Plants

Plants

Plants are one of the kingdoms of life, and they are everywhere, from the grass and flowers in our gardens, to the trees and shrubs of the woodland, to the vines and carnivorous plants of the rainforest. Plants provide us with our fruits and vegetables, and of course coffee and chocolate! They are a vital part of our food chain, providing food for herbivores, often in return for pollination. Plants provide more than just food for us: they photosynthesise, producing the very oxygen that we breathe.
Illustration of a plant with leaves that look like hands, insects are flying around it and a series of dots are on its pot

Can plants count?

Plants can't count exactly like humans do, but scientists agree that they're capable of some very clever things
Show more
Squirting cucumbers can fire their seeds up to three car lengths away.

This 'explosive' squirting cucumber can launch seeds at nearly 30mph

Nature's most explosive cucumber fires out its seeds to give them their best shot in life
Show more
An illustration of plants during the Silurian period, including Prototaxites.

Scientists may have discovered a whole new type of life

A strange giant cylindrical lifeform might not be a fungus after all
Show more

null

undefined

A sign showing the entrance to the zone of silence

What is Mexico's Zone of Silence

It's an area filled with bizarre plants and animals.
Show more
Leafcutter any carrying leaf

The secret way insects (and their poop) are spreading plants around the world

New evidence is showing that bugs are playing a much larger role in seed dispersal than we thought.
Show more
Three people sat in an office filled with lots of green plants.

How can embracing biophilia lead to a richer, happier life?

Just don't forget to water them.
Show more
A person stands in the middle of a bustling vegetable patch.

Why 'no-dig' gardening is the zero-effort way to improve your garden

Put the spade down – science recommends going easy on your soil.
Show more
Ghoul from Amazon Prime's Fallout.

Here's how life would actually mutate after nuclear fallout

Don’t expect ghouls or radroaches in a real nuclear apocalypse.
Show more
A hand reaches down to pull peanuts out of the earth. 

How do peanuts grow?

Peanuts have an alias: Ground nuts. And here’s how they got it.
Show more
Bright, neon colours streak the bark of rainbow eucalyptus trees.

The strange science behind the 'rainbow' tree

This stunning, brightly coloured tree has neon stripes running along its trunk making it look as if it has been painted.
Show more
Plants like this recently discovered species of lily pad are already threatened with extinction

Why scientists are now racing to stop a mass plant extinction

The race is on to document and protect the world’s plant and fungi species... and everything is at stake if we lose.
Show more
Lots of pumpkins sat on bales of hay and straw with a giant pumpkin displayed on a platform in the middle

The world’s largest pumpkin is ridiculously large… But is far from its biological limit

Pumpkins keep getting bigger thanks to time spent in cell division, specialised tissue, and selective breeding.
Show more
Leaves bedecked with droplets of sap along their edge

What is guttation?

The build-up of water inside plants is released via sap through specialist pores in the leaf.
Show more
shampoo ginger lily plant

Nature’s weirdest: This (ugly) shampoo ginger lily plant can make your hair look beautiful

The staggering benefits of the house plant, explained.
Show more
Stressed out plant

Plants let out secret high-pitch screams when stressed

They sound a bit like bubble wrap being popped, apparently.
Show more
What is vertical farming? © Getty Images

Vertical farming: Why stacking crops high could be the future of agriculture

It drastically reduces the space needed to grow crops.
Show more
This website is owned and published by Our Media Ltd. www.ourmedia.co.uk
© Our Media 2025