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Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the...

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Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology
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Page 1: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Transpiration

Mr. West AP Biology

Page 2: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

1. Definition

• Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants.

Of all the water plant absorbs, over 95-99% is transpired to the air as water vapor.

Page 3: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

4. From where water is transpired?

• Aerial parts of whole young plant

• Lenticels (lenticular transpiration) 0.1%

• Cutin (cuticular transpiration) 3%~10% Stomatum (stomatal transpiration) ~ 90%

Page 4: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

What is most likely leaving through the stomata of the leaf picture here?

• Water (H2O)

What is this process called? Stomatal Transpiration

Page 5: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Cuticle

Cuticle

Mesophyll

Stomata Guard cells

Prevents water loss

Site of photosynthesis

Openings allow gases and water to move in and out of leaf

Open and close the stomata

Stomatal transpiration

Page 6: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Stoma Open

Stoma Closed

Guard Cells

Stoma

Importance of transpiration

Guard Cells

CO2

O2 H2O

What goes in?

What goes out?

What process involves using CO2 and H2O releasing O2 as a waste product?

• Photosynthesis

What is the plant using this process to make?

• Carbohydrates-glucose

If the plant needs water for photosynthesis, why is water coming out of the stoma?

Page 7: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Stoma Open Stoma Closed

Function of Stomata

Guard Cells

• These stomata (leaf openings) naturally allow water to evaporate out.

Why would the plant close stomata with guard cells?

• Prevent excess water loss through transpiration. (conserve water)

So what is the point of having stomata?

• Allows gas exchange for photosynthesis

Page 8: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

How do the guard cells react to the availability of water?

Dry – guard cells CLOSE

lots of H2O – guard cells OPEN

http://www.ualr.edu/~botany/images.html

Function of Guard Cells

Page 9: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Guard Cells

4. Guard cells: • cells that open and

close the stoma

5. Stomata: openings in leaf’s surface; when open: • GAS EXCHANGE:

Allows CO2 in & O2 out

of leaf • TRANSPIRATION:

Stomata

Page 10: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,
Page 11: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

5. Characteristics of guard cells

Page 12: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Guard cell properties and their relationship with stomatal control

• Thickness of CW varies in the ventral and dorsal part of the guard cells.

• Contains chloroplast and can perform light reaction. (not dark reaction for the lack of key enzymes)

• Structurally isolated from epidermal cells for the lack of plasmodesmata (water and ions transmit only through cellular pathway, thus helps to build up water gradient)

• Little volume, little amount of water absorption or loss controls stomtal aperture.

Page 13: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

6. Factors influencing stomatal aperture

• Light

• Temp.

• CO2

• Water content

• Plant hormone

Page 14: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

(1). Light

• Stomata of most plant open in the day and close at night, while CAM plants are just the opposite.

• Stomata opening are sensitive to red light and blue light, and blue light is more effective, it stimulates opening by a blue-light receptor: zeaxanthin.

Page 15: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,
Page 16: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

(2) Temperature

• Stomatal aperture increase with Temp, within 20- 30 (the optimal).℃

Page 17: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

(3). CO2

• Low CO2 conc. promotes stomatal opening, while high CO2 conc. inhibits stomatal opening through its acidification of the guard cell thus inhibits PM hyperpolarization.

Page 18: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

(4) Water content

• Stomta open when the leaf contain enough water. When there is a water shortage, they close.

Page 19: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

(6) Plant hormones

• CTK promotes opening

• ABA inhibits

Page 20: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Factors that influence transpiration

Transpiration from the leaf depends on two major factors:

1. Difference in water vapor gradient

2. Diffusional resistance

Page 21: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

The driving force of transpiration is the “vapor pressure gradient.” This is the difference in vapor pressure between the internal spaces in the leaf and the atmosphere around the leaf

Diffusional resistance comprises stomatal resistance and boundary layer resistance

Page 22: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Transpiration rate=Driving force/resistance

water vapor inside the leaf - water vapor of the air

= stomatal resistance + boundary layer resistance

Page 23: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

Environmental factors that affect the rate of transpiration

1. Light

Plants transpire more rapidly in the light than in the dark. This is largely because light stimulates the opening of the stomata , Light also speeds up transpiration by warming the leaf .

Page 24: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

2. Temperature

Plants transpire more rapidly at higher temperatures because water evaporates more rapidly as the temperature rises.

3. Humidity When the surrounding air is dry, diffusion of water out of the leaf goes on more rapidly.

Page 25: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

• 4. Wind When a breeze is present, the humid air is carried away and replaced by drier air.

• 5. Soil waterA plant cannot continue to transpire rapidly if its water loss is not made up by replacement from the soil. When absorption of water by the roots fails to keep up with the rate of transpiration, loss of turgor occurs, and the stomata close. This immediately reduces the rate of transpiration. If the loss of turgor extends to the rest of the leaf and stem, the plant wilts.

Page 26: Transpiration Mr. West AP Biology. 1. Definition Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants. Of all the water plant absorbs,

If you were an aquatic plant where would your stomata be?

Fringed Water-lily

Stomata are found only on the upper epidermis because the lower epidermis is submerged in water. If the stomata were to be on the underside, they wouldn't be able to perform their function (i.e to allow water to evaporate and thus contribute to transpiration).


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