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Biology Articles » Botany » Plants, Insects Play Cat And Mouse Game Plants, Insects Play Cat And Mouse GamePlants, Insects Play Cat And Mouse Game Plants and insects play a far more intricate game than we suspect, says a University of Toronto researcher in the journal Science this month. Likening the game to one of cat and mouse, botany professor Anurag Agrawal suggests that both plants and insects have the inherent ability to adjust their behaviour - going so far as to alter their physiology and chemistry - in reaction to other species. "On initial inspection you may think that both the caterpillar and the plant are exceedingly static - the plant just sits there and can't run away from the insect while the caterpillar is essentially stuck on that one plant as it feeds," says Agrawal. "There seems to be little flexibility in terms of their interactions. What I'm arguing is that nothing is further from the truth."
Source: University Of Toronto. October 2001 rating: 4.06 from 16 votes | updated on: 29 Nov 2006 | views: 267 | |

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