Zombie Flower Revived After 32,000 Years
Tuesday, February 28th, 2012A team of Russian scientists has grown living plants from a flowering plant that died 32,000 years ago. The plant was a type of narrow-leaf campion. Campions, also called catchflies, are a group of flowering plants that have five petals, often cleft or notched (partly divided at the top). Scientists were able to recover fruits of the campion from a squirrel burrow in Siberia, where they had remained frozen for thousands of years. The fruits were collected by an Arctic ground squirrel, which buried them the way modern squirrels do. In this case, the burrow became covered by earth, and the fruits were preserved in permafrost (permanently frozen soil). Scientists recovered the fruits a few years ago and were able to coax cells within them into growing. These cells grew into clones of the long-dead flowers.
The flowers are by far the oldest plants grown from ancient tissue. The previous record was held by a date palm, which was grown from a seed that was 2,000 years old. Seeds usually do not germinate (sprout) after many years.
The scientists tried unsuccessfully to grow flowers from the campion’s seeds. Instead, the researchers were able to grow cells recovered from the fruit. Many plants can grow from tiny parts of a parent, a form of reproduction known as vegetative propagation. The fruits were preserved by the frozen soil. In fact, the fruits were probably frozen shortly after they were buried, because arctic ground squirrels deliberately dig their burrows near frozen soil. In this way, the soil acts as a freezer.
The research will enable scientists to compare the ancient flowers with their living relatives. This work should help scientists understand how the plant has evolved (changed over many generations). The research also raises the possibility that scientists may be able to grow other plants from tissue that has been frozen in soil. It might even be possible to grow plants that have become extinct.
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