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Plant Hormones and Tropisms: Responding to Internal and External Signals

This chapter explores the various types of tropisms in plants, including phototropism, gravitropism, and thigmotropism. It also highlights the role of hormones such as auxins, cytokinins, gibberellins, abscisic acid, and ethylene in plant growth responses. Additionally, the chapter discusses how plants respond to light, photoperiodism, and other stimuli like drought and predators.

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Plant Hormones and Tropisms: Responding to Internal and External Signals

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  1. Plant Responses to Internal & External Signals Chapter 39

  2. Tropism • A plant growth response from hormones that results in the plant growing either toward or away from a stimulus • Hormones – chemical messengers that coordinate the different parts of a multicellular organism

  3. Types of tropisms: • Phototropism – growth toward or away from light • Gravitropism – growth toward or away from a gravitational source • Thigmotropism – growth toward or away from a touch • Vines grow toward a support and then grow toward (around) that support

  4. Positive vs. Negative Tropisms • Positive is growth toward a stimulus • Positive Phototropism – growth toward light • Positive Gravitropism – growth toward a gravitational source • Positive Thigmotropism – growth toward a tactile stimulus • Negative is growth away from a stimulus

  5. Hormones • Auxins • Stimulate cell elongation • Cause proton pumps to activate  Lower pH  weakening of cell wall  turgor pressure expands & elongates cell wall • High concentrations of synthetic auxins KILL certain plants, usually weeds (eudicots) • Synthetically produced auxins in high concentration = Herbicides

  6. How do you make a …? • Cytokinins • Stimulate cell division or cytokinesis • Proper ratio of auxins & cytokinins  cell division & differentiation • Gibberellins • Work with auxins to stimulate stem elongation • Loosen cell walls allowing cellular expansion  stem expansion • Signal the seed to cease dormancy and germinate • Many dwarf plant varieties have non-functional gibberellins

  7. Hormones (Page 3) • Abscisic acid • SLOWS Growth • Antagonistic to previously mentioned hormones • Promotes seed dormancy, but gibberellins cease it • Causes stomata to close to conserve water

  8. Ethylene • Gas • Plays crucial role in programmed cell death (apoptosis) • Promotes ripening of fruit • Ripening in one fruit  ripening in other fruits • Positive feedback mechanism = rapid ripening of fruit • One bad apple does spoil the lot.

  9. Plants respond to Light • Plants can detect presence, direction, intensity, and wavelength of light • Red & Blue wavelengths are most important • Blue light is most important for phototropisms and light-induced opening of stomata • Sensed by photoreceptors

  10. Phytochromes • Photoreceptors for red light (mainly) • Exist in 2 isomer forms which can switch forms depending on wavelength available • Responsible for Circadian Rhythms • 24 hour cycles

  11. Photoperiodism • Physiological response to a photoperiod (relative lengths of day and night) • Night is always the more important of the 2!! • But we (humans) focus on the daylight. • Controls Flowering • Short-day plants • Require a period of continuous darkness exceeding a critical measure in order to flower • Early Spring or Fall flowering • Sometimes called “Long-Night” plants

  12. Besides Short-Day plants, • Long-Day Plants • Flower only if a period of continuous darkness is less than a critical value • Flower in Late Spring or early Summer • Considered “short-night” plants • Day-Neutral Plants • No length of continual darkness is needed for flowering

  13. Plants respond to things other than light • Gravitropism – growth toward the earth (gravity) • Auxin plays key role • If root is plased horizontally, then gravity causes an accumulation of auxins in root’s lower side • Remember HIGH auxin = inhibition of growth at high concentration, so • lower side = no growth • Upper side = growth • Allows the root to grow down into the ground

  14. Auxin Accumulation

  15. Plants respond to other things… • Drought • Stomata close • Leaves will cease growth • Leaves roll into shape that reduces transpiration • Deep roots (where H2O is) will speed their growth, but shallow roots will stop growing • Predators • Thorns, chemicals, distasteful compounds • Some plants even attract parasites • First layer of defense - Epidermis

  16. Coordinated Plant-Parasite Defense

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