Shhhhh. Listen Closely. Your Plants Might Be Talking

by Dana Cronin

There’s an old belief among farmers that on a quiet night, if you listen closely, you can hear the sound of corn growing.

A new exhibit at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden proves that theory to be true.

The exhibit, “Sonic Succulents: Plant Sounds and Vibrations,” is the artist Adrienne Adar‘s vision come to life.

Adar is a sound artist based in Los Angeles. She’s passionate about the natural world, and says her goal is to show people that plants aren’t that different from us: they grow, breathe and even communicate in their own ways.

And so, back in May, she planted a patch of corn within the Brooklyn Botanic Garden and has surrounded it with large yellow megaphones that visitors can stick their heads inside to listen to what a growing stalk sounds like. It turns out the sound is almost extra-terrestrial.

“It can be a little bit meditational … children were sitting on the ground and putting their heads in the lower horns and just hanging out,” she said.

This isn’t the first time Adar has used her art to explore the sounds of nature. In 2016, she connected listening stations to trees around the city of Taos, New Mexico for an exhibit designed to allow locals to experience the area’s native trees and plants in a new way.

Adrienne Adar, the artist behind “Sonic Succulents,” stands next to a corn patch she planted in May at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.

Dana Cronin/NPR

Adar says she’s inspired by the work of scientists like Monica Gagliano, an ecologist at the University of Western Australia,whose research focuses in part on how plants, like animals, are sentient beings with cognitive abilities. They can learn, remember and have their own methods of communication. Gagliano has done experiments showing that plants are able to detect specific vibrational frequencies, like the sound of water, and grow toward that sound.

Adar was fascinated with the idea that plants are sentient. In conceptualizing the exhibit, she says audio was the most effective way to get that idea across.

“You hear a sound, a big sound, and you move and [say], ‘What is that?’ Or if you hear something in your apartment moving, you kind of assume it’s an animal. You always think there’s an alive quality,” she said.

Inside the exhibit there’s a long line of potted plants, including cacti, palm plants and succulents, paired with headphones. Visitors are encouraged to touch the plants, at which point tiny microphones embedded in the planters pick up the vibrations of the touch and make it audible.

Adar says she wants visitors to hear those sounds and realize the impact we have on plants — and to hopefully come away with a newfound respect for them.

“Listen to what it feels when you touch it,” she said. “So when you step on a plant… maybe next time it changes the behavior.”

The exhibit runs through Oct. 27.