To see accurate pricing, please choose your delivery country.
 
 
United States
£ GBP
All Shops

British Wildlife

8 issues per year 84 pages per issue Subscription only

British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

Subscriptions from £33 per year

Conservation Land Management

4 issues per year 44 pages per issue Subscription only

Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.

Subscriptions from £26 per year
Academic & Professional Books  Botany  Plants & Botany: Biology & Ecology

The Revolutionary Genius of Plants A New Understanding of Plant Intelligence and Behavior

Popular Science
By: Stefano Mancuso(Author)
225 pages, colour & b/w photos, colour illustrations
Publisher: Atria Books
NHBS
The Revolutionary Genius of Plants is a very nicely illustrated and entertaining entry into the topic of plant intelligence and behaviour, arguing such notions are as not as out-there as you might think.
The Revolutionary Genius of Plants
Click to have a closer look
Average customer review
  • The Revolutionary Genius of Plants ISBN: 9781501187858 Hardback Sep 2018 Availability uncertain: order now to get this when available
    £36.99
    #243530
Price: £36.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles Recommended titles

About this book

Do plants have intelligence? Do they have memory? Are they better problem solvers than people? The Revolutionary Genius of Plants – a fascinating, paradigm-shifting work that upends everything you thought you knew about plants – makes a compelling scientific case that these and other astonishing ideas are all true.

Plants make up eighty percent of the weight of all living things on earth, and yet it is easy to forget that these innocuous, beautiful organisms are responsible for not only the air that lets us survive, but for many of our modern comforts: our medicine, food supply, even our fossil fuels.

On the forefront of uncovering the essential truths about plants, world-renowned scientist Stefano Mancuso reveals the surprisingly sophisticated ability of plants to innovate, to remember, and to learn, offering us creative solutions to the most vexing technological and ecological problems that face us today. Despite not having brains or central nervous systems, plants perceive their surroundings with an even greater sensitivity than animals. They efficiently explore and react promptly to potentially damaging external events thanks to their cooperative, shared systems; without any central command centers, they are able to remember prior catastrophic events and to actively adapt to new ones.

Every page of The Revolutionary Genius of Plants bubbles over with Stefano Mancuso's infectious love for plants and for the eye-opening research that makes it more and more clear how remarkable our fellow inhabitants on this planet really are. In his hands, complicated science is wonderfully accessible, and he has loaded the book with gorgeous photographs that make for an unforgettable reading experience. The Revolutionary Genius of Plants opens the doors to a new understanding of life on earth.

Customer Reviews (1)

  • Entertaining intro on plant intelligence
    By Leon (NHBS Catalogue Editor) 12 Nov 2018 Written for Hardback


    In an earlier review, I said that botany was never my greatest love. With The Revolutionary Genius of Plants, Italian plant neurobiologist Stefano Mancuso does a very good job of changing my mind. In the preface, he implores readers to imagine what it is like to be a plant, unable to escape predators. How can you survive this onslaught? The answer: by becoming virtually indestructible. And the way plants do this is by having a body plan that is almost the inverse of animals. There was something so powerful about Mancuso’s writing here that he instantly drew me in.

    Plants have long been considered as the vegetal backdrop to our lives. Green, immobile, and fairly boring. Sure, photosynthesis and all that, but plants are, well, nothing like animals. Or are they? In recent years, a growing number of scientists are making the case that plants are surprisingly intelligent and possess senses similar to our own; smell, touch, hearing, memory, even awareness.

    Mancuso has been hailed as the founder of the discipline of plant neurobiology and has written previously on this subject in Brilliant Green. The current book originally appeared in Italian in 2017. Similarly, there have been popular science books such as What a Plant Knows, more serious works such as Plant Sensing and Communication, and even a textbook: Plant Behaviour & Intelligence.

