1 / 14

Jan. 11, 2011 Bot4730/5730 Plant Physiological Ecology

Jan. 11, 2011 Bot4730/5730 Plant Physiological Ecology. Course Overview and Introduction. Syllabus overview. Goals Readings Laboratory relation to Lecture Grading and expectations Undergraduate vs. Graduate Requirements. My Biases. Most of my work has been at whole plant and larger scales

leighellis
Download Presentation

Jan. 11, 2011 Bot4730/5730 Plant Physiological Ecology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jan. 11, 2011Bot4730/5730Plant Physiological Ecology Course Overview and Introduction

  2. Syllabus overview • Goals • Readings • Laboratory relation to Lecture • Grading and expectations • Undergraduate vs. Graduate Requirements

  3. My Biases • Most of my work has been at whole plant and larger scales • Most of my work has focused on field projects • Most of my work on woody plants • Focus of my work has been flux ecology

  4. Science and models • Science is observation, interpretation and application to test predictions • Science can also be called a modeling process Observations Hypotheses/Theories Analysis Prediction Mechanistic model

  5. What is Ecophysiology or Physiological Ecology? • Field was developed to answer mechanistic questions posed at a higher level of integration with answers at a lower level of integration • Physiological ecology is the science of determining the physiological controls on ecological phenomena or the study of environmental controls on plant physiology • what are some of the questions?

  6. Ecophysiology Publications Span Large Temporal and Spatial Scales Woodward New Phyt. 2007

  7. Conceptual Idea of Ecology Hereditary potential Environmental Factors Potential Species Historical Filter Physiological Processes Physiological Filter Growth and Reproduction Biotic Filter Ecological Expression • Theory • Individuals in a population are not identical • Some of this variation is heritable • All populations have the potential to populate the whole earth • Different individuals leave different numbers of descendants • Number of descendents depends on interaction between physiology • and environment

  8. Conceptual Idea of Ecology cont. • Individuals will leave descendents in some environments but not others • If some individuals leave more descendants than others causing change in population characteristics then evolution occurs by natural selection • Differential success of different physiologies changes ecosystem properties • Other types of evolutionary mechanisms?

  9. Free Energy • Changes in free energy (ΔG) occur between the start and the end of a process • ΔG = Δ H –T Δ S • For a system to be spontaneous ΔG must be negative • More negative ΔG indicates a greater amount of work that a spontaneous system can perform • Simply stated “nature runs downhill” • Equilibrium ΔG = 0 • Exergonic reactions ΔG < 0; release free energy • Endergonic reactions ΔG > 0; require free energy

  10. Overview of physiology • Metabolism is the totality of an organism’s chemical reactions • Metabolism manages the energy and material resources of an organism • Catabolic pathways yield energy and break down complex molecules to simpler ones • Cellular respiration free energy yielding catabolic pathway • Anabolic pathways consume energy to synthesize complex molecules from simple ones • Photosynthesis free energy requiring anabolic pathway

  11. General Environmental Responses • Stress – any environmental or biotic factor that reduces the rate of a physiological process below its maximum • This definition results in most plants being continuously stressed • Three time scale responses to stress • Stress Response – immediate reduction in physiological rate • Acclimation – morphological and physiological adjustment by individuals to compensate for stress • Adaptation – evolutionary response resulting from genetic changes in populations as a result of acclimation

  12. Macromolecules • Carbohydrates • Energy and C currency • Lipids • Storage • Membranes • Nucleic acids • RNA, DNA • Polypeptides • 3-D structure

  13. Enzymes • Enzymes are biological catalysts • All enzymes are proteins except for ribozymes • In exergonic reactions, activation energy released back to the surroundings and more energy released with new bonds • Enzymes speed reactions by lowering EA, but do not change ΔG • Hasten reactions that would occur eventually • Enzymes selective; determine which reactions will occur at any given time

  14. Enzyme Controls • Cofactors inorganic enzyme helpers that promote catalytic activity • Coenzymes are organic enzyme helpers that promote catalytic activity • Inhibitors prevent enzymes from catalyzing reactions • Competitive or noncompetitive • Feedback inhibition switches off of a metabolic pathway by its end product

More Related