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Botany Overview 1st Remarks: “Plants Can’t Run” Plants have covered the globe. The basic information is usually the most important.

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Botany Overview. 1st Remarks: “Plants Can’t Run” Plants have covered the globe. The basic information is usually the most important. What’s here?. Overview of plant evolution and plant clades Overview of plant growth and development Overview of Plant Transport Overview of Photosynthesis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Botany Overview

Botany Overview

• 1st Remarks:

• “Plants Can’t Run”• Plants have covered

the globe.• The basic

information is usually the most important.

Page 2: Botany Overview

What’s here?

• Overview of plant evolution and plant clades

• Overview of plant growth and development

• Overview of Plant Transport• Overview of Photosynthesis• Overview of Plant Response to the

Environment

Page 3: Botany Overview

What if you can’t run and you can’t eat?

Major Challenge

MajorBalancingAct

Page 4: Botany Overview

Who are the Land Plants?

Table 29.1 (578)

Shared Primitive Characters:

Shared Derived Characters:

Page 5: Botany Overview

Commonality: Alteration of Generations

Page 6: Botany Overview

Sporophyte changes as plants become more derived.

Table 29.1 (578)

Page 7: Botany Overview

Bryophyte Life Cycle

Page 8: Botany Overview

Modern Pterophytes are usually found in moist places…why?

Page 9: Botany Overview

Alteration of Generations: Pterophytes

Page 10: Botany Overview

"a vast forest of the most stately pine trees that can be imagined, planted by nature at a moderate distance. . .

enameled with a variety of flowering shrubs." Fire defined where the longleaf pine forest was found and fostered an ecosystem diverse in plants and animals.

SOUTHERN COASTS

Page 11: Botany Overview

Gymnosperm Lifecycle

Page 12: Botany Overview

All Hail The Mighty Flower!

• Beauty• Ingenuity• Dominance • Support• Evolution/Classification

Page 13: Botany Overview

What is a seed?

What is a fruit?

Ingenuity 3: Double Fertilization

Page 14: Botany Overview
Page 15: Botany Overview

Meristems: Apical & Lateral

Page 16: Botany Overview

Meristems: Apical & Lateral

Page 17: Botany Overview

Secondary Growth

Initials!

Page 18: Botany Overview

One more look @ 2ndary

Growth

Page 19: Botany Overview

Over all transport in Plants:

Major Challenge

MajorBalancingAct

3 “transport regions”: xm: ctc: wp:

Page 20: Botany Overview

Transmembrane (xm) Transport: mediated by transport proteins

and “set up” by chemiosmosis (proton pumps)

Membrane Potential

Page 21: Botany Overview

Results of a chemo-electrical gradient…good stuff for the plant

Page 22: Botany Overview

Apoplastic, symplatic, so what?

Page 23: Botany Overview

These cellular processes lead to whole plant transport(aka Bulk Flow)

• Hydrostatic pressure pulls sap down

• Tension pulls sap (water) up• Facilitated by changes in

water potential between neighboring cells– Diffusion/Osmosis– Active Transport

• Vessel structure leads to increased transport efficiency– Xylem:

• Dead…– Phloem:

• So what…

Page 24: Botany Overview

Accent of Xylem Sap: Differences in Water Potential!

• Facilitated by the physical properties of water– Adhesion/Cohesion

• Water molecules on the march!

Page 25: Botany Overview

Plant Transport HO 1: Overview of Xylem Transport

?

Page 26: Botany Overview

Phloem Loading: Source-Sink

Phloem Sap: 30% sugar (sucrose) by volume!Sugar Source: …Sugar Sink: …

Page 27: Botany Overview

Transpiration on a cellular level

Fig. 36.12

Page 747

How does water move up to the leaves?

It can be pushed…

It can be pulled…

How powerful is transpiration?

Page 28: Botany Overview

Regulation of transpiration occurs at the stomata, thanks to…

1. Structure and FunctionAre correlated

Regulation of Stomatal Opening:

K+ Transport & Turgor Pressure

*Light

*CO2

*Circadian Rhythms

Page 29: Botany Overview

Bioenergetics: Background Info

• Producers

• Consumers

Page 30: Botany Overview

Across four levels of organization

• Plants • Leaves

• Mesophyll Cells

• Chloroplasts

Page 31: Botany Overview

PS: 2 Reactions in 1 organelle

Page 32: Botany Overview

Food for thought:

How are cellular respiration and photosynthesis similar? How are they

different? Think about it on an organismal level, on an organelle level, and on a

biochemical level.

Page 33: Botany Overview

More Food…Check out Figure 10.16

Page 34: Botany Overview

So What? • So what happens when

light is absorbed?

photosystem

Page 35: Botany Overview

If we could get down on the thylakoid membrane…

Page 36: Botany Overview

No, really, so what?