    I have always been a bit sceptical of this. Recently, the German forester Peter Wohlleben has enjoyed a huge commercial success with his book The Hidden Life of Trees, which has been criticised by scientists for its selective and unrepresentative sources. And I feel this is just the top of the slippery slope into pseudoscience. The New Age movement has happily appropriated traditional knowledge of indigenous tribes, both their use of plant parts for medicinal purposes, and the use of psychoactive botanical substances such as ayahuasca by shamans. And before you know you are dabbling in vision quests, spiritual healing, forest bathing and the secret teachings of plants. Critics might argue that, as a sceptic not moving in these circles nor intending to, I have no idea what I am talking about and am belittling their profound experiences and beliefs. Well, sorry, but I smell a rat, and I will get back to this topic in a future review of The Ethnobotany of Eden.

    Fortunately, Mancuso does much to quell my scepticism and shows that, for those who can set aside their prejudices, there is a lot of serious science to be done. As I mentioned above, what makes plants so hard for us to grasp is that their body plan is the inverse of ours. Where animals concentrate functionality in specialised organs, plants distribute the same functions throughout their whole body in a diffuse fashion. And this is such a profound difference that we struggle to understand plants.

    Mancuso introduces experimental work showing that certain plants have a form of memory, with touch-sensitive plants rapidly learning to ignore stimuli that are not dangerous. Others show extraordinary forms of mimicry, or mimesis, that implies a form of vision. Root systems function as a form of distributed intelligence or a collective brain, allowing efficient exploration of soil for nutrients. By now most of us will have seen time-lapse footage in nature documentaries showing how plants move but do so on a different time scale to us. Other plants manipulate insects by secreting neuroactive substances. And Mancuso is not the first person to suggest that plants domesticated us as much as we domesticated them, though I feel he gets a bit carried away here. He suggests that vetch seeds evolving to resemble lentil seeds – and so piggy-back on human cultivation of lentils as a pest species – shows that plants are learning to respond to our preferences because the vetch plant does not want to be discarded. This might just be semantics, but I feel this ascribes agency to plants where a simple explanation of natural selection against vetch seeds not resembling lentil seeds would suffice. I have yet to be convinced that this means plants have learned something.

    Towards the second half of the book, Mancuso switches to what we can learn from plants. Principles borrowed from plants have been used in structural engineering, but also the design of space probes that can passively move, dig and drill the same way certain plant seeds can. Similarly, salt-tolerant plants could help address the shortage of suitable agricultural land and usher in a future of marine farming to feed the growing human population.

    As an object, The Revolutionary Genius of Plants is a very nicely designed, full-colour book. The short chapters feature plenty of colour photos (though a few are of such low resolution that they appear pixelated in print), and the quality of the paper stock makes for a hefty book. In many ways, it reminds me of the visually pleasing productions of, say, Ivy Press.

    Mancuso keeps the science fairly light (though references are provided), dipping into a range of topics with the occasional tangent. The applied research of his group, which he mentions in various places, is certainly interesting. And well before the end of the book Mancuso had me convinced that plants are worth paying more attention to. Especially his claim that, despite lacking central organs, plants can achieve many of the same feats by distributing functionality throughout their bodies, making them so very alien to us, is made very convincingly. Although I am left with many questions as to how such things are achieved exactly, something this book does not dig into in too much detail, The Revolutionary Genius of Plants makes for a fascinating and entertaining entry point to the topic of plant intelligence and behaviour.
    1 of 1 found this helpful - Was this helpful to you? Yes No

Biography

Stefano Mancuso is one of the world’s leading authorities in the field of plant neurobiology, which explores signaling and communication at all levels of biological organization. He is the associate professor at the University of Florence in Italy and has published more than 250 scientific papers in international journals.

Popular Science
By: Stefano Mancuso(Author)
225 pages, colour & b/w photos, colour illustrations
Publisher: Atria Books
NHBS
The Revolutionary Genius of Plants is a very nicely illustrated and entertaining entry into the topic of plant intelligence and behaviour, arguing such notions are as not as out-there as you might think.
Media reviews

"Fascinating [...] full of optimism [...] this quick, accessible read will appeal to anyone with interest in how plants continue to surprise us."
Library Journal

"In this thought-provoking, handsomely illustrated book, Italian neurobiologist Stefano Mancuso considers the fundamental differences between plants and animals and challenges our assumptions about which is the ‘higher’ form of life.”
Wall Street Journal

Current promotions
Best of WinterNHBS Moth TrapNew and Forthcoming BooksBuyers Guides