Giraffes & freshly cut grass…

That smell we love so much, that has even been bottled into a scent is the distress call of your freshly cut lawn. It is the release of a chemical defense and self administered first aid from the hundreds of thousands of injuries you just inflicted with your precious lawnmower.

Plants release a whole number of volatile organic compounds called GLV’s (Green leaf volatiles) normally. Whenever a leafy plant is injured it starts to release them in high numbers with some of the compounds stimulating the grown of new cells which help the wounds heal quickly. Some compounds will help the plant by acting as an antibiotic or antifungal aid.

More interestingly it can be used as a distress signal by plants to warn other plants of incoming danger giving them time to put up a defense. An example of this is when giraffes eat acacia trees. Giraffes have developed the understanding that if they approach an acacia grove from down-wind then, as they eat the acacia, the distress signal sent will blow away rather than towards the other trees. This allows the giraffes to continue munching their way through the other trees. This distress signal allows the acacia tree to release a chemical into the leaves that make them taste foul to the giraffe.

Geocoris punctipes

Scientists found, in one study, that the saliva of certain caterpillars reacts with the compounds released by coyote tobacco plants to make them attractive to the Geocoris punctipes AKA “big-eyed bugs” that regularly eat the caterpillars.

There may be a high cost to that wonderful smell of freshly cut grass, though. The compounds released are precursors to ozone formation, according to researchers, and can contribute to the formation of photochemical smog in urban areas.

Enjoy,

Tom

The Scent of Rain

Petrichor is the name of that smell when the summer rains fall after a hot day. What’s it called? Why does it smell?

Petrichor is the earthy scent produced when rain falls on dry soil. The word is constructed from Greek petra, “rock”, or petros, “stone”, and īchōr, the fluid that supposedly flowed in the veins of the gods. I think “Petrichor is better sounding than “rocky god blood”.

What is it?

Well, it is slightly more complicated than might be first thought.

The smell is the aeration of a combination of an oil that is produced by plants during long periods of dry weather that then settles into clay based soils and rocks. When the rain falls it gets lifted into the air and combines with another compound that is a metabolic (breaking down of compounds) by-product of Actinobacteria (see section below) which is released as the soil becomes wet.

So in short it is a mixture of plant oils and a by-product of bacteria that build up during as dry spell give us that distinctive scent from summer rain that invokes so many positive thoughts and childhood memories.

According to research from MIT University heavy rain actually produces fewer aerosols than a light or medium rainfall, according to their findings. So that might be why petrichor is associated with the moments after a drizzle. 

Actinobacteria exist as either dormant spores or actively growing mycelium with filaments called hyphae. Most of these free-living organisms look like strands of hair or spaghetti under a microscope. Some are spherical in shape, others are branched, and many have knobby or hair-like projections.

Enjoy,

Tom

How rain creates an aerosol effect