Part

This depends on the structure of plants, and how detailed their communications could be. I imagine being intelligent and sessile while having others around you who are also intelligent and sessile would greatly influence the social-psychological environment of these plants. Specifically, I would think that you would go to great lengths to be polite, as there is no way to remove yourself from an unpleasant situation.

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In nature there are already quite a few plants with motility, albeit not while rooted. Seeds are the most common example and they might as well adapt to float and roll as an energy efficient way of travel. The Mimosa pudica (shy plant) can close its leaves as a response to touch. This can become a survival mechanism, plants retract underground to avoid herbivores. The Helianthus (sunflower) bends its stalk to follow the sun. This is also quite the efficient mechanism as leaves would take more complex shapes (like frills for example) and stare at the sun. The Drosera (sundew) wraps around insects that fell prey to it. There's also the bush you see in westerns the tumble weed that rolls with the wind to spread its seeds.

For intelligence an ant sized brain is already quite powerful and I imagine that depending on the plants size, bigger or more numerous brains could become a possibility. Now I also want to point out something that most people forget: brains are more expensive than muscles! You can fix this in multiple ways.

  1. Slow movement. A plant races "muscles" would be hydraulic, compartments filling themselves with water to bend the plant. It's not that uncommon, jumping spiders use this as well.

  2. Sleep. How long does the plant stay inert before recharging? That would mean that they need protection from their comrades during their sleep or it could just mean that they rest during the day and start moving at night.

  3. A type of hive-mind or shared intelligence. More trees connected to each other would form an impressive super organism. Each individual would provide their share of intelligence to the community.

For motility the seedlings are by far the best bet. They can grow in grapes and when ready will feather fall on the ground and start rolling. Why rolling? Limbs are expensive and likely won't develop on a first try. So rolling despite being a rudimentary way of locomotion is quite viable. Seedlings can have tiny arms on their surface which they use to move around and grab objects. They can even have thorns for defense. Just imagine for a moment an armada of these roley-poleys chasing you for pulling a weed.

An issue with these seedlings is resupplying their energy. Seeds normally have some energy stored within to germinate, but these seeds fulfill labor roles for the colony. Do they link up with the adult trees to feed? Do some seeds stay immature to continue working? Up to you.

The adult trees could still retain some motility. For example in extreme cases when they need to relocate they could retract their leaves and form a ball around themselves with their roots and branches and start rolling. As for their senses I believe that omnidirectional antennae is the way to go. After all plants have an up and down but no front and back. Long tendrils tipped with sensors would probe the trees surroundings. Given that they roll this would also be logical. They could have sight, smell and hearing, just like we do.

Reproduction is everyone's favorite subject. A colony of sentient plants would still need flowers for reproduction, even if they no longer need pollinators. Now notice that because plants are motile and thusly no longer require assistance from pollinators does not mean that flowers will disappear altogether. In fact it will change the flowers purpose. I'm talking about mating rituals. This can be a major cultural aspect of the plants lives.

Consider the following: above the treetops beautiful flowers emerge, each with their own quirks and personalities. Suddenly they dance to express themselves and display with their petals their health and genetic traits. Using this ritual, the trees will choose their mates and select the traits they desire in their offspring. After this some flowers detach themselves, fly towards their mate and wither shortly after. On the receiving end the flower will also wither but form a grape of seedlings.

Technology is an interesting thing to talk about concerning these aliens. You want spacecrafts? Sure thing. Older trees that need to relocate could use such technology and thus the conquest of space can begin. Their ships would have thick isolating outer shells that are transparent but filter dangerous radiation. Plants are perfect for space travel. They make their own food using sunlight (plenty of stars in space), water (in the form of ice) and minerals (asteroids, comets and so on). On top of that they recycle waste. They live for a very long time. Because of this they could theoretically achieve space travel before humans, due to their ships being simpler.

If we take a hive-mind into consideration the accumulated knowledge would allow them to develop far faster than us because knowledge is shared no time is wasted on learning, they work in unison unlike people who are usually selfish and finally the colony lives forever so experience piles up. Clearly they surpassed us long ago.

As they are plants their knowledge of (self) agriculture and pharmaceutics would be far more developed than ours. They could grow natural materials better than us. Their wisdom would also surpass ours. The only real disadvantage is their slow movement.

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There have been a lot of interesting answers with far more research than what I'm willing to dedicate, but based off of those, here's my input:

Most of the answers highlight that you need some form of mobility to introduce a pressure to evolve intelligence / sentience. My first thought was to a plant that would live in different ecosystems, in phases.

Imagine a plant ressembling a water lily - living on the surface of a swamp / river / lake. This would be phase 1. After a while developing there, it "untethers" itself from the ground under the body of water it's been growing in and start floating off downstream, towards a waterfall. It falls off the edge of the waterfall, but its large leaf is wide enough to let it glide through the air instead of falling straight down. It land in a nearby plain and roots in down there. It can now grow taller because of the increased sunlight and space, and in a few seasons it will produce seeds that can float off in the wind, like a dandelion's. This is phase 2.

Then you can start playing with the plant's leaves during phase 1 to evolve into shapes, and give it sensory organs that can detect other plants of its species so it can guide itself away from big clumps to have more room for itself. The organism would progressively grow to be more and more complex, and might one day evolve into a flying sentient plant.

How cool would that be!?

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