In India, there is a botanist named Xinfu. After many years of experiments, he found that music can promote plant growth.
Xinfu asked an artist named Kumari to use a lyre to play a kind of music called "Raja" to the impatiens in his garden. Kumari followed his instructions and played the impatiens every day. Hua played the piano for 25 minutes without stopping for 15 consecutive weeks. As a result, a miracle occurred. The daffodils that listened to the "Raja" music grew faster than similar daffodils nearby. The leaves of these flowers were 72% longer on average than ordinary flowers, and the average height also increased by 20%.
Sinfu also conducted the same experiment on different flowers and vegetables. The results showed that sound waves can promote the flowering and fruiting of these plants and increase their yield. Plants have the ability to appreciate music.
From 1960 to 1963, he also conducted a large-scale experiment in the fields of seven nearby villages. He used a radio to play "Rajia" on six types of rice. As a result, in these fields, The average yield of rice in other fields increased by 20 to 60%.
He also experimented with flowers and tobacco in the same way, and the yield increased by nearly 50% compared with ordinary fields. Schiff also accidentally discovered that music not only stimulates the growth of tobacco, but also greatly increases the nicotine content in tobacco leaves.
In the United States, a singer named Rosie Rickler discovered that plants have various reactions when they "listen" to music.
She did an interesting experiment, placing corn, wheat, geranium, etc. in three houses respectively, letting the plants in the first house grow silently, and the plants in the second house growing silently every day. Let it listen to a piece of music in the key of F. The plant in the third room only plays the same music to it intermittently for 3 hours every day. After two weeks, all the plants in the second house withered, but the plants in the third house not only did not die, but were much stronger than the plants that grew silently in the first house.
This experiment tells people that plants, like people, need music in their lives, but listening to music too much or too hard will kill them.
After reading the above description, you may adopt an indifferent attitude. No matter what the consequences are, it has nothing to do with me anyway. However, two students from the Biology Department of Beale University in Poole, USA, became interested in this. They spent eight months conducting experiments on zucchini to see for themselves how much influence music had on the plants.
They placed growing zucchini in both rooms, placed a radio next to the zucchini, and played intense rock music and elegant classical music respectively from Denver radio stations. It was found that the vines of the zucchini that listened to classical music climbed towards the radio, and one of them even wrapped its branches around the radio, as if it was intimately embracing the radio; while the vines of the zucchini that listened to rock music climbed away from the radio. .
The experiments of these two students, in turn, inspired the singer Rickle. She did the same experiment with marigolds. Two weeks later, all the marigolds who listened to rock music died. Eighteen days later, she examined the roots of the two groups of marigolds and found that the roots of the dead group were sparse, while the roots of the other group of marigolds were thick and developed.