Plant Responses and Hormones (5) Flashcards
Why do plants have phototropisms?
They sense the direction of light and grow towards it to maximize light absorption for photosynthesis
Why do plants have geotropisms?
They can sense gravity, so their roots and shoots grow in the right direction
Why do plants have thigmotropisms?
Climbing plants have a sense of touich, so htey can find things to climb and reach the sunlight.
What is herbivory?
Being eaten by animals
What are alkaloids and how do they work?
Alkaloids are chemicals with bitter tastes, noxious smells or poisonous characteristics that deter or kill herbivores.
What are tannins and how do they work?
Tannins taste bitter, and in some herbivores they can bind to proteins in the gut, making the plant harder to digest. Both of these things deter animals from eating the plant.
What are alarm pheromones and what do they do?
Some plants release alarm pheromones into the air in response to herbivore grazing. This can cause nearby plants that detect these chemicals to start making chemical defenses such as tannins.
What do some plants do to protect against herbivory when touched?
They fold up in response to being touched. It may help to knock off any small insects feeding on the plant, it may also scare animals trying to eat it.
How do some plants respond to abiotic stress e.g extreme cold?
Some plants respond to extreme cold by producing their own form of antifreeze. The antifreeze proteins bind to ice crystals and lower the temperature that water freezes at, stopping more ice crystals from growing.
What is a tropism?
A tropism is the response of a plant to a directional stimulus. Plants respond to stimuli by regulating their growth
What is a positive tropism?
A positive tropism is growth towards the stimulus
What is a negative tropism?
A negative tropism is growth away from the stimulus
What parts of the plant are phototrophic?
shoots are positively phototrophic and roots are negatively phototrophic
What parts of the plant are geotrophic?
shoots are negatively geotrophic and roots are positively geotrophic.
What is a hydrotropism?
Plant growth in response to water. Roots are positively hydrotrophic
What is a thermotropism?
Plant growth in response to temperature.
What is a thigmotropism?
Plant growth in response to contact with an object.
What are plant growth hormones?
They are chemicals that speed up or slow down plant growth.
Where are plant growth hormones produced and used?
Growth hormones are produced in the growing regions of the plant and they move to where they are needed in the other parts of the plant.
What does the hormone gibberellin do?
It stimulates seed germination, stem elongation, side shoot formation and flowering.
What does the hormone auxin do?
They stimulate the growth of shoots by cell elongation. High concentrations of auxins inhibit growth in roots though.
Where are auxins produced and give an example of an auxin?
Auxins are produced in the tips of shoots in flowering plants. One important example of an auxin is indoleacetic acid which, like other auxins, works by stimulating cell elongation.
How does IAA work?
IAA is moved around the plant to control tropisms- it moved by diffusion and active transport over short distances, and via the phloem over long distances. The uneven distribution of IAA means there is uneven groth of the plant
What does IAA do in shoots and roots?
In shoots, it elongates cells while in roots it inhibits growth.