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William Terzaghi Spring 2013 Bio 369: Plant Physiology.

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Presentation on theme: "William Terzaghi Spring 2013 Bio 369: Plant Physiology."— Presentation transcript:

1 William Terzaghi Spring 2013 Bio 369: Plant Physiology

2 COURSE OVERVIEW 1) Understanding how plants work.

3 Understanding how plants work. Solar input = 1.3 kW/m2

4 Understanding how plants work. Solar input = 1.3 kW/m2 5% (max) can be stored in organics

5 Understanding how plants work. Solar input = 1.3 kW/m2 5% (65W/m2) can be stored Humans consume ~ 100 W (360,000 J/hour)

6 Understanding how plants work. Solar input = 1.3 kW/m2 5% (65W/m2) can be stored Humans consume ~ 100 W (360,000 J/hour) Plants must have high surface area & low metabolism

7 Understanding how plants work. Photosynthesis

8 Understanding how plants work. Photosynthesis Nutrition

9 Understanding how plants work. Photosynthesis Nutrition Metabolism

10 Understanding how plants work. Photosynthesis Nutrition Metabolism Growth & development

11 COURSE OVERVIEW 1) Understanding how plants work. 2) Understanding how plant physiologists work. Method

12 COURSE OVERVIEW 1) Understanding how plants work. 2) Understanding how plant physiologists work. Method Technology

13 Plan A Standard lecture course

14 Plan B Standard lecture course, except:

15 Plan B Standard lecture course, except: 1.Last lectures will be chosen by you -> electives

16 Plan B Standard lecture course, except: 1.Last lectures will be chosen by you -> electives 2.Last 4 labs will be an independent research project

17 Plan B Standard lecture course, except: 1.Last lectures will be chosen by you -> electives 2.Last 4 labs will be an independent research project 3.20% of grade will be “elective” Paper Talk Research proposal Poster

18 Plan B Standard lecture course, except: 1.Last lectures will be chosen by you -> electives 2.Last 4 labs will be an independent research project 3.20% of grade will be “elective” Paper Talk Research proposal Poster Exam

19 Plan B schedule- Spring 2013 DateTOPIC JAN14General Introduction 16plant structure I 18plant structure II 21plants and water I 23plants and water II 25mineral nutrition I 28mineral nutrition II 30solute transport I FEB1solute transport II 4Photosynthetic light reactions I 6Photosynthetic light reactions II 8Calvin cycle 11C4 and CAM 13Environmental effects 15Phloem transport I 18 Exam 1

20 20Phloem transport II 22Respiration I 25Respiration II 27Respiration III MAR1Lipid synthesis 4Spring Recess 6Spring Recess 8Spring Recess 11Biofuels 13Nutrient assimilation I 15Nutrient assimilation II 18Cell wall synthesis and growth I 20Cell wall synthesis and growth II 22Growth and development I 25Growth and development II 27Light regulation of growth I 29Easter APR1Easter

21 APR3Light regulation of growth II 5Growth regulators I 8Growth regulators II 10Growth regulators III 12Growth regulators IV 15Exam 2 17Elective 19Elective 22Elective 24Elective 26Elective 29Elective May1ElectiveLast Class! ???Final examination

22 Possible elective topics 1) Plant defense compounds 2) Control of flowering 3) Blue-light responses 4) Plant stress responses 5) Plant pathogens 6) Plant movements (heliotropism, venus fly traps, etc) 7) Plant neurobiology 8) Plants and global warming 9) Organelle genetics 10) Plant biotechnology 11) Phytoremediation 12) Lamarckian evolution 13) Self-incompatibility

23 Lab Schedule DateTOPIC Jan18General introduction, plant structure 25Water potential and transpiration Feb1Mineral nutrition 8Light reactions of photosynthesis 15CO 2 assimilation, C3 vs C4 and CAM 22Environmental effects on CO 2 assimilation Mar1Respiration 8Spring Recess 15Induction of nitrate reductase 22Growth and development I 29Easter Apr5Independent project 12Independent project 19Independent project 26 Independent project

24 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us.

25 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels

26 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels What would make a good biofuel? How and where to grow it? Can we get plants/algae to make diesel, H 2 (g) or electricity?

27 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general)

28 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) Can we use plants to clean up contaminated soil or water? What’s involved? What would be a good plant?

