Plants and Light Flashcards
What is tropism?
A plants growth in response to environmental cues.
What is growth?
A permanent increase in the size of an organism or of some part of it.
Where are the main areas of stem elongation?
The meristem. These are areas which occur just behind the tip of a root or shoot and are particularly sensitive to chemical messages produced in a response (in particularly) to light.
What happens when one side of a plant grows more than the other?
It results in the bending of shoots or roots in response to a particular stimulus.
What does chlorophyll formation depend on?
Light and day length (or night length). These environmental cues determine changes such as bud development, flowering, fruit ripening and leaf fall.
What is photoperiodism?
Plants flower and seeds germinate in response to changes in day length.
What is phototropism?
Tropisoms are growth responses in plants where the direction of the growth response is determined by the direction of the external stimulus.
What is meant by ‘positive tropism’?
When growth of plant is towards stimulus.
What is meant by ‘negative tropism’?
When growth is away from the stimulus.
What is the name of the photoreceptor you’re supposed to know that is involved in light conversion?
Phytochrome.
What is phytochrome?
A blue-green pigment which exists in two interconvertible forms; Pr which absorbs red light and Pfr which absorbs far red light.
Which is more stable, Pr or Pfr?
Pr but Pfr is more biologically active.
How is Pfr converted to Pr?
When it’s exposed to far red light (rapid) or via slow conversion in the dark.
How is Pr converted to Pfr?
Via red light (rapid).
Which is inactive? Pr or Pfr?
Pr.