Powerpoint: Flooding Response in Shoots
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Transcript Powerpoint: Flooding Response in Shoots
Flooding effects: Shoots
Messages
Substances
POSITIVE:
increase in messages
from roots to shoots
Toxins (Mn2+, Fe2+, S-)
Nutrients
NEGATIVE:
decrease in messages
from roots to shoots
Photosynthate (starches
and sugars)
Water
Hormones
ACCUMULATIVE:
build up of substances
in the roots and shoots
Hormones
Hormones act as intermediates between environmental
signals and the plants responses to these stimuli.
Ethylene – involved in cell elongation, Associated with
Local Growth. (Abscission, hypertