skrebbel 13 hours ago

Ever thought you yanked a dandelion out by the entire root? Think again: https://images.wur.nl/digital/collection/coll13/id/676/rec/3

  • nfriedly 12 hours ago

    My dad told me that one year his school held a contest over the summer to see who could get the longest dandelion root.

  • dsalzman 12 hours ago

    Whats the units?

    • MikeCoats 12 hours ago

      Centimetres.

      Their 13 cm high plant specimen had a 456 cm deep root.

      • mock-possum 9 hours ago

        So like 15 feet

        • oytis 14 minutes ago

          Or 4 Emperor penguins

          • skrebbel a few seconds ago

            Depends if they're imperial Emperor penguins or not

        • garbagewoman 2 hours ago

          Probably, since cm are almost as useless as the grand old imperial system

    • zyberzero 12 hours ago

      It says cm, so centimeters (1/100 meter) - slightly less than 0.4 inches

      • tejtm 8 hours ago

        decimal place issues... I hope.

        there are ten mm in a cm

        456cm == 4560mm

        there are 24.5 mm per inch (it is the law).

        4550mm / 25.4 = 179.527 inches

        or about 14.9 feet

        which is about 5 yards

        which is 20% of a 'murican football field if that helps

        • jacobolus 6 hours ago

          The above comment was pointing out that each 1 centimeter is slightly less than 0.4 inches. If you want to be more precise, each centimeter is about 0.3937 inches.

          • tejtm 3 hours ago

            Your correction to my perception of what you intended 0.4 inches to represent is accepted.

  • fragmede 12 hours ago

    no wonder the damned things keep coming back!

    • loandbehold 11 hours ago

      That's where glyphosate comes in handy.

      • jacobolus 6 hours ago

        Why do you need to get rid of dandelions?

        • NoMoreNicksLeft 37 minutes ago

          Instead of getting rid of them, I was hoping to find seeds for Russian dandelions. I'd like to grow some. Haven't been able to find any for sale though...

      • alphan0n 8 hours ago

        The cancer was worth it to rid ourselves of a mildly offensive flower.

        • 0_____0 7 hours ago

          I reckon you could skip spraying it if you were going to eat it anyway.

          Did you know that wheat in the US is sprayed with glyphosate right before harvest? It causes all the wheat to dry evenly, avoiding the need to cut down the wheat and windrow it for drying. This means extra weeks in the growing season to squeeze another crop in.

          • garbagewoman 2 hours ago

            How would you squeeze another crop in?

  • collinvandyck76 11 hours ago

    Always good to have a weed puller in your toolshed. A stand-up puller, specifically, that operates as a lever, allowing it to first grab deeply and then through a rotation of the handle it pulls out quite a bit of the root system. A lifesaver if you have a rain garden which is really just a synonym for weed garden.

    • fsckboy 6 hours ago

      the link is to a dandelion root system that goes 450 centimeters into the ground, or 4.5 meters / 5 yards.

      we'd like to know how much of that weed would your weed puller pull if your weed puller pulled a full pull?

      • garbagewoman 2 hours ago

        I would not actually like to know that, since such a device seems impossible

    • colordrops 10 hours ago

      Any recommendations for a particular weed puller?

daemonologist 18 hours ago

How are these produced? I assume they're not actually digging a giant trench and taking a section, but are the drawings based on measurements of a specific individual in some way?

In any case, very cool to have such a collection.

  • throwup238 17 hours ago

    They usually are. It’s a process akin to archaeology where they have to carefully wash away the dirt from the root system, measuring as they go. The problem with this method is that it's hard to reconstruct the entire 3d structure of bigger plants like trees so a lot of the root drawings on the site don’t accurately show how deep they go. It’s much easier with small plants where the researcher can control the soil used.

    Modern methods like xray CT or ground penetrating radar can do it nondestructively in the field but they’re usually expensive to set up compared to just sending some grad students to dig.

    • garbagewoman 2 hours ago

      By “usually”, have you any examples of what led to that conclusion?

    • JKCalhoun 16 hours ago

      I had assumed they had grown the plant between two vertical, parallel panes of glass.

      • imp0cat 14 hours ago

        That would probably produce a distorted image of the root system.

        • immibis 10 hours ago

          On the contrary - I think you'd get an accurate image of a very distorted root system!

          • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago

            > you'd get an accurate image of a very distorted root system

            At the very least, you've taken a 3D system and reduced it to 2D. Additionally, you're exposing not only the root system but the entire microbiome around them to light and, almost certainly, unless you were incredibly meticulous about sealing, oxygen.

  • paulgerhardt 16 hours ago

    A few ways. This particular project is doing it by hand and very tedious.

