Wind-dispersed plants have evolved ingenious ways to lift their seeds 1,2. The common dandelion uses a bundle of drag-enhancing bristles (pappus) to help keep their seeds aloft. This passive flight mechanism is highly effective, enabling seed dispersal over formidable distances 3,4 ; however, the engineering underpinning pappus-mediated flight remains unresolved. Here, we have visualized the flow around dandelion seeds, uncovering an extraordinary type of vortex. This vortex is a ring of recirculating fluid, which is detached due to the flow passing through the pappus. We hypothesized that the circular disk-like geometry and the porosity of the pappus are the key design features that enable the formation of the separated vortex ring. The porosity gradient was surveyed using microfabricated disks, and a disk with a similar porosity was found able to recapitulate the flow behaviour of the real pappus. The porosity of the dandelion's pappus appears to be tuned precisely to stabilize the vortex, while maximizing the aerodynamic loading and minimizing the material requirement. The discovery of the separated vortex ring signals the existence of a new class of fluid behaviour around fluid-immersed bodies that may underlie locomotion, weight reduction, and particle retention of biological and manmade structures. Dandelions (Taraxacum officinale agg.) are highly successful perennial herbs, which can be found in temperate zones all over the world 5. Dandelions, like many other members of the Asteraceae family, disperse their bristly seeds using the wind and convective updrafts 6,7. Most dandelion seeds likely land within 2 m 8,9 ; however, in warmer, drier and windier conditions, some may fly further (up to 20,000 seeds per hectare travelling more than 1 km by one estimate) 6,10. Asteraceae seeds routinely disperse over 30 km and occasionally even 150 km 3,4. Plumed seeds comprise a major class of dispersal strategies used by numerous and diverse groups of flowering plants, of which the common dandelion is a representative example. Plumed seeds contain a bundle of bristly filaments, called a pappus, which are presumed to function in drag enhancement (Fig. 1a-c). The pappus prolongs the descent of the seed, so that it may be carried farther by horizontal winds 11 , and it may also serve to orientate the seed as it falls 7,12. Dandelion seeds fall stably at a constant speed in quiescent conditions 2,13-15. For wind-dispersed seeds, maintaining stability while maximizing descent time in turbulent winds may be useful for long-distance dispersal 16,17. It is not clear, however, why plumed seeds have opted for a bristly pappus rather than a wing-like membrane, which is known to enhance lift in some other species (e.g., maples 1). Here, we uncover the flight mechanism of the dandelion, characterizing the fluid dynamics of the pappus and identifying the key structural features enabling its stable flight. To examine the flow behaviour around the pappus, we built a vertical wind tunnel (Fig. 1d, and M1), designed so that the seed ca...
PREMISE Seed dispersal is extremely important for the recovery and restoration of forest communities. Relict tree genus Zelkova possesses a unique dispersal mechanism: mature fruits fall with the entire twig, and the dried leaves that are still attached function as a drag‐enhancing appendage, carrying the fruits away from the parent tree. This singular adaptation has never been investigated in Z. abelicea. METHODS Drop tests with dispersal units and individual fruits of Z. abelicea were performed in controlled conditions to measure their dispersal velocity and to define their flight mode. RESULTS Zelkova abelicea uses both slowly falling dispersal units with chaotic motion, as well as fast falling individual fruits using a straight path. The falling velocity of Z. abelicea dispersal units is 1.53 m s‐1, which is virtually identical to that of the East Asiatic Z. serrata (1.51 m s‐1). In contrast, the falling velocity of individual fruits was 2.74 m s‐1 (Z. serrata: 5.36 m s‐1). CONCLUSIONS Members of the genus Zelkova, growing today in distant regions, show remarkable evolutionary conservation of the velocity and flight mechanics of their dispersal units. This is surprising because the Mediterranean and East Asiatic Zelkova species have been separated at least 15–20 mya. Zelkova abelicea, although growing in the Mediterranean with completely different forest structure and composition, still uses the same dispersal mechanism. The dispersal capacity of the genus Zelkova is less efficient than that of other wind dispersed trees, and it presumably evolved for short‐distance ecological spread and not for long‐distance biogeographical dispersal.
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