Isaac Newton had a clue about how plants transport water 200 years before botanists. David Beerling, a plant scientist at the University of Sheffield in England, argues in the Feb. 2 Nature Plants that Newton’s notes on plant sap in the 1660s presage modern theories of plant hydrodynamics.
A page in one of Newton’s undergraduate notebooks describes plant sap rising up through pores in the plant’s stem, drawn by solar energy. The ideas are in line with the modern understanding that evaporation in tree leaves pulls water up through a plant against gravity.