    The traditional way of transplanting large trees while keeping the root system intact is with a hydrovac. A machine the size of a jet engine that liquifies the soil with water and then vacuums it up. [1]

    More recent developments have tried using an AirSpade which doesn’t use water but compressed air to blow apart and then suck the soil without making a slurry which is better as the soil can be redeposited in the same hole rather than discarded[2]

    [1] https://youtube.com/shorts/HinwD5-Q2xA

    [2] https://youtu.be/B3XomJ6Z1I4

    • oasisbob 15 hours ago

      I'm not sure that either of these methods count as traditional.

      Air spades in particular are primarily used for rootwork, not transplanting. Bareroot methods are used for smaller trees. Bare rooting leaves roots in a very vulnerable state, so doing it on larger trees you intend to move and keep alive is a serious logistical challenge.

      The most traditional method I can think of is "ball and burlap" where root balls are cut free in the field, and retrieved later in the season for final packaging.

mellosouls 18 hours ago

Nice link, for anybody coming to the comments first, it isn't a sample of linux system layouts as I thought.

ofalkaed 10 hours ago

Digging up and drawing the root systems of plants might be my dream job, I love digging, plants, and slow methodical tedious work. Anyone hiring? Pinus sylvestris[0] and Quercus robur[1] are good entries with numerous examples to compare. I would love to see a photograph of the exposed roots of their Sequoiadendron giganteum.

[0] https://images.wur.nl/digital/collection/coll13/search/searc...

[1] https://images.wur.nl/digital/collection/coll13/search/searc...

macrolocal an hour ago

Nb. This isn't about Lie theory.

joshdavham 15 hours ago

I like to think of a plant’s roots as an analogy for the knowledge required to create something.

As a weird example, a web app may be like the exposed plant above ground while the roots are that developer’s knowledge. The plant is what others see, but the roots are the intricate system that was required to create the plant.

zkmon 14 hours ago

Wow. What did I just see? Wonderful and so satisfying. Interesting to see that some plants are tiny above ground compared to their existence below ground - plant-cartels :)

I always suspected that rivers are like trees - they also might have a hierarchy of streams (root system) inside the sea. Sometimes this root system is exposed to above "ground" in the form of deltas and streams around them.

kjellsbells 10 hours ago

Naive question, possibly poorly formed: what is the purpose of the parts of the plant? Eg the leaves are for collecting energy and the flower for reproduction...so is the "thing" that all that work is going to benefit really just the root stem?

  • brianpan 4 hours ago

    The answer to pretty much every biological "why" question is: because it reproduced. It seems simplistic, but really, a thing is here and alive because its ancestors reproduced.

    Your version of the question has surprising perspective- I think you are asking what the "it" of the plant is. That's an interesting personification of a plant. I think it points to the fact that plants may be safer underground- for anchoring, for not being eaten, for getting shielded from harsh elements.

  • Woberto 10 hours ago

    Isn't reproduction the point? The roots exist to obtain water, nutrients, minerals; leaves gather energy from the sun; this is used to grow fruit, or whatever is used for reproduction

veeti 11 hours ago

I've been doing some small scale basil growing at home using kratky hydroponics in glass jars. It's always interesting to check how the roots have grown and expanded overnight.

Evidlo 11 hours ago

Was thinking about vectorizing these and using a pen plotter to make some cool art for my wall, but the images are not very high resolution, unfortunately :(

hagbard_c 18 hours ago

Who'd'a'thought I'd come across root drawings from my old university where I studied at the Forestry faculty which produced these.

  • bookofjoe 16 hours ago

    HN is like Forrest Gump's box of chocolates: you never know what you might get!

thirtygeo 17 hours ago

Really neat. I've often wondered about what the unexposed part of trees and plants are.

Like: am I walking on them? Are they tapping down somewhere deep or are they shallow.

The examples on a hill were interesting; I would have thought the extent would be skewed but it was fairly even

  • Arch-TK 15 hours ago

    For plants, and trees too I guess, you can just grow your own, dig it up after a while, and inspect for yourself.

    Today I finished picking tomatoes from my tomato plants and pulled them up to avoid them rotting in the field as the temperature goes down. It was curious to see how the root systems varied both between the two tomato varieties I had planted, the location of the plant in relation to surrounding grass, and the type of soil they ended up in.

Sponge5 17 hours ago

Recently there was an exhibition of tree root illustrations by Jitka Klimesova in Prague. I think there's potential for more art emerging from science.

cynicalsecurity 18 hours ago

Not what I expected, but this is really cool.

alienbaby 17 hours ago

reminds me alot of patterns from diffusion limited aggregation.

29athrowaway 17 hours ago

From the perspective of a plant... In soil, you have: silt, clay and sand. Plus other plants, fungi, worms, microorganisms, rocks, insects, animals, etc. Each plant needs different nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and others), need different pH levels, can tolerate different salinity, etc. There might be different humidity, precipitation, wind speed, the water tables are different...

I guess all these differences translate into how the root must structurally develop to satisfy all those requirements and constraints.

octol 11 hours ago

Imagine if there were a consciousness in each of those complex systems.

JohnHaugeland 14 hours ago

i thought these were nervous systems until i started reading comments