1 / 15

Root Absorption Unit 4 – Anatomy and Physiology Lesson 4.2 The Radicle Root

Root Absorption Unit 4 – Anatomy and Physiology Lesson 4.2 The Radicle Root. Principles of Agricultural Science – Plant. Check for Understanding…. Write a short paragraph on your presentation notes page that answers the following question: How do plant roots “absorb” water?

claus
Télécharger la présentation

Root Absorption Unit 4 – Anatomy and Physiology Lesson 4.2 The Radicle Root

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. Root AbsorptionUnit 4 – Anatomy and PhysiologyLesson 4.2 The Radicle Root Principles of Agricultural Science – Plant

  2. Check for Understanding… Write a short paragraph on your presentation notes page that answers the following question: How do plant roots “absorb” water? NOTE: If you are not sure of the correct answer, explain your best guess. You have two minutes…

  3. Root Physiology Misconceptions It is easy to speculate that roots act like a sponge and absorb water by pulling it into the root pores. In reality the root doesn’t “absorb” water, rather water uptake is a physiological process involving osmosis.

  4. Cell Access • Passive transport requires no energy output from the cell to transfer substances in and out of the cell. • Active transport requires an output of energy from the cell to move substances.

  5. Diffusion • The movement of particles from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration. Which way will the substance move?

  6. Diffusion Diffusion occurs until there is equilibrium.

  7. Osmosis Plant cells rely on osmosis to maintain levels of water necessary in the cell. Osmosis–The diffusion of water through semi-permeable membrane separating two solutions. Which way will the water move?

  8. What happens in osmosis? As water reaches equilibrium, a cell may become dehydrated or over hydrated. Hypotonic: Higher H2O conc. out of cell, H2O moves in, cell expands. Isotonic: H2O conc. in cell = H2O conc. out of cell. Hypertonic: Lower H2O conc. out of cell, H2O moves out, cell shrinks.

  9. So Where Does Osmosis Happen? Water and dissolved nutrient uptake happen through the root hairs. Root hairs are specialized epidermal cells contained on the surface of roots. (University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2008)

  10. Fluid Transfer • As the plant consumes water for physiological processes, water and dissolved nutrients are drawn up the plant stem. • This causes an unbalance between the cell content and soil. • Water and dissolved nutrients contained in the water pass through the cell membranes of root hairs to balance the deficiency.

  11. The Concept of Turgor • Essentially turgidity or turgor is the internal water pressure of a plant. • Take a balloon as an example, if fully inflated it can stand up vertically and be very rigid. • If the balloon does not have enough pressure for its size, it will flop over and not stand up.

  12. Not Enough Water • Plants without enough water will deflate like the balloon without enough air pressure. • If no water is present in the soil, some water loss will happen from the roots. • This causes the plant to wilt very fast and shut down physiological processes. • Wilting point

  13. Bounty of Water • Soil can’t distribute too much water unless it is saturated. • The plant won’t absorb any more than it can handle if turgid. • If the soil is saturated with water, the root hairs die from the lack of oxygen, and thus end the uptake of water and nutrients.

  14. References Herren, R. V., & Donahue, R. L. (2000). Delmar’s agriscience dictionary with searchable CD-ROM. Albany, NY: Delmar.  Schooley, J. (1997). Introduction to botany. Albany, NY: Delmar Publishers. University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Botany. (2008). Retrieved image March 18, 2008 from http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/130/Root/Grass_Seedling_root/Root_hair.low.jpg

More Related