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Chapter 10 – Transport in Plants

Chapter 10 – Transport in Plants. Transport in plants. Water and mineral nutrients must be absorbed by the roots and transported throughout the plant Sugars must be transported from site of production, throughout the plant, and stored. Cellular transport mechanisms.

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Chapter 10 – Transport in Plants

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  1. Chapter 10 – Transport in Plants

  2. Transport in plants • Water and mineral nutrients must be absorbed by the roots and transported throughout the plant • Sugars must be transported from site of production, throughout the plant, and stored

  3. Cellular transport mechanisms

  4. Osmotic potential, solutes, and water movement

  5. Water potential influences water movement • Water potential (Ψ) of a cell: Ψcell = ΨΡ + ΨΟ Ρ = pressure potential Ο = osmotic (solute) potential

  6. Ψp - Pressure potential (turgor) Low Ψp High Ψp

  7. ΨΟ– Osmotic (Solute) potential • Pure water ΨΟ= 0 • All solutions, ΨΟ< 0 • As solute concentration increases, Ψcell …

  8. Water movement in plants • Movement from high Ψcell to low Ψcell • Occurs in the xylem • Involves adhesion, cohesion, and pressure

  9. Adhesion and cohesion

  10. Water transport

  11. Tension-cohesion theory explains xylem transport • Water is drawn up the plant by transpiration of water from stomata

  12. A water potential gradient creates tension

  13. higher ψ higher ψ Transpiration creates tension lower ψ lower ψ cohesion lower ψ higher ψ highest ψ higher ψ low ψ

  14. Water transport animation

  15. Transpiration & water transport

  16. Importance of stomata • Regulate transpiration rate • Controls rate of water uptake • Water required for photosynthesis • Water required to maintain turgor pressure • Influences nutrient uptake • Regulate gas exchange • CO2 required for photosynthesis

  17. Turgid guard cells open stomata

  18. Guard cells & osmotic potential

  19. Transpiration & photosynthesis

  20. Ψ and transpiration rate • In terms of ψ, can you explain how transpiration rate is influenced by: • Atmospheric humidity? • Wind? • Air temperature? • Light intensity?

  21. Which of the following explains why water moves into the root from the soil? • The water potential of the root is lower than the water potential of the soil • The roots exist in a hypertonic environment • The pressure potential of the soil forces water into the root • Water is actively transported into the root • The soil has a higher solute concentration than the roots, causing water to diffuse into the roots

  22. Stomata close when • Photosynthesis lowers CO2 concentrations in the leaves • Potassium ions are pumped into guard cells • Abscisic acid levels increase • Guard cells become turgid • All of these occur

  23. A guard cell with a high internal concentration of K+ • Is in a hypertonic condition • Has a low water potential relative to outside of the cell • Has a higher water potential than outside the cell • Both 1 and 2 • Both 2 and 3

  24. Water transport

  25. Sugar transport

  26. Source to sink sugar transport

  27. Pressure-flow hypothesis explains sugar transport

  28. Phloem loading

  29. Sugar transport can be explained by water potential

  30. Transport in plants • Water and mineral nutrients are absorbed by the roots and transported throughout the plant by tension-cohesion • Sugars are transported from site of production (source), throughout the plant, and stored (sinks) by pressure-flow

  31. Mineral nutrition & uptake

  32. Soils and plant nutrition • 14 essential mineral nutrients • N,P,K,S,Ca,Mg,Fe,Cl,Mn,B,Zn,Cu,Mo,Ni • 3 essential non-mineral nutrients • C,H,O • What makes these nutrients essential?

  33. Magnesium and photosynthesis

  34. Nitrogen and amino acids

  35. Nitrogen, phosphorus & DNA

  36. Potassium and cell function

  37. Macronutrients vs. micronutrients

  38. Fertilizers • Fertilizer analysis (N-P-K) • Analysis varies depending on growth objectives

  39. How can essential elements be determined?

  40. Hydroponics

  41. Recreational hydroponics • Home hydroponics systems

  42. A soil profile • Soil composition • Sand, silt, clay • Humus • Microorganisms • Animals

  43. Mineral nutrients exist as ions

  44. Cation exchange allows mineral ions to be absorbed by roots

  45. Cation exchange and H+

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