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Hormonal Control in Plants Requirements for Growth & Reproduction 2008 Solar tracking (heliotropism) Some plants orientate their leaves perpendicular to the sun’s rays. This maximises their absorption of sunlight and photosynthesis. Plants in desert climates orientate their leaves parallel to the sun’s rays, hence decreasing leaf temperature and water loss through transpiration. Ethylene Gaseous hormone produced in many plant parts fruit ripening promotes leaf, fruit and flower abscission Abscicic Acid produced in terminal buds and maturing seeds (stress hormone) closes stomata (pores in leaves) inhibits growth enforces seed dormancy In Autumn, phytochrome levels change. The plant responds by producing abscisic acid at the petiole (leaf attachment point). Chlorophyll is moved from the leaf into the stem, so leaves go yellow/red. Petiole cells soften until the leaf drops off. Dicots can grow from either: Apical buds/meristems (the top of the plant) Lateral buds/meristems (buds at branching points) Apical dominance When the apical bud grows more quickly than the lateral buds, the plant grows into a tall slender shape. The apical bud produces auxin, which inhibits growth at lateral buds. If the apical bud is pruned, the lateral buds are no longer inhibited and the plant grows into a low bushy shape.