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Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of...

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Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development
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Page 1: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development

Page 2: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

How Do Seeds Germinate?• Germination is the resumption of growth after

a time of arrested embryonic development• Environmental factors influence germination

– Spring rains provide the water amounts necessary to swell and rupture the seed coat (taking in water is imbibition)

– Oxygen moves in and allows the embryo to switch to aerobic metabolism

– Increase temperatures and number of daylight hours

Page 3: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Continue…

• Repeated cell divisions produce a seedling with a primary root.

Page 4: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Genetic Programs, Environmental Cues• Patterns of germination and development

have a heritable basis dictated by a plant’s genes

• Early cell divisions may result in unequal distribution of cytoplasm– Cytoplasmic differences trigger variable gene

expression, which may results in variations in hormone synthesis

– Even though all cells have the same genes, it is the selective expression of those genes that results in cell differentiation.

Page 5: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Growth and Development

• Growth and development are necessary for plants to survive– Growth is defined as an increase in the number,

size, and volume of cells– Development is the emergence of specialized,

morphologically different body parts

Page 6: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Plant Hormones

• Plant hormones have central roles in the selective gene expression underlying cell differentiation and patterns of development.

Page 7: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.
Page 8: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Types of Plant Hormones• Gibberellins: Promote stem elongation

– Help buds and seeds break dormancy and resume growth in the spring.

– In some species, they influence the flowering process.

• Cytokinins: stimulate cell division in root and shoot meristems, where they are most abundant; they are used commercially to prolong the life of stored vegetables and cut flowers

Page 9: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Grapes (Gibberellins)

WithWithout

Page 10: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Continue (Plant Hormones)…• Auxins: affect lengthening of stems and

coleoptiles (the protective cylinder that covers and protects the tender leaves during germination)– May participate in growth responses to light and

gravity.– Indoleacetic acid (IAA) is applied to fruit trees to

promote uniform flowering, set the fruit, and encourage synchronous development of fruit.

– Synthetic auxins (such as 2,4-D) are used as herbicides

Page 11: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Auxins Picture

Page 12: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Continue (Plant Hormones)…• Abscisic Acid (ABA)inhibits cell growth, helps

prevent water loss (by promoting stomata closure), and promoting seed and bud dormancy.

• Ethylene stimulates the ripening of fruit and is used commercially for this purpose.

• Other less well known hormones trigger flowering and inhibit the growth of lateral buds (apical dominance)

Page 13: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

What are Tropisms?

• A plant tropisms is a growth response– Evidenced by a turning of a root or shoot toward

or away from an environmental stimulus– Hormones mediate the shifts in rates at which

different cells grow and elongate to cause the overall response

Page 14: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Types of Tropisms

• Gravitropisms: is the growth response to gravity– shoots grow up, roots grow down.– Auxins, together with a growth—inhibiting

hormone, may play role in promoting, or inhibiting, growth in strategic regions

– Statoliths, which are unbound starch grains in the plastids, respond to gravity and may trigger the redistribution of auxin

Page 15: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Roots moving down toward gravity

Page 16: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Continue (Tropisms)…

• Phototropisms: is a growth response to light– Bending toward the light is caused by elongation

of cells (auxin stimulation on the side of the palnt not exposed to light).

– Flavoprotein, a pigment molecule probably plays a role because of its capacity to absorb blue wavelengths of light

Page 17: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.
Page 18: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Continue (Tropisms)…

• Thigmotropism is shift in growth triggered by physical contact with surrounding objects.– Prevalent in climbing vines and in the tendrils that

support some plants– Auxin and ethylene may have roles in the

response

Page 20: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Response to Mechanical Stress

• Response to the mechanical stress of strong winds explain why plants grown at higher mountain elevations are more stubby than their counterparts at lower elevations

• Human interventions such as shaking can inhibit plant growth.

Page 21: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

How Do Plants Known When to Flower?

• Phytochrome: Alarm button for plants– Biological Clocks are internal time-measuring

mechanisms that adjust daily and seasonal patterns of growth, development, and reproduction

• Phytochrome– a blue-green pigment, is alarm button for some biological clocks in plants

• Phytochrome- can absorb both read and far-red wavelengths with different results.

– When is the pigment activated? – When is the pigment inactive?

Page 22: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Continue…

• Some plants activities occur regularly in cycles of 24 hours (circadian rhythms) even when environmental conditions remain constant

Page 23: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Flowering – A case of photoperiodism

• Photoperiodism is a biological response to a change in relative length of daylight and darkness in a 24-hour cycle; this resetting of the biological clocks is necessary to make seasonal adjustments

Page 24: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Continue…• The flowering process is keyed to changes in

daylength throughout the year.– Short-day plants: flower in late summer or early

autumn when daylength becomes shorter • Example: Poinsettias

– Long-day plants: flower in the spring as daylength becomes longer

• Example: Spinach

– Day-Neutral Plants: flower when they are mature enough to do so

• Example: Roses

Page 25: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.
Page 26: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Senescence• The dropping of leaves, flowers, fruits is called

abscission• Senescence: is the sum total of the processes

leading to the death of plant parts or the whole plant– Decrease of daylight hours trigger the reduction of

auxin– Cells in abscission zones produce ethylene which

causes cells to deposit suberin in their walls

Page 27: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Entering and Breaking Dormancy• Dormancy occurs in autumn when daylight

shortens and growth stops in many trees and nonwoody perennials– it will not resume until spring

• Strong cues for dormancy include in short days, cold nights, and dry, nitrogen-deficient soil.

• Dormancy has great adaptive value in preventing plant growth on occasional warm autumn days only to be killed by later frost.

Page 28: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Vernalization

• Vernalization is the stimulation of flowering only after plants have been exposed to lower temperatures (winter).

• Deliberately exposing seeds to lower temperature to stimulate flowering the next season is common agricultural practice.

Page 29: Chapter 32 Plant Growth and Development. How Do Seeds Germinate? Germination is the resumption of growth after a time of arrested embryonic development.

Breaking Dormancy

• Dormancy is broken by milder temperatures, rains, and nutrients.

• It probably involves gibberellins and abscisiic acid, and require exposure to specific periods of low temperatures.


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