9.3 Plant growth Flashcards

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1
Q

Plant life spans

A

Determined genetically

  • annuals: cucumber, carrot
  • biannuals: 1st year germinating, roots, 2nd year stems, leaves, flowers, fruits - cellery
  • perennials: live 2+ years - trees
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2
Q

Plant anatomy

A
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3
Q

Leaf anatomy

A
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4
Q

Apical vs lateral meristem growth

A
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5
Q

Explain meristem cells

A

Meristems: tissues in a plant consisting of undifferentiated cells capable of indeterminate growth (allow plants to regrow structures/ form entirely new plants)

  • apical: shoot/root - primary growth - leaves/flowers
  • lateral: at cambium - secondary growth - production of bark
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6
Q

Explain auxin and apical dominance

A

Auxins - growth hormones in shoots/roots- trasnported by PIN3 proteins - absorbed by auxin efflux pumps

Produced by shoot apical meristem - promotes growth in shoot appex but prevents in lateral (auxillary) buds - apical dominance - ensures plant growth towards light

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7
Q

Explain tropisms

A

Tropism - growth or turning movement of an plant in response to a directional external stimulus

Both regulates by auxin

Phototropism - shoots, light receptors regulate distribution of auxin - growth where auxin - positive photostropism

Gravitropism (geotropism) - roots, auxin accumulates at the lower part of roots - dark side of root becomes shorter - negative phototropism

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8
Q

Explain micropropagation

A

Micropropagation - technique used to produce large numbers of identical plants (clones) from a selected stock plant

  • undifferentiated shoot apex selected from a stock plant and sterilised
  • tissue sample - explant - grown on a sterile nutrient agar gel
  • explant is treated with growth hormones (e.g. auxins) to stimulate shoot and root development
  • growing shoots continuously divided + separated - new samples (multiplication phase)
  • root and shoot are developed, the cloned plant can be transferred to soil

Adv:

  • fast
  • takes up less space
  • virus free
  • save rare species
  • genetically identical

Disadv:

  • labs needed
  • high costs
  • skilled workers
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9
Q

Explain apical growth

A
  • Growth - combination of cell enlargement and mitosis in shoots and roots - regulated by auxins
  • Differentiation - variety of stem tissues/ structures + leaves/flowers
  • in stem - at nodes - axillary (lateral) buds - new branching shoots - leaves and flowers
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10
Q

Auxins in shoots vs roots

A

In shoots: promotes growth - cell elongation, auxin activates proton pumps - decrease pH - cellulose fibres loosen + auxin activates expression of expansins - increases elastciity of cell wall - influx of water - into vacuole - cell increases in size => increase in cell size helps bend towards the sun - more sunlight

In roots: inhibits elongation, cells become smaller

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11
Q

Plant hormones and their function

A

Auxins: primary growth by elongation and mitosis

Promote apical dominance – whereby the apex grows while - lateral buds remain undeveloped

Auxin concentrations - response to directional stimuli - tropisms

Cytokinins: promote cytokinesis and ensure roots and shoots grow at equal rates

  • promotes secondary growth (thickening) and help to control the rate of branching by a plant, involved in stimulating the growth of fruit

Gibberellins: triggers germination in dormant seeds (initiates plant growth), causes stem elongation by promoting cell elongation and mitosis

Ethylene: gas which acts as a plant hormone - stimulates maturation and ageing (senescence)

  • responsible for ripening of fruit (auxins + gibberellins promote fruit growth but inhibit ripening)
  • contributes to the loss of leaves (abscission) and the death of flowers

Abscisic Acid (ABA): inhibit plant growth and development

  • promotes the death of leaves (abscission) and is responsible for seed dormancy
  • initiates stress responses in plants (like winter dormancy in deciduous plants)
  • controls the closing of stomata - regulates transpiration
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