Monica Gagliano

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Monica Gagliano
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Born1976 (age 47–48)
Occupation
  • Ecologist
  • Professor

Monica Gagliano was born in 1976[1] and grew up in northern Italy.[2] She is an ecologist known for expanding the field of biological research into the intelligence of plants.

Gagliano is a Research Associate Professor in the field of evolutionary ecology at Southern Cross University in Lismore, Australia, where she directs the Biological Intelligence lab.[3] Through her research with plants, she “has extended the concept of cognition (including perception, learning processes, memory) in plants.”[4] She works to expand how people view plants and encourages people to respect the subjectivity and sentience in plants and in all of nature.[5]

Career

Gagliano trained as a marine ecologist.[6] As a postdoctoral fellow at James Cook University in 2008, she was researching Ambon damselfish (Pomacentrus amboinensis) at the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. As part of her research, she was required to kill and dissect the fish at the end of the study. The fish were used to swimming in and out of her hand daily, but on the last day they disappeared, as if they knew what she intended. This produced an ethical and professional crisis for Gagliano. She completed the study but vowed not to kill in the name of science again. She left animal science and entered plant science. Her sense that the fish knew set her on a course of studying sentience in other life forms.[7][8][9]

Gagliano is a leading researcher in the field of plant cognition. Her best-known study, from 2014, investigated learning and memory in Mimosa pudica, or “sensitive plant.” Mimosa plants typically fold their leaves at the slightest disturbance. Yet the study showed that Mimosa plants no longer folded their leaves after being dropped in the same way repeatedly. They habituated to the disturbance, and habituation is an elementary form of learning.[10] In 2022 she and a team suggested researching how plants pay attention by using a phenomenological-empirical approach.[11]

Gagliano has extended the field of bioacoustics to plants. In 2012 she showed corn plants emitting sounds.[12] In 2017 she showed that the roots of pea plant (Pisum sativum) sensed a water source through sound cues.[13]

Gagliano advocates for comparing learning in plants to learning in animals, challenging the conventional scientific boundary between beings with brains and beings without them. In a 2013 presentation Gagliano argued that the same habituation that the Mimosa plants showed, when observed in animals, is called “learning,” and therefore researchers need to “use the same language to describe the same behavior.”[14] She told New Scientist in 2018, “Whether it is an animal, a plant or bacteria, if it ticks the boxes that we agree define learning, then that is what it is doing."[15] In a 2015 journal article she addressed common theoretical problems that lead researchers not to research intelligence in plants and suggested solutions to these barriers of thought.[16]

Gagliano is an advocate for stronger ethical standards in scientific protocols for working with both plants and animals. In 2020 she and several animal behavior scientists, concerned that current practices of conventional science do not go far enough in guaranteeing the welfare of animals, plants, or ecosystems, suggested criteria to deepen researchers’ ethical commitment to nonhuman welfare. The suggestions include using language that respects sentience in animals; emphasizing aspects of experience that are important to the animal being studied (such as the importance of smell to dogs); and incorporating unconventional sources of knowledge, such as Indigenous knowing and personal relationships with the beings under study.[17]

In addition to her Western scientific training and research, Gagliano has also trained with Peruvian plant shamans, following established shamanic protocols to learn how to communicate directly with plants. She credits plants with suggesting designs for lab experiments and collaborating with her to solve research problems.[18][19]

In popular culture

Michael Pollan’s 2013 article in the New Yorker, “The Intelligent Plant,” introduced Gagliano’s work to a wide audience and reignited popular interest in, and discussion about, plant cognition.[20][21]

Artist and writer James Bridle discussed Gagliano’s work in his book Ways of Being (2022).[22] In his 2023 interview with Emergence magazine he called her work “hugely influential” to him.[23]

Novelist Richard Powers, author of The Overstory, and Monica Gagliano participated in a conversation on “Plant Intelligence” at the Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth College in 2020.[24]

Indigenous botanist and professor Robin Wall Kimmerer and Monica Gagliano were interviewed on the Bioneers podcast.[25]

Books

  • Thus Spoke the Plant: A Remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters with Plants (North Atlantic Books, 2018) ISBN: 9781623172435

References

  1. "Thus Spoke the Plant". LC Catalog. Library of Congress. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  2. Shechet, Ellie (26 August 2019). "Do Plants Have Something to Say?". New York Times. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  3. "Dr Monica Gagliano". SCU Staff Directory. Southern Cross University. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  4. "Dr Monica Gagliano". SCU Staff Directory. Southern Cross University. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  5. "Monica Gagliano". ICE: Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth. Dartmouth College. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  6. Shechet, Ellie (26 August 2019). "Do Plants Have Something to Say?". New York Times. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  7. Shechet, Ellie (26 August 2019). "Do Plants Have Something to Say?". New York Times. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  8. Howgego, Joshua. "Smarty plants: They can learn, adapt and remember without brains". New Scientist. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  9. Gagliano, Monica (2018). Thus Spoke the Plant: A Remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters with Plants. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books. p. ix–xiii. ISBN 9781623172435.
  10. Gagliano, Monica; Renton, Michael; Depczynski, Martial; Mancuso, Stefano (2014). "Experience teaches plants to learn faster and forget slower in environments where it matters". Oecologia. 175: 63–72. doi:10.1007/s00442-013-2873-7. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  11. Parise, André Geremia; de Toledo, Gabriel Ricardo Aguilera; Oliveira, Thiago Francisco de Carvalho; Souza, Gustavo Maia; Gagliano, Monica; Marder, Michael (2022). "Do plants pay attention? A possible phenomenological-empirical approach". Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology. 173: 11–23. doi:10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2022.05.008. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  12. Gagliano, Monica; Mancuso, Stefano; Robert, Daniel (March 2012). "Towards Understanding Plant Bioacoustics". Trends in Plant Science. 17 (6): 323–25. doi:10.1016/j.tplants.2012.03.002. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  13. Gagliano, Monica; Grimonprez, Mavra; Depczynski, Martial; Renton, Michael (May 2017). "Tuned In: Plant Roots Use Sound to Locate Water". Oecologia. 184: 151–60. doi:10.1007/s00442-017-3862-z. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  14. Pollan, Michael. "The Intelligent Plant". New Yorker. New Yorker. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  15. Howgego, Joshua. "Smarty plants: They can learn, adapt and remember without brains". New Scientist. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  16. Gagliano, Monica (2015). "In a green frame of mind: perspectives on the behavioural ecology and cognitive nature of plants". AoB PLANTS. doi:10.1093/aobpla/plu075. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  17. Franks, Becca; Webb, Christine; Gagliano, Monica; Smuts, Barbara (2020). "Conventional science will not do justice to nonhuman interests: A fresh approach is required". Animal Sentience. 27 (17). doi:10.51291/2377-7478.1552. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  18. Shechet, Ellie (26 August 2019). "Do Plants Have Something to Say?". New York Times. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  19. Gagliano, Monica (2018). Thus Spoke the Plant: A Remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters with Plants. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books. ISBN 9781623172435.
  20. Pollan, Michael. "The Intelligent Plant". Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  21. Shecher, Ellie (26 August 2019). "Do Plants Have Something to Say?". New York Times. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  22. Bridle, James (2022). Ways of Being: Animals, Plants, Machines: The Search for a Planetary Intelligence. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. pp. 71–75. ISBN 9780374601119.
  23. Vaughan-Lee, Emmanuel. "An Ecological Technology: An Interview with James Bridle". Emergence Magazine. Kalliopeia Foundation. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  24. "Monica Gagliano". ICE: Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth. Dartmouth College. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  25. "Nature's Intelligence: Interviewing the Vegetable Mind with Robin Kimmerer and Monica Gagliano". Bioneers. Retrieved 1 July 2023.

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