29 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) 3. Climate change

30 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) 3. Climate change How will plants be affected? Can we use plants to help alleviate it?

31 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) 3. Climate change 4. Resveratrol synthesis in Japanese knotweed

32 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) 3. Climate change 4. Resveratrol synthesis in Japanese knotweed Where do they make it? What factors influence it?

33 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) 3. Climate change 4. Resveratrol synthesis in Japanese knotweed 5. Other plant products?

34 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) 3. Climate change 4. Resveratrol synthesis in Japanese knotweed 5. Other plant products? 6. Organic farming, alternatives to herbicides & pesticides Caffeine bioremediation Something else?

35 Plan C We will pick a problem in plant physiology and see where it takes us. 1.Biofuels 2. Frack-water (or bioremediation in general) 3. Climate change 4. Resveratrol synthesis in Japanese knotweed 5. Other plant products? 6. Something else? 1.Pick a problem

36 Plan C 1.Pick a problem 2.Pick some plants to study

37 Plan C 1.Pick a problem 2.Pick some plants to study 3.Design some experiments

38 Plan C 1.Pick a problem 2.Pick some plants to study 3.Design some experiments 4.See where they lead us

39 Plan C 1.Pick a problem 2.Pick some plants to study 3.Design some experiments 4.See where they lead us Grading? Combination of papers and presentations

40 Plan C Grading? Combination of papers and presentations First presentation:10 points Research presentation: 10 points Final presentation: 15 points Assignments: 5 points each Poster: 10 points Intermediate report 10 points Final report: 30 points

41 BIO 369 - Resource and Policy Information Instructor: Dr. William Terzaghi Office: SLC 363 Office hours: MWF 10:00-12:00, or by appointment Phone: (570) 408-4762 Email: terzaghi@wilkes.edu

42 BIO 369 - Resource and Policy Information Instructor: Dr. William Terzaghi Office: SLC 363 Office hours: MWF 10:00-12:00, or by appointment Phone: (570) 408-4762 Email: terzaghi@wilkes.edu Course webpage: http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/william.terzaghi/bio369.html

43 BIO 369 - Resource and Policy Information Instructor: Dr. William Terzaghi Office: SLC 363 Office hours: MWF 10:00-12:00, or by appointment Phone: (570) 408-4762 Email: terzaghi@wilkes.edu Course webpage: http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/william.terzaghi/bio369.html http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/william.terzaghi/bio369.html Text: Taiz & Zeiger (2011). Plant Physiology, 5 th Ed. Sinauer Assoc, Sunderland, MA. ISBN 978-0-87893-856-

44 Plant Structure 3 Parts 1.Leaf 2.Stem 3.Root

45 Plant Structure 3 Parts 1.Leaf A.Cuticle = lipid barrier

46 Plant Structure 3 Parts 1.Leaf A.Cuticle = lipid barrier B.Epidermis = barrier cells

47 Leaf Structure A.Cuticle = lipid barrier B.Epidermis = barrier cells C.Stomate = gate controlled by guard cells

48 Leaf Structure A.Cuticle = lipid barrier B.Epidermis = barrier cells C.Stomate = gate controlled by guard cells D.Mesophyll = photosynthetic cells

49 Leaf Structure A.Cuticle = lipid barrier B.Epidermis = barrier cells C.Stomate = gate controlled by guard cells D.Mesophyll = photosynthetic cells E.Bundle Sheath = control import/export

50 Leaf Structure E.Bundle Sheath = control import/export F.Vascular tissue = plumbing Xylem = water & inorganics Dead!

51 Leaf Structure E.Bundle Sheath = control import/export F.Vascular tissue = plumbing Xylem = water & inorganics Dead! Phloem = sugars

52 Leaf Structure E.Bundle Sheath = control import/export F.Vascular tissue = plumbing Xylem = water & inorganics Dead! Phloem = sugars Live!

53 Plant Structure Kranz anatomy = less mesophyll, more bundle sheath

54 Plant Structure 3 Parts 1.Leaf 2.Stem

55 Plant Structure 3 Parts 1.Leaf 2.Stem Apical meristems create new shoot cells

56 Plant Structure Stem Apical meristems create new shoot cells Vascular cambium creates new xylem & phloem


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