How Plants Grow & Respond to Disturbance. Succession & Disturbance  Community change is driven by successional forces: Immigration and establishment.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1/1/2014 Plant Life Cycles Chapter #2. 1/1/2014 What is a Life Cycle? from the time a seed is planted until a seed is produced.
Advertisements

August 2008 Plant Life Cycles Chapter #2 Modified by Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum Office June 2002.
Grass Growth and Response to Grazing. Importance of Grasses l Grasses are the most abundant plant l Most of the energy and nutrients for livestock l Forage.
Types and Categories of Range Plants. Objectives 1. Categorize plants according to: growth form, life span, season of growth, origin, and forage value.
Nutrient Cycling and Retention
Plant Material Maintenance, chapter 2 in the text.
Regulation of Plant Growth
Impacts of Climate Change on Western Forests Dr. Mark Johnston Saskatchewan Research Council and Prairie Adaptation Research Collaborative.
Michelle Trogdon GEOG 4401/5401 Soils Geography Fall 2007 – Univ of Colorado, Boulder.
BIOL 585 – Fall Schedule: Week 1: Figure set activity (LAB) Week 2: Field sampling at Prophetstown State Park (FIELD) Week 3: Data analysis & interpretation.
Grass Growth and Pasture Management Part of the Ruminant Livestock: Facing New Economic Realities Meetings.
Forages. Forage – the edible parts of plants, other than separated grain, that can provide feed for grazing animals, or that can be harvested for feeding.
Rangeland Management Training By Dan Robinett, USDA - USAID 7 Kabul, 2006.
Plant Tissues and Organs
Shoots I. Primary growth in stems A. Shoot system 1. apical bud 2. apical meristem activity B. Nodes and internodes C. 3 basic leaf arrangements D. Fate.
Watersheds and Fire Where conditions are not too dry or too wet and where accumulated carbon from photosynthesis will not oxidize slowly or rot, fire cycles.
Ecosystem Production Objectives  Describe the concept of the ecosystem  Relate the laws of thermodynamics to ecology  Define the types of ecological.
UNCE, Reno, Nev. How Woody Vegetation Grows With special thanks to all our contributors including:
How Plants Grow Mort Kothmann Texas A&M University.
Types and Categories of Range Plants Jen Peterson.
Theories of Vegetation Change Mort Kothmann Texas A&M University.
The Animal Cell The Chloroplast Chromoplast in Forsythia.
Plant Ecology - Chapter 14 Ecosystem Processes. Ecosystem Ecology Focus on what regulates pools (quantities stored) and fluxes (flows) of materials and.
Terrestrial Succession Meredith Burke June 13, 2002.
Changes to Rangelands Over Time. Range Change Factors  Grazing  Fire  Invasive Species  Weather/Climate  Human Activities.
Plant Structure Aquaponics. Shoot system Root system Reproductive shoot (flower) Terminal bud Node Internode Blade Vegetable shoot Terminal bud Petiole.
Primary Productivity  Amount of energy or mass created during photosynthesis  gC/m 2 /yr or kcal/m 2 /yr  Net Primary Productivity: biomass for herbivores.
55 Introduction The species that live together in a particular area constitute an ecological community. Each species interacts in unique ways with other.
National Railroad Contractors Association Plant Biology.
Welcome! §Please read the board completely. §Please get out your Ecology objectives #1- 5 and review with your neighbor for the quiz. (add review ideas.
Effect of Elevated Atmospheric CO2 Concentration to Plant Respiration
The Grass Plant Inflorescence Culm Leaf blade Leaf sheath Ligule Stolon daughter plant Rhizome daughter plant Auricles Seed.
How Plants Grow & Respond to Disturbance. Succession & Disturbance  Community change is driven by successional forces: Immigration and establishment.
Ecological Succession.  Ecological succession is the observed process of change in the species structure of an ecological community over time.
Plants & Plant Tissues Shoots System This system is composed of a stem(s), leaves, and flowers which are adapted for support, light acquisition, water.
Obj.Assessment StatementNotes Describe the concept and processes of succession in a named habitat. Page Students should study named examples.
Fire Effects on Vegetation September 13, Tallgrass Prairie: TTYP First, think to yourself. Write down any causes, effects, and mechanisms that explain.
What’s Your Classification? Horticulture Science 03B Plant Life Cycles Growth Forms Size Classification.
CHAPTER 35 PLANT STRUCTURE AND GROWTH Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Section B1: The Process of Plant Growth.
Field bindweed  Scientific name: Convolvulus arvensis  Family: Convolvulaceae (Morning Glory family)  Life cycle: Perennial  Where found: Range, Cropland.
Bare rock is exposed due to some type of disturbance like a retreating glacier or volcanic eruption. No soil is present. Pioneer species, like lichens.
What is Range? Unit 4: Rangelands, Forests, & Fire.
PLANT STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Changes in Ecosystems: Ecological Succession Pete HamiltonSandringham College.
ECOSYSTEMS All of the organisms living in a community and the abiotic factors with which they interact. “global ecosystem” Energy flows Nutrients cycle.
Modified by Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum Office
Grass Growth and Response to Grazing
Life Depends on the Sun Energy from the sun enters an ecosystem when plants use light energy to make sugar molecules. This happens through a process called.
Rangeland Principles (Rem 151)
Plant Life Cycles Chapter #2 11/15/2018.
How Do Plants Grow Biology 11.
Plant Form and Function
Plant Life Cycles Chapter #2 11/22/2018.
Ecological Succession
Plant Growth.
Changes in ecosystems Standard 17.4: Describe changes in ecosystems resulting from seasonal variations, climate change, and succession.
Plant Processes.
Eukaryotic Multicellular Autotrophs Non-mobile
How Plants Respond to Grazing
Plant Response to Grazing
The Carbon Cycle The carbon cycle is the movement of carbon from the nonliving environment into living things and back. Carbon Essential part of proteins,
Changes to Rangelands Over Time
SUCCESSION.
Locoweed is Flourishing This year
PLANT GROWTH & DEVELOPMENT
Primary and Secondary Growth in Plants
Grass Growth and Response to Grazing
Plant Characteristics and Special Functions
Plant Life Cycles Chapter #2 5/25/2019.
Small and Large trees begin to grow, and the community reaches an equilibrium or balance. This results in a climax community. Organisms are driven away.
Presentation transcript:

