Information and Communication Theoretical Foundations of the Internet of Plants, Principles, Challenges, and Future Directions
Ahmet B. Kilic, Ozgur B. Akan
公開日: 2025/9/10
Abstract
Plants exchange information through multiple modalities, including chemical, electrical, mycorrhizal, and acoustic signaling, which collectively support survival, defense, and adaptation. While these processes are well documented in biology, their systematic analysis from an Information and Communication Technology (ICT) perspective remains limited. To address this gap, this article is presented as a tutorial with survey elements. It provides the necessary biological background, reformulates inter-plant signaling within ICT frameworks, and surveys empirical studies to guide future research and applications. First, the paper introduces the fundamental biological processes to establish a foundation for readers in communications and networking. Building on this foundation, existing models of emission, propagation, and reception are synthesized for each modality and reformulated in terms of transmitter, channel, and receiver blocks. To complement theory, empirical studies and state-of-the-art sensing approaches are critically examined. Looking forward, the paper identifies open challenges and outlines future research directions, with particular emphasis on the emerging vision of the Internet of Plants (IoP). This paradigm frames plants as interconnected nodes within ecological and technological networks, offering new opportunities for applications in precision agriculture, ecosystem monitoring, climate resilience, and bio-inspired communication systems. By integrating biological insights with ICT frameworks and projecting toward the IoP, this article provides a comprehensive tutorial on plant communication for the communications research community and establishes a foundation for interdisciplinary advances.