We are about to understand the language of trees.

Science has confirmed that plants can communicate, but understanding what they say is incredibly interesting.

Scientists say we will soon be able to translate the language of plants . You might think that plants are passive objects that simply live, but in fact plants are living organisms that communicate with each other.

What's particularly interesting is that plant communication systems are much more complex than we thought.

Scientists believe that trees communicate with each other using systems that are both balanced and sensitive to the world around them. But because of this, these systems can be easily disrupted, much like cloud networks in information technology, disruptions can be difficult for users.

Recently, researchers discovered that plant communication systems can send different electrical signals through their root systems, and the receiving plant will translate to understand those messages.

With recent advances in research, we will soon understand what plants communicate to each other.

Picture 1 of We are about to understand the language of trees.
Understanding how plants communicate could be useful in research to combat climate change. (Photo: ballllad/Adobe).

Next, scientists will insert electrical probes into the root systems of several plant species to record their communication signals . They will test how these signals change as they travel through the entire plant as environmental conditions change.

With such in-depth experiments, scientists hope we will soon be able to translate the entire language that plants use when they talk to each other. This will be especially useful for research aimed at protecting plants in the fight against climate change.