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Introduction to Water and Nutrients in Plants and Properties of Water in Plants HORT 301 – Plant Physiology September 21, 2007

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Water and Nutrients in Plants and Properties of Water in Plants HORT 301 – Plant Physiology September 21, 2007"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Water and Nutrients in Plants and Properties of Water in Plants HORT 301 – Plant Physiology September 21, 2007 paul.m.hasegawa.1@purdue.edu Plants are autotrophic (self-nourishing) - access essential chemical resources from the environment and synthesize all other necessary molecules Light or chemical energy is used for acquisition (fixation), assimilation and biosynthesis

2 Essential chemical resources of plants are necessary for growth, development and survival Carbon – carbon (as CO 2 ) is fixed and assimilated into sugars from which carbohydrate macromolecules (starch, cellulose), nucleic acids (RNA, DNA), proteins, and lipids are produced Water (H 2 O) – absorbed into roots from the soil solution and moved throughout the plant, H and O are essential Mineral nutrients – essential elements (excluding C, H and O), usually accessed by roots from the soil solution

3 Series of lectures will focus on: Water and mineral nutrients – properties, acquisition, assimilation and movement (transport) through the plant Sugar/photosynthetic assimilate movement (translocation) through the phloem, and assimilate allocation and partitioning

4 Water and Plants - Lectures Properties of water- structure and physico-chemical properties of water that are fundamental to function in plants Water movement into and through plant cells – bulk flow, diffusion and osmosis; water potential Water absorption/uptake into roots – movement of water from the soil solution, absorption by roots and loading into the xylem for movement to the shoot Water movement through the plant – water transport in the xylem Stomatal function in transpiration – control of water loss to the atmosphere, water movement to the shoot and carbon fixation (~500 g H 2 O transpired/g organic matter fixed) Water relations and horticulture (Mike Mickelbart)

5 How or why is water important to plants? Properties of Water in Plants Taiz and Zeiger, Chapter 3 (p. 37-41)

6 Water (H 2 O) is the most limiting plant resource – essential for plant survival, growth and development, exchanged for CO 2

7 Plant volume (fresh weight, size) and cell expansion – water constitutes about 80-95% of cellular volume and “drives” cell expansion (volume increase) Maintenance of temperature – heat buffer (absorbs heat energy) and other cooling properties of water, continuous movement through the plant because of transpiration (evaporation to the atmosphere) facilitates temperature maintenance (97% of water absorbed by roots is lost by transpiration) Essential for some biochemical chemical reactions – e.g. carbon fixation Solvent for ions and organic molecules – most elemental nutrients are absorbed by roots from the soil solution

8 Molecular structure of water – H 2 O, two hydrogen atoms (H) bound covalently to oxygen (O), electrons are shared between H + and O 2- Oxygen has a stronger attraction for the electrons in the covalent bond (more electronegative than hydrogen) creating a negative charge (oxygen) and positive charge (hydrogen) and creating polarity Separation of the negative and positive charged regions because of the covalent bond angles makes it a polar molecule (molecule has positively and negatively charged regions, although without a net charge )

9 Hydrogen bonding (weak electrostatic interaction) – Localized negative and positive charges in the water molecule results in formation of hydrogen bonds (H  O) that facilitates water molecule aggregation

10 Water is a solvent for biochemical molecules – Hydrogen bonding between water and ions or polar molecules reduces intramolecular electrostatic interaction and increases solubility Attraction of water molecules to charged groups in marcromolecules produces a hydration shell that enhances solubility

11 Temperature buffering and cooling properties of water – due to high specific heat and latent heat of vaporization properties Specific heat - energy required to raise the temperature of a substance Specific heat of water relative to other substances; water (1.00 cal/g/deg) > alcohol (0.58) > air (0.25) > copper (0.09) @ standard pressure, thermal energy is dissipated to raise the temperature, plant transpires 97% of water taken up by roots Latent heat of vaporization - energy required to change the state of a molecule from the liquid to the gas phase Water (539 cal/g) > alcohol (204), thermal energy is used for vaporization, evaporation at the leaf surface facilitates cooling

12 Cohesive, tensile strength, adhesive and surface tension properties of water – facilitate water movement in cells, root to shoot Cohesion – intermolecular attraction of water molecules due to hydrogen bonding

13 Water can be compressed forming a positive pressure Tensile strength – maximum (pulling) force (per unit area) that a water column can withstand without separating causing air spaces, due to cohesion

14 Adhesion – attraction of water molecules to a solid phase, e.g. glass tube or cell walls (pores) of xylem vessels Surface tension – negative pressure created at the water-air interface (liquid-vapor) surfaces because water molecules have greater attraction for each other than for air Tensile strength, cohesion and adhesion cause capillary movement (capillarity) of water up a small diameter tube (or xylem vessel) from a basal source, and surface tension is the primary driving force for water transport up the xylem


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