Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Plant Responses to Internal and External Signals Plant Hormones Plant Movements Control of Daily and Seasonal Responses Phytochromes.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Plant Responses to Internal and External Signals Plant Hormones Plant Movements Control of Daily and Seasonal Responses Phytochromes."— Presentation transcript:

1 Plant Responses to Internal and External Signals Plant Hormones Plant Movements Control of Daily and Seasonal Responses Phytochromes

2

3 Plant Hormones Hormone-compound produced by one part of an organism that is transported to other parts where it triggers a response in target cells  Sends signals between different plant parts  Tracks time of day and year  Sensing and responding to gravity, direction of light, etc  Adjusts growth patterns and development  Phototropism-responsible for many of the discoveries about plant hormones

4 Experiments  Darwin: experiment-removed coleoptiles; result-no phototropism; conclusion- tip responsible for sensing light  Peter Boysen-Jensen: experiment-separated tip w/ block of gelatin; result-normal behavior; conclusion-signal was a mobile substance  F.W.Went: experiment-removed tip, placed it on agar block, placed block back on plant; result-normal behavior;conclusion-chemical in block from tip was responsible. AUXIN

5

6

7 Functions of Plant Hormones  Coordinate growth and development by affecting division, elongation and differentiation of cells  Regulate responses to environmental stimuli  Difficult to identify-varying concentrations affect target cells differently; and different target cells are affected differently

8 Classes of Plant Hormones  Auxins (IAA)  Cytokinins  Gibberellins (GA)  Abscisic Acid (ABA)  Ethylene

9

10 Auxins  Produced by apical meristem  Stimulate cell growth  Induces vascular cambium cell division and differentiation of secondary xylem  Promotes formation of adventitious root  Promotes fruit growth  2,4 D-selective herbicide-dicots

11

12 Cytokinins  Modified adenine  Stimulates cytokinesis  Controls cell division and differentiation (in conjunction with auxins) by stimulating RNA and protein synthesis  Controls apical dominance  Anti-aging hormone

13 Gibberellins  More than 80 gibberellins have been identified  Primarily produced in roots and young leaves  Stimulate growth of leave and stems, but not roots  Work with auxins to stimulate cell elongation  Control fruit development along with auxins  Causes seeds to break dormancy, stimulated by imbibing water

14

15 Abscisic Acid  Produced by terminal bud-prepares plant for winter (suspends primary and secondary growth)  Stress hormone-closes stomata as a result of excess transpiration

16 Ethylene  Growth inhibitor  Produced by high auxin concentrations  Gas  Promotes sinescence (aging) examples: xylem, leaf fall, withering of flowers, death of annuals after flowering  Fruit ripening  Leaf abscission

17

18 Plant Movements  Tropisms-growth responses (+ or -), one time events, not repeatable  Phototropism-light, differential distribution of auxins, blue light  Gravitropism-gravity, roots positive, stems negative; process involve statoliths (starch grains), calcium and auxin concentration changes  Thigmotropism-touch, twining of a tendril

19

20 Turgor Movements (Nastic Movements)  Reversible movements caused by changes in turgor pressure  Rapid leaf movements (Mimosa)  Sleep movements  K+ movements changes osmotic conditions and leads to turgor changes

21

22 Control of Daily and Seasonal Responses  Circadian rhythm-physiological cycle with a frequency of about 24 hours  Photoperiodism-physiological response to day length—flowering,  Phytochromes play a critical role in seasonal cycles.  Two photoreversible forms: P fr and P r


Download ppt "Plant Responses to Internal and External Signals Plant Hormones Plant Movements Control of Daily and Seasonal Responses Phytochromes."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google