stimuli and responses Flashcards

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1
Q

What are tropisms?

A

the response of a plant to a stimulus coming from a certain direction

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2
Q

What are the two types of tropisms?

A

positive- plants growing towards stimulus
negative- plants growing away from stimulus

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3
Q

What is phototropism?

A

shoots of plants growing towards light to photosynthesise - positive phototropism
shoots of roots growing away from light - negative phototropism

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4
Q

What is gravitropism?

A

shoots of plants growing against gravity - negative phototropism
shoots of roots growing downwards with gravity - positive phototropism

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5
Q

What is hydrotropism?

A

shoots of plants growing away from water - negative phototropism
shoots of roots growing towards water - positive phototropism

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6
Q

What is thigmotropism?

A

shoots of plants growing towards objects they have touched - positive thigmotropism
explains why plants climb and attach to things

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7
Q

What are plant growth factors?

A

hormone-like substances produced by cells throughout the plant that affect the growth of tissues in the plant (an example being auxins)

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8
Q

What is IAA?

A

an example of an auxin which controls the elongation of plant cells
produced in the tips of shoots and tips of roots

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9
Q

What happens to the shoots when light intensity changes?

A

the change in light intensity causes the movement of IAA from the light sides of the shoots to the shaded side
the shoot will then bend towards the light due to a greater concentration of IAA on the shaded side which elongates the one side
this is an example of positive phototropism

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10
Q

What happens to the roots when light intensity changes?

A

IAA controls bending of the roots away fromt he light
IAA moves towards shaded side of the roots causing the elongation of cells on the shaded side and the bending of roots away from the light
this is negative phototropism

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11
Q

How do shoots and roots move towards /against gravity?

A

IAA moves to the undersides of shoots/ roots causing elongation of ells, bending them and growing upwards/downwards
roots show positive gravitropism
shoots show negative gravitropism

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12
Q

What would happen if the tip of a shoot was:
-removed
-covered with opaque material
-removed, put on agar and placed back
-agar put on half of shoot

A
  • no bending due to no IAA
  • no bending due to no IAA
  • plant will bend and grow as normal - IAA will diffuse through agar
    -plant would bend only towards that side, as IAA will only be able to diffuse on that side
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13
Q

What are the different type of receptors?

A

Photoreceptors (light)
Thermoreceptors (temp)
Chemoreceptors (chemicals)
Mechanoreceptors (pressure)
Proprioceptors (movement)

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14
Q

What is the role of sensory receptors?

A

they detect a specific stimulus and convert the change in energy into the nerve impulse/generator potentials

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15
Q

What is resting potential?

A

when there is no stimulus detected - ions move in and out of cell through ion channels and pumps

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16
Q

What is generator potential?

A

When a stimulus is detected, causing membrane of receptors to become more excited and more permeable. There is a potential difference across the membrane as more ions can enter the cell

17
Q

What is the action potential?

A

When generator potential passes the ‘threshold level’ passing a detected stimulus onto the sensory neurone

18
Q

What are pacinian corupscules ?

A

mechanoreceptors that detect changes in pressure

19
Q

What is the structure of pacinian corupscules ?

A

sensory nerve ending surrounded by layers of connective tissue called lamellae

20
Q

How to pacinian corupscules respond to change in pressure?

A

-when stimulus is detetcted, lamelle become deformed and presson the sensory nerve ending which deforms the stretch-mediated sodium ion channels
-channels open and sodium ions diffuse in
-influx of ions changes potential difference across membrane creating a generator potential
-if potetnial reaches threshold level, it will trigger action potetnial which is passed onto CNS

21
Q

What are photoreceptors and where are they located?

A

receptors in the eye that detect changes in light
located in the fovea (in the retina)

22
Q

How do photoreceptors in the eye respond the change in light?

A

-light enters eye through pupil and is focused onto retina
-amount of light entering eye is controlled by muscles of iris
-Photoreceptors carry electrical impulses to the brain via the optic nerve (in the place called the blind spot)

23
Q

What are 2 types of photoreceptors?

A

rod and cone cells

24
Q

What are the features of cone and rod cells?

A

rods- monochromatic vision, multiple rod cells connect to a singular sensory neurone, low visual ascuity, high sensitivty to light
cones - trichromatic vision (blue/green/red), each cone cell has its own sensory neurone, high visual ascuity, low sensitivty to light

25
Q

What is spacial summation?

A

when a stimulus is detected from different areas

26
Q

What is visual ascuity?

A

The ability to distinguish between 2 points close together

27
Q

What are neurones?

A

Nerve cells that are responsibel for the conduction of electircal impulses (action potentials) in the body

28
Q

What is the role of sensory neurones?

A

transmit nerve impulses from receptor to relay neurone which travels directly to motor neurone

29
Q

What is a neurone cell body?

A

contains the cell organelles such as nucelus and large amounts of the Rough ER

30
Q

What are dendrons ?

A

extensions of the cell body that divide into smaller branches called dendrites.

31
Q

What is an axon?

A

a single long fibre that carries electrical impulses away from the cell body

32
Q

What are dendrites?

A

dendrites can conduct electrical impulses towards cell body

33
Q

What is a myelin sheath?

A

made up of Schwann cells that are rich in lipds called myelin - protects the axon and provides electrical insulation

34
Q

What are nodes of Ranvier?

A

exposed parts of the axon between Schwann cells and where there is no myelin sheath