How Plants Grow & Respond to Disturbance

Succession & Disturbance  Community change is driven by successional forces: Immigration and establishment of plants Competition between plants Site modification Stabilization

Succession & Disturbance  Disturbances affect succession: Fire Grazing Drought (climate/weather) Human activity To understand how disturbances affect community change, must understand how these disturbances affect plant growth.

Functional Categories of Plants  Annual (grass, forb)  Perennial (grass, forb)  Woody Deciduous or evergreen Sprouting or non-sprouting (basal)  Cool season or warm season  Anti-herbivory  Chemical  Physical These factors affect how plants respond to disturbance

Major Plant Groups on Rangelands Tree Shrub Forb Grass Grasslike DicotsMonocots These factors affect how plants respond to disturbance

Key Points of Plant Response  Location of Growth Points  Growth Limiting Factors  Importance of Roots  Carbohydrates – Energy for Growth

Location of Growing Points Keep meristems out of reach

Location of Growing Points  Location depends on season Early in the growing season - close to the ground and protected. As the season progresses - elevates and subject to removal. Apical Meristem Axillary Buds

Factors Limiting Plant Growth  Heat (optimal temperature)  Below-Ground (roots) Water Nitrogen and other nutrients  Above-Ground (shoot) Light CO 2 Meristems (apical, intercalary, axillary)

Allocation of Plant Resources Plants allocate resources (phytosynthate) with the priority towards acquiring the most limiting resource(s).  If water is limiting, allocation is shifted towards root growth over shoot growth.  If leaf area is limiting, allocation is shifted towards leaf growth over shoot growth.

Key Concepts  N uptake is with water; if water is limiting, N will be limiting  Higher levels of available N increase water use efficiency  Level of available NO 3 in the soil affects the species composition of the vegetation Weeds require higher levels of NO 3 than do climax grasses

Importance of roots Remove the Leaves Affect the Roots

Root Responses to Defoliation 50%70%90% Level of Removal

Root Responses to Defoliation  Root growth decreases proportionally as defoliation removes greater than 50% of the plant leaf area.  Frequency of defoliation interacts with defoliation intensity to determine the total effect of defoliation on root growth. The more intense the defoliation, the greater the effect of frequency of defoliation.

Consequences of Reduced Root Growth  The net effect of severe grazing is to reduce: Total absorptive area of roots. Soil volume explored for soil resources e.g. water and nitrogen.  How may this alter competitive interactions?

Carbohydrates – Energy for Growth  Current photosynthesis is the primary source for growth of new shoots.  Carbohydrate reserves exist and they provide a small amount of energy to contribute to initial leaf growth following severe grazing or leaf damage e.g., fire, late spring freeze.

Growth is Exponential  The initial or residual amount of plant tissue is very important in determining the rate of plant growth at any point in time.  The total amount of root and shoot biomass is more important than the concentration of reserve CHO.

What we now know makes this untrue FALSE

Key Points of Plant Response  Location of Growth Points  Growth Limiting Factors  Importance of Roots  Carbohydrates – Energy for Growth