Photo: Craig Robertson / Bioeconomy Science Institute
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In a small room in the Bioeconomy Science Institute in Lincoln, Dr Mark MacDougall refocuses a laser so that the beam is centred on a piece of metal tape on a tomato plant leaf. He's using it to detect miniscule motions.
The source of this movement? A tiny glasshouse whitefly on the underside of the leaf, trying to communicate in a type of insect language, one we can't sense or speak - a language of vibrations.
Biotremology
Before he started his PhD in this topic Mark hadn't heard of this vibrational language, the study of which is called biotremology. But the idea completely captivated him.
"I just had no idea that vibrations were just a part of the way that animals com
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