This paper explores whether plant systems can be interpreted through the previously proposed 0-6-6-6-7 adaptive structural architecture. The investigation examines recurring plant behaviors involving equilibrium, environmental constraints, signaling pathways, adaptive correction, and survivability stabilization. This paper presents an observational mapping between established plant processes and a broader adaptive systems framework. The discussion considers how plant regulation, resource transport, environmental response, and stabilization mechanisms may correspond to invariant reference conditions, constraint layers, transmission pathways, adaptive cycles, and oversight functions within the architecture. The work remains exploratory and interpretive, offering botany as a natural-domain test of a previously proposed structural model.
Leif Nathaniel Johnson (Mon,) studied this question.