• Where does the electron from water go once it replaces the electron in the chlorophyll molecule in the center of PSII (PS 680)?

Page 37: Botany Overview

What happens? Well, chemiosmosis happens.

Page 38: Botany Overview

What do the Light Reactions produce?

• Light Reactions…

Page 39: Botany Overview

But chloroplasts still needs a little more ATP

Page 40: Botany Overview

Light Reaction Review…

Page 41: Botany Overview

Gimmie Some Sugar!

Page 42: Botany Overview

Phase 1: Carbon Fixation

Page 43: Botany Overview

Phase 2: Reduction

Page 44: Botany Overview

Phase 3: Regeneration of RuBP

Page 45: Botany Overview

Photosynthesis: The Big Picture

Location

Energy conversions

Material inputs/outputs

Page 46: Botany Overview

Photorespiration• A drain on Calvin Cycle Energy that produces no ATP,

it does produce CO2

• Why? Rubisco has an affinity for O2

• …and when [O2] build up in cells (and [CO2] drop)…

• Rubisco binds RuBP to O2 instead of CO2

• Why? Rubisco evolved before O2 concentrations were appreciable in atmosphere

• Can drain as much as 50% of photosynthetic energy away.

Page 47: Botany Overview

Fighting Photorespiration the C4 way

• High Light, High heat (think Corn).

• What happens when it gets too hot, and transpiration increases?

• What happens to [CO2] and [O2]?• How do plants combat this?

• Fix CO2 into PEP Carboxylase• (4-C compound)• Deliver 4-C compound to Calvin Cycle in

Bundle Sheath (where [O2] are lower.• Perform Calvin Cycle in Bundle Sheath • Transport Sugars (Sucrose) to Phloem• Spatial Separation!

Page 48: Botany Overview

Fighting Photorespiration the CAM way

• What are conditions like in the desert?

• What will the stomata do?• How will the plants get CO2?

• Open stomata at night!

• Fix CO2 into organic acids(Crussalean Acid Metabolism) at night, store in vaculoles

• During day, when light is available…

• Temporal Separation!

Page 49: Botany Overview

Botany Overview

• 1st Remarks:

• “Plants Can’t Run”• Plants have covered

the globe.• The basic

information is usually the most important.

Page 50: Botany Overview

Why Study Plant Hormones/Plant Responses to

the environment?• Ties into the theme: “Plants can’t run.”• Allows us to look at cellular (and sub-cellular

processes) and relate them to organism function.

• Gives us a glimpse of how organisms respond to stimuli and interact with an ecosystem (abiotic and biotic forces).

• In a sense, this is physiological ecology

Page 51: Botany Overview

Basic Concepts related to plant hormones

• Small molecules that can pass through cell membrane and trigger receptor molecules.

• Hormones affect plant growth and development by affecting:– Cell division, Cell Elongation, Cell Differentiation

• Response to a hormone doesn’t depend so much on absolute amounts of a hormone, but depends on relative concentrations of certain hormones relative to other hormones.– Plants are under the influence of multiple hormones b/c they

respond to multiple stimuli (e.g. temperature, day length, osmotic balance). Certain hormone balance causes a specific response (e.g. phototropism, flowering, fruit ripening, etc.)

Page 52: Botany Overview

General Signal Transduction

Page 53: Botany Overview
Page 54: Botany Overview

Action Spectrum for plants control photomorphogenesis (plant growth and development)

• Two major classes of Photoreceptors:– Blue Light Receptors

• Phototropism (Photoropin)• AM opening of stomata• (Zeaxanthin)• Slowing of hypocotyl

elongation (cryptochrome)– Phytochromes

• Red Light/Far Red Light Receptors

Page 55: Botany Overview

Because Plant Cells have Phytochromes• Phytochromes are

receptors for red light• Consists of two domains

– One receives the light– One has kinases that link

the reception of light with cellular response

• Revert between two isomers (Pr and Pfr)– Pr = Red light (660nm)– Pfr = Far Red light (730nm)

Page 56: Botany Overview

Light & Phytochromes initiate a cell signal and Response

Shoot elongation

730 nm

Page 57: Botany Overview

Phytochromes also set circadian rhythms

• Circa = approximately; dies = day• Cyclic variations based on 24 period• What changes?

– Humidity, temperature, light• How do plants respond?

– Plants respond by opening and closing stomata and synthesizing certain enzymes

• Caveat: this rhythm is internal, but it is set by an external stimulus: light

• Phytochromes also signal plants when to flower. This is called…phtoperiodism. – Why keyed to day length?

Page 58: Botany Overview

Other stresses on plants• Gravity: gravitropism

– • Mechanical stimuli: wind, herbivory, touch

– thigmomorphogenesis:

• Drought–

• Flooding–

• Heat stress– “Heat-shock Proteins”

• Cold Stress/Freezing: membrane contents/[solute]