Transcript C4_2 Notes

Lesson C4–1
Understanding the Importance of
Water in Plant Growth
Terms.
• Evapotranspiration
• Hydrologic cycle
• Irrigation
• Solvent
• Translocation
• Transpiration
• Turgor
• Wilting
• Water covers three-fourths of the earth’s
surface and it is available for plants in
most areas of the world. It is also a major
component of plants and animals. Humans
are about 70 percent water and cacti are
about 90 percent water.
• Water molecules consist of two atoms of
hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. As a bipolar
molecule it has positive and negative charges. It
is a good coolant for organisms. Water is a
universal solvent, meaning nearly everything
will dissolve in it.
The exchange of water between earth and its
atmosphere as a result of evaporation and
condensation is the hydrologic cycle.
Water plays an important role in all
plant functions.
• Water is necessary for a plant to maintain
turgor, which gives a plant rigidity and shape.
• Water aids in cell division and growth.
• Water provides internal pressure that helps roots
•
push through soil.
Water molecules are split in photosynthesis
releasing oxygen into the atmosphere and
contributing hydrogen atoms to the manufacture
of carbohydrates.
• Energy released in respiration is moved
through the plant by water.
• Water dissolves minerals in the soil. Roots
absorb the water with the dissolved
minerals and transport them throughout
the plant where they serve as raw
materials for the making of numerous
compounds.
• This movement of materials is called
translocation.
• Water is pulled up through the plant by
transpiration or the evaporation of water
from stomates and plant surfaces.
Evapotranspiration includes the water
that transpires from plants and evaporates
from soil.
• As water evaporates, it helps to stabilize
the temperature of the plant.
Plants are dependent upon water
for healthy growth.
• Water stress occurs when the soil is too dry for
root hairs to absorb water or if the evaporation
and transpiration rates from the leaves exceed
the rate at which water can be moved up the
stem. Several things occur when plants lack
water. The most common sign is wilting or the
limpness to the plant tissue. Water stress might
also appear as leaf rolling, leaves changing color
from a deep green to a blue-green, yellowing or
browning of leaves, and leaf drop.
• Optimal plant growth and crop yields are
achieved when a plant is never placed
under water stress.
Prolonged water stress results in
permanent wilting and damage to
plant tissues.
• Plants differ in their ability to draw water
from the soil and to conserve water in
their tissues.
• Factors that improve a plant’s ability to
tolerate drought include a deep, welldeveloped root system, waxy leaf
surfaces, hairy leaves, shiny or light
colored leaves that reflect light, and leaves
that fold up or drop under water stress
conditions.
• Too much water in the root zone can be equally
•
damaging to plants as too little water.
Excessive water around the roots reduces the
oxygen levels. Without adequate oxygen
for respiration, root hairs die. The death of root
hairs leads to an inability to absorb available
water and therefore moisture stress within the
plant.
The symptoms of excessive water are very
similar to those symptoms when the soil lacks
moisture.
• Irrigation practices, the artificial application of
water, should be aimed at providing the right
amount of water to avoid water stress, but not
too much to limit oxygen to the roots.