Based on Mader, Sylvia S. 1996. Biology - 5th Ed. WCB
and
Cox, G.W. 1997. Conservation Biology - 2nd ed. WCB
and
Levine, J.S. and K.R. Miller. 1994. Biology: Discovering Life. D.C. Heath
Reading: Chapters 30, 32 in Levine and Miller
Plants
- Basic Needs
- Sunlight
Trees grow to it
Algae may swim to it
Need for support
- Water
- Need for roots
- Reproduction
Special structures
Plants cant move
Replacement of water as a means for mixing gametes
Evolution movement onto land
Must solve 3 problems (5 in book)
- Support
- Water to leaves
- A lot of work to raise gallons of water to the top of a tall tree
- Replacing water as a medium for sperm to swim in
Solutions
- Roots
- Vascular tissue
- Pollen
Parts of a plant:
Three main parts:
- Roots obtain water, nutrients, anchor plant
- Stems hold up plant, transfer water, nutrients, sap
- Leaves photosynthetic center
3 tissues
Meristems
Apical meristem
- at the tips of roots
- increase in length
lateral meristem
- circles stems and roots
- increase in girth
differentiation transformation of one of the divided meristem cells into a specialized cell
Cell types:
- Sieve-tube members no nucleus
- Companion cells
Roots
- Primary roots
- Secondary roots
- epidermis
- Root hairs
- Cortex
- Endodermis
- Casparian strip
Water movement
3 forces:
- root pressure
- capillary action
- transpiration
transpiration is made effective by:
- tension - "pull" from leaves
- cohesion water molecules stick together
- adhesion water sticks to walls of xylem
Ultimately powered by the sun
100 liters/day = 4 liters/hr = 4 kg/hr = 10 pounds / hr up 300 feet.
Sap movement
Pressure/flow hypothesis
- Sugars produced in leaves
- Sugars pumped into phloem
- Water follows by osmosis
- Roots remove sugar, cause gradient which draws sugar and water to roots
- Water usually moves in the opposite direction of sap
Water uptake by roots
- Active transport of mineral ions into roots
- Water follows due to osmotic pressure
- Endodermis and Casparian strip regulate water flow water must move through cells
- High salt levels in soil can pull water out of the root hairs
- Halophytes tolerate higher salt concentrations
Tree stems
- Two layers of meristem tissue
- Vascular cambium produces new xylem to inside, phloem to outside
- Cork cambium forms new cork (bark) to outside
- Annual rings xylem produced more rapidly in spring
Plant Growth
Seeds
Three parts
- Embryo
- Stored food
- Seed coat
Monocots:
- One cotyledon
- Food stored in endosperm
- Grasses (corn, rice, wheat, etc)
Dicots:
- Two cotyledons
- Food stored in cotyledons
- Woody plants
Dormancy
- Period of inactivity by the seed
- Allows bad growing seasons to be bypassed
- May last days to 12,000 years
- Many seeds need drought, damage to seed coat, or freezing temperatures before germination
Plant nutrients Table 32.2 page 643
Materials needed for photosynthesis
Water - source of hydrogen
- taken in through roots
- aided by mycorrhizae
- transported up trunk via xylem
- lost through stomata - transpiration
- Stomata open due to turgor pressure
- Turgor pressure requires water
- No water - stomata close, reduces water loss
CO2 - source of carbon
- Taken in at stomata
- Stomata open only when water available
- Taken in at night by desert plants
Nitrogen - needed for amino acids
- Taken in as NO3- dissolved in H2O
- Nitrogen fixed by bacteria in soil
- Nitrogen present in animal wastes, fertilizers
- Rhizobium in nodules of legumes also fix N2
- In short supply for bog plants --> carnivory
Phosphorous - used in ATP, DNA, cell membranes
- Taken in with water as PO4
- uptake enhanced by mycorrhizae
- "mined" from decaying organisms
Magnesium - used in chlorophyll
- taken up with water
Sources of minerals
Fertilizers
- N-P-K ratios --> nitrogen - phosphorous - potassium
- Elements removed from soil most quickly
- 5-10-5 NPK = 5% nitrogen, 10% phosphorous, 5% potassium
- Test soil to determine proper ratio
Mineral availability - affected by soil
- Property of pH - acids leach minerals from soils
- Under acid conditions soil releases aluminum and iron rather than calcium, magnesium and potassium
- Aluminum and iron may be toxic to the plant
- Plants can use energy to concentrate minerals far above levels found in the soil
Epiphytes - getting by without soil
Agriculture
Practices:
preparing soil
- slash-and-burn
- machinery
- soil erosion
- use of fossil fuels
- soil compaction
monoculture
- efficiency
- susceptibility to disease, pests
fertilizers
- replace lost nutrients
- expense
- eutrophication
pesticides
- attempt to deal with pest problems caused by monoculture