Science

Squirting cucumbers thicken and stiffen to eject seeds with ‘remarkable speed and precision,’ study finds

Squirting cucumbers thicken and stiffen to eject seeds with 'remarkable speed and precision,' study finds


Squirting cucumbers are named after the way they expel their seeds in a violent jet of liquid — and now, scientists have finally unlocked the mysterious mechanics of these explosive launches.

New research suggests these inedible cucumbers (Ecballium elaterium), whose name means “throw out” in Greek, accumulate fluid in their fruit, building so much pressure inside the cucumbers that they eventually burst. Remarkably, scientists discovered that this pressure drops just before the seeds are released, because the fluid drains from the fruits into the stem, changing its shape and catapulting the cucumbers away so they spew their contents.

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