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UNIT 7 Chapter 36: Transport in Plants Chapter 37: Plant Nutrition Chapter 38: Plant Reproduction Types of Transport Transport of water and minerals occurs on three levels: In/out of individual cells Short distance Long distance Differences in water potential drive transport of water in plant cells = s + p Pure water, s = 0 Addition of solutes decreases s Water moves from areas of high water potential to areas of low water potential Water potential impacts uptake and loss of water Flaccid cell Cell loses water Cell will eventually plasmolyze Turgid cell Cell gains/maintains water Turgid plant Absorption of Water & Minerals Root hairs and mycorrhizae increase surface area and enhance absorption Water and minerals transported = xylem sap Ascent of xylem sap depends mainly on transpiration Xylem sap not “pushed” by pressure in roots, but “pulled” up Force created by transpiration and cohesion/adhesion of water molecules extends down shoot, into roots and even into soil Water potential gradient drives water up Air in the xylem, cavitation, breaks the chain Control of Transpiration A plant can transpire more than its weight in water every day Flow in xylem can reach 75cm/min Guard cells control the size of the stomata and balance the plant’s water needs and loss Transpiration-to-photosynthesis is amount of water loss per gram of CO2 fixed Many plants ~600:1 – 600g of water lost per 1g of CO2 fixed C4 plants (ex. corn) ~300:1 Transpiration also results in evaporative cooling, which can cool leaves 10-15°C Prevents denaturation of enzymes and disruption of metabolism Each stoma is flanked by a pair of guard cells suspended by other epidermal cells over an air space Water into guard cells = turgid stoma open Water out of guard cells = flaccid stoma closed K+ plays an important role in osmosis in guard cells Presence of K+ ions lowers s and water flows in or out based on where s is lower There are three cues that initiate the opening of stomata in the morning 1. Blue-light receptors promote active uptake of K+ into guard cells Photosynthesis provides ATP 2. Depletion of CO2 as photosynthesis begins 3. Internal “clock” within guard cells that cycles on a 24-hour basis – circadian rhythm Xerophytes Xerophytes are plants that are well adapted to arid (very dry) environments CAM plants are xerophytes (family Crassulaceae) A number of anatomical adaptations exist to reduce water loss Concentration of stomata on lower surface of leaf Presence of trichomes Placement of stomata within “crypts” Phloem Transport Phloem sap is typically moved from sugar sources to sugar sinks Sources: sugar being produced by photosynthesis, esp. in mature leaves Sinks: growing parts of the plant, fruits Sinks usually receive sugar from the sources closest to them Can be in any direction – even against pull of gravity Pressure flow is the primary force behind the translocation of phloem sap Phloem sap flows from source to sink at about 1m/hr Flow is fastest near sources Sugar concentration is highest Water is recycled because of differences in END Nitrogen Requirements • 80% of the atmosphere is nitrogen (N2), but plants can still suffer deficiencies • Plants can only use nitrogen in certain forms • Ammonium (NH4+) or nitrate (NO3-) ions • Bacteria in the soil metabolize unusable forms of nitrogen • Nitrogen fixation makes nitrogen available • Nitrogen fixing bacteria convert N2 into NH4+ and ammonifying bacteria convert decomposing organic material into NH4+ • Nitrifying bacteria convert NH4+ into NO3- • ALL (eukaryotic) life on earth depends on nitrogen fixation Parasitic & Carnivorous Plants • Some plants supplement or replace their photosynthesis by taking advantage of other plants • ex. Indian pipe • Epiphytes are autotrophic plants, but they simply live on other plants • Not truly parasitic • ex. some mosses and ferns • Carnivorous plants supplement their nutrition by digesting animals • Typically found in areas with poor soil conditions • Use photosynthesis for carbohydrates, but get some nitrogen and minerals from animals • Modified leaves trap animals and secrete enzymes END Flower Structure: Review Pollination • Pollination is the attachment of pollen to a flower’s stigma • Pollen released is carried by wind or animals • Pollen grain produces a pollen tube • Grows through style, into ovary and discharges sperm • Zygote gives rise to an embryo • Ovule develops into a seed, ovary develops into a fruit containing seed(s) Plant Reproduction Terminology • Plant biologists distinguish between complete flowers, those having all four organs, and incomplete flowers, those lacking one or more of the whorls • A bisexual flower (“perfect flower”) is equipped with both stamens and carpals • A unisexual flower is missing either stamens or carpels • A monoecious plant has male and female flowers on the same individual plant • ex. corn • A dioecious species has male flowers and female flowers on separate plants • ex. date palms Prevention of Self-Fertilization • Some flowers self-fertilize, but most angiosperms have mechanisms that make this difficult • Barriers prevent self-fertilization to maintain genetic variety • In some species stamens and carpels mature at different times • May be arranged so that it is unlikely that an animal pollinator could transfer pollen from the anthers to the stigma of the same flower • Most common anti-selfing mechanism is self-incompatibility • Ability to reject its own pollen • Biochemical block prevents fertilization • Self-incompatibility systems are analogous to the immune response of animals • Difference is that the animal immune system rejects non-self, self-incompatibility in plants is a rejection of self • Based on genes for self-incompatibility, called S-genes, with as many as 50 different alleles in a single population • If a pollen grain and the carpel’s stigma have matching alleles at the S-locus, pollen grain fails to initiate or complete the pollen tube Double Fertilization • Pollen grain lands on stigma, absorbs moisture and begins producing a pollen tube • Directed by a chemical attractant, the pollen tube enters the ovary through the micropyle and discharges two sperm within the embryo sac • Both sperm fuse with nuclei in the embryo sac • One sperm fertilizes the egg to form the zygote • Other sperm combines with the two polar nuclei to form a triploid nucleus in the central cell • Gives rise to the endosperm, a food-storing tissue of the seed Fig. 38.9 • After double fertilization, the ovule develops into a seed, and the ovary develops into a fruit enclosing the seed(s) • As the embryo develops, the seed stockpiles proteins, oils, and starch Fruit Development • As the seeds are developing from ovules, the ovary of the flower is developing into a fruit • Pollination triggers hormonal changes that cause the ovary to begin its transformation into a fruit • If a flower has not been pollinated, fruit usually do not develop, and the entire flower withers and falls away • The wall of the ovary becomes the pericarp, the thickened wall of the fruit • In some angiosperms, other floral parts contribute to what we call a fruit Seeds & Seed Germination • As a seed matures, it dehydrates and enters a dormancy phase • Extremely low metabolic rate, suspension of growth and development • Conditions required to break dormancy • Some seeds germinate as soon as they are in a suitable environment • Remains dormant until some specific environmental cue causes them to break dormancy • Seeds of many desert plant germinate only after a substantial rainfall, ensuring enough water • Where natural fires are common, many seeds require intense heat to break dormancy • Other seeds require a chemical attack or physical abrasion • ex. through an animal’s digestive tract before they can germinate • Germination of seeds depends on imbibition, the uptake of water due to the low water potential of the dry seed • Expanding seed ruptures its seed coat and triggers metabolic changes in the embryo that enable it to resume growth • Enzymes begin digesting the storage materials of endosperm and the nutrients are transferred to the growing regions of the embryo END