There are many different viewpoints on this. A selection of contributors' thoughts are included below.
Answer 1: DOROTHY RETALLACK STUDYMany scientific studies have been done regarding the effects of music on plants. The simple answer is that past studies have suggested hard rock or heavy metal music seems to have a detrimental effect on plant growth.
There is a well-known study from the early 1970s, conducted by Dorothy Retallack at the Colorado Woman's College in Denver using the college's three Biotronic Control Chambers. In one series of studies, the tone of F sound was played daily for three hours a day, intermittently in one laboratory, it was played for eight hours a day, constantly, and the control group had no sound introduced. Those plants where the F tone was played intermittingly for 3 hours a day grew twice as large and were twice as healthy as those in a sound-free environment. However, plants in the laboratory where the tone of Fconstantly for 8 hours daily died within two weeks of the experiment's beginning. Dorothy used a growing chamber, a variety of plant species (but the same in each chamber) and made sure the volume was consistent for all forms of music.
Different types of music were then utilized in her following experiments. She tried acid rock music by Led Zeppelin, Vanilla Fudge, and Hendrix. It was played to one group of plants and semi-pop music (of the 1970's) to another. The "acid rock music" plants were sickly and small compared to the control group of "semi popular" music (now termed soft rock).
The other genres of music she experimented with: were Classical Music (Debussy), jazz (she use Louis Armstrong among others), and Indian (Ravi Shankar). The plants grew large and healthy, with the plants actually growing towards the radio for each of these three forms of music, just like they bend towards sunlight. Dorothy also experimented with Country Music (such as Jonny Cash) and found they neither grew toward or away from the speakers and seemed neutral. While Dorothy did have a personal bias and by the end of her research she believed plants could feel and were capable of ESP. She felt perhaps it was the lyrics that the plants didn't like with the acid rock music.
It seems the plants like all types of music, except hard, pounding rhythms, but prefer stringed instruments the most. They also didn't like a constant tone played for 8 hours per day, but how many of us do!
Effective experiments need to involve the following factors, which Dorothy tried to maintain, but failed to measure the water and soil moisture with an accurate device:
Mythbusters have come up with a different result. Their experiments suggested that heavy metal seems to stimulate growth more than other types of music. The culprit is likely the rapid vibration that encourages activity. Perhaps these results could be pursued by searching the Mythbusters website on Discoverychannel.
Answer_3:_SMALL_SCALE_EXPERIMENTS">Answer_3:_SMALL_SCALE_EXPERIMENTS">Answer 3: SMALL SCALE EXPERIMENTSThe effect is the same as random noise, i.e. just the physical stress of sound. Music as such has no effect because:1) Plants are not intelligent. In fact, they don't have a central nervous system. Music can only affect you if you understand it, and plants can't understand anything.
2) Plants have no auditory organs. They can't hear any more than you could hear through your skin if you had no ears.
If you look this up on the net, you'll see plenty of small scale experiments with positive results. Unfortunately, these experiments are fatally flawed in several ways. First, they are typically done with just 3 or 4 plants, and with such a small sample size any difference is likely to be from random chance. Second, and perhaps more importantly, the control is silent when it should be random noise with the same frequency spectrum and periodicity as the music. This is the only way to test the effects of music as such, not just the effects of sound. When the experiment is done with a good sample size (thousands of plants) and controlled properly, the results may well be negative.
Answer_4:_TRY_EXPERIMENTS_YOURSELF">Answer_4:_TRY_EXPERIMENTS_YOURSELF">Answer 4: TRY EXPERIMENTS YOURSELF"I tried experimenting myself. After 4 week of experimenting, the following were the results. I observed that the one that was in the best condition was the plant that was in the room with classical music. It grew in the range of 9-16 degrees away from the CD Player. The second best plant was the one in the room with no music. It grew from the range of 11-15 degrees away from the CD Player. The one that didn't do so well was the one in the room with rock music. It grew from the range of 33-85 degrees away from the CD Player. " Answer_5:_CLASSICAL_MUSIC">Answer_5:_CLASSICAL_MUSIC">Answer 5: CLASSICAL MUSICMany people swear by Classical music, which is used in some professional greenhouses to stimulate plant growth. In the book, "The Secret Life of Plants," the results of exposure to various types of music on houseplants is explored, among other fascinating plant experiments.
