Seeds Are Nature's Most Efficient Ratchet

Seed head of foxtail grass in motion.
(Image credit: Igor M. Kuliæ and Rochish Thaokar)

The seeds of many grasses are remarkable little mechanical devices. Each seed's hull has one or more bristle-like projections called awns, covered with tiny barbs pointing away from the seed.

When a seed is partly buried in the ground with its awn pointing up, the barbs form a simple ratchet. Each time the soil swells and shrinks with daily humidity changes, the ratchet drives the seed ever so slightly downward. (Awns also cling to animal fur for seed dispersal; they can cause problems when they ratchet their way into ear canals, nostrils, or other soft tissues.)

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