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Sunflowers usually face the sun but turn toward each other if the sun isn't found.

The claim that sunflowers usually turn toward the sun is widely supported by scientific understanding of heliotropism, where young sunflowers exhibit this behavior. However, the claim that sunflowers turn toward each other when the sun is not found is debunked by a professional fact-checker (USA Today), which rated it false.

June 29, 2026 Language: en 2 claims analyzed

Individual Claims

71
Mostly True Biology
Sunflowers usually turn toward the sun.
The claim that sunflowers usually turn toward the sun is consistent with the phenomenon of heliotropism, where sunflowers follow the sun's movement across the sky during the day, especially when they are in their bud stage.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score None
Web Consensus Weight 0
Source Quality Score 85
Source Quality Weight 0
Llm Reasoning Score 75
Llm Reasoning Weight 100
Weighted Total 71
Evidence Summary General scientific consensus on heliotropism, no fact-check found.
37
Mostly False Biology
If sunflowers don't find the sun, they turn toward each other.
USA Today fact-checked this claim and rated it as false. There is no scientific evidence supporting that sunflowers face each other when they cannot find the sun.
Fact Check Score 49
Fact Check Weight 60
Web Consensus Score None
Web Consensus Weight 0
Source Quality Score 10
Source Quality Weight 0
Llm Reasoning Score 10
Llm Reasoning Weight 40
Weighted Total 37
Evidence Summary USA Today rated this claim as false.

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