Answer_6:_HUMAN_VS_PLANTS">Answer_6:_HUMAN_VS_PLANTS">Answer 6: HUMAN VS PLANTSThe effect of music on plants is drastic. It is found that music stimulates the brain, but it depends what kind of music. For example the high frequency of mechanical waves that run hand in hand with rap and acid rock are damaging to the plant.Some studies have indicated that they do indeed germinate and grow faster and healthier when exposed to Classical music.
Soft classic music or sounds of nature, water or birds Answer Myth Busters actually did an experiment to see if it is true that music has an affect on plant growth. They set up several experiments using different types of music and no music. All plants were growing in the same conditions expect for different types of music. Believe it or not, the ones in the greenhouse with heavy metal grew the best.
One may take the personal opinion that plants evolved and thrived for years without any form of music (pop, rock, rap or classical), so why would it make a difference now. If there is anything to the theories that abound it would have to do with vibrations/ and or frequency rather than specific music types. However, specific music types certainly emit certain types of vibrations.
A 2007 study in South Korea in rice fields showed that sounds at 125Hz and 250Hz made genes rbcS and Ald, that are known to respond to light, more active whereas sound waves at 50HZ made these genes less active.
Source: See related link below
This is an Epigenetic change. Contrary to popular belief no species is hard wired by it's genetic code. Genetic expression changes based on environmental conditions. To give an example of impact it is worth noting that every finch in the world has the same gene for beak and diet, but the timing of when the gene turns on and it's intensity of activity determines the beak shape and diet.
Source: PBS Broadcast, "What Darwin Never Knew"
There are many studies that show how both plants and animals adapt their own genetic expression based on environmental conditions. This is evidence that species change not by random mutation as previously thought, but through a real time reaction to the environment.
To put it simply plants adapt themselves to their environment as easily as animals. They respond to light, touch, and sound. The wave-length of what is favorable and unfavorable to plants are similar in humans and other animals suggesting as well that the reason we like and dislike music has more to do with the way vibrations influence genetic expression than conscious preference.
You may have heard about people putting plants near speakers, but does it really work? The answer is yes and no. It is true that music does affect our emotions and can make people feel happier. However, it's not music that affects the growth of the plant, but the vibration from the speaker. The vibration from a speaker is not strong enough to break the rock and certainly not to penetrate the soil. So if you want to try this experiment, use speakers instead of headphones.
I SAY POP, CUZ MICHAEL JACKSON KNOWS HOW TO TREAT A LADY THEN HE CAN TREAT A PLANT>>>
it has been proven that plants grow better in a room with classical music playing than heavy music like death metal. for this reason i have no idea, but i listen to metal and im not dead. so who cares :D
plants like country music better so YES.
yes the sound waves affect them and make them grow faster
There are many ways to grow your soundcloud likes. You can buy followers, likes, comments and reposts from a reputable provider like us. Β But it is always better to earn them the honest way. You need to post high-quality tracks thatΒ othersΒ would enjoy listening to. Post them regularly and interact with your followers. Give them a glimpse of the hard work and dedication you put into your tracks. They will enjoy the music and in return, help spread the word about you in order to make your page grow.
I thought the same thing and i did the experiment and the music that actually helps a plant grow taller is Pop music the more pop music that you have the better for the plant.
There is no scientific evidence to suggest that any specific type of music makes plants grow better. Factors such as light, water, nutrients, and temperature have a greater impact on plant growth than music.
I SAY POP, CUZ MICHAEL JACKSON KNOWS HOW TO TREAT A LADY THEN HE CAN TREAT A PLANT>>>
a plant grows better in soil
plants that like water grow better in clay and plant that don't like water grow better in sand. like cactus
the plant with better soil will grow better
I think indoor will grow better.
A bean will grow better in dirt not organic.
Nope.
as opposed to what?
NO.
it depends on the music. if you're planning to play classical, it is proven that classical music (mozart, bach, beethoven) help plants grow. it you're planning to play rap, or something like that, no music would be better. =) IMPROVED ANSWER!-I just did this project this weekend and my results were that plants grow best with jazz music. Pop music is the runner up and then Rock is next. Country killed the plant(I KNEW IT!) haha but if you really want great results try doing the experiment! Take 3 or 4 plants (that are exactly the same) and test different genres of music and no music at all! Its a fun project for a science fair or just for fun!