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A study led by Nicholas Makris at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, published in Scientific Reports on April 23, 2026, finds that rice seeds exposed to the sound and vibration of falling raindrops germinate substantially faster than seeds not exposed to droplet impacts.
Researchers submerged roughly 8,000 Oryza sativa seeds in shallow water and subjected some trays to streams of rain-like droplets while keeping controls in identical water without droplet impact.
Depending on conditions and seed position in puddles, germination was accelerated by roughly 24â40%. The team attributes the effect to pressure waves transmitted through water that jostle microscopic starch-rich statoliths inside seed cells; those movements plausibly trigger early growth processes.
The study also measured very high underwater sound pressures produced by single drops in shallow puddles.
Authors caution that other factors â such as aeration, pressure changes or extra material from drops â might contribute, and they call for further biological and cross-species testing to confirm mechanisms and field relevance.
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