Food & Drink0 min ago
the tree died at 4 pm...
Alright folks, I know I'm going to get seriously mocked on this one, but I'll ask anyway. When a human being dies, or an animal, it's possible to call the time of death. Would it also be possible, hypothetically, to call the time of death for a tree or a plant? Now I do know about the nervous system, brain death, the human circulatory system, etcetera, so you don't really have to educate me at that level. Still, a tree does go from being alive to being dead, and even if it's a withering process, there has to be some kind of point of no return - whether you call it death or just that: Point of no return.
If you say no, do motivate your opinion!
I'll eagerly watch for your answers, but I'm afraid it may be a long time before I can thank you. I have huge signing-in problems from 'my' public computers and have to go to the other end of Stockholm to find a cooperative one... if I'm lucky.
Go ahead, friends. Have a field day.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.DaSwede, bless her (i'm assuming it's a her on the gravity of the question)yet another case of letting the monkey grind the organ.
though in this case, it seems more mission impossible.
even spacechimps unimpressed with that question,lol.
Have a field day?you havin a laff?
your not a psychologist trying to avoid buying a few books by any chance are you?if you are post me your email addy(AB allows now)cos i need some cheap treatment.
I don't know about determining the time of death on the small time scale that you are concerned with, but radio carbon dating can be used to determine the time of death of a tree or plant (or any living thing) on a much larger time scale (hundreds to thounsands of years). The criteria for time of death is when the organism no longer participates in the carbon cycle. This link will tell you more about radio carbon dating.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dating
Thanks for your answers and for thinking along with me! rosyrussell, I think there actually already is research proving that plants have at least reactions, which may be what we call feelings. There was one experiment where the scientist walked about in a room with a scissors and did bad things to some of the plants... whereupon their brethren reacted by 'screaming' (electrodes of some sort) when the scientist began to approach them.
mibn2cweus, your alias is tough to write you know, so I'm trying to decode it... "Am i being too serious"? Or some other word instead of 'serious'?
newtron, as you say that wasn't exactly what I asked, but radiocarbon dating is an interesting subject, so that's a good page, thanks!
Bye for now - I'm being logged out (at the library.)