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PLANT RESPONSES TO EXTERNAL SIGNALS Ch 39
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A potato left growing in darkness produces shoots that look unhealthy, and it lacks elongated roots After exposure to light, a potato undergoes changes in which shoots and roots grow normally A potato’s response to light is an example of cell-signaling
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I. General Features of Plant response The stages are reception, transduction, and response
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Reception: Internal and external signals bind receptors Transduction: Second messengers transfer and amplify signals from receptors to proteins that cause responses Response: A signal transduction pathway leads to regulation of one or more cellular activities
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II. Plant Germination, Growth, and Fruit Production Under the control of growth hormones: auxins, cytokinins, gibberellins Many of the hormones work together
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Effect of these hormones: – Growth: Stimulate cell division, elongation and phototropism
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Pinching of apical bud induces growth of lateral buds under influence of cytokinins Auxin induces cell elongation thru uptake of water in vacuole and loosening of cell wall
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Effect of auxin on phototropism:
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Germination: Stimulate the breakdown of stored energy in seed to produce glucose for cell respiration
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Production of Fruit: After seed formation, fruit forms to aid in seed dispersal
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Under what conditions might these hormones be produced?
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III. Dormancy and Fruit Ripening Under control of hormones that inhibit growth: – Ethylene – Abscisic acid
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Effect of these Hormones – Seed dormancy: stops germination so seed won’t germinate in winter – Fruit ripening: Speed up fruit ripening to aid in seed dispersal – Leaf abscission: Chlorophyll in leaf, and cellulose at base of leaf is broken down
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Why drop leaf? Why break down chlorophyll? Why don’t evergreens lose their leaves? Ethylene is a gas. Why does “one bad apple spoil the whole bunch?”
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IV. Plant Responses to Light are critical to their success A.Phytochromes and circadian rhythms in plants
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Pr →Pfr occurs during the day Pfr →Pr occurs at night Since length of day/night changes over a year (except where?) plants use this to adjust activities Plants use photoperiod (how many hours of light/day a plant is exposed to) to detect time of year
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B. Effect of the Daylength on Flowering What is this illustration telling?
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– Flowering in plants is controlled by the amount of DARK – Short day plants flower when amount of dark is greater than the critical period – Long day plants flower when the amount of dark is less than the critical period http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/conten t/chp39/3902002.html http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/conten t/chp39/3902002.html
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Explain effect of red and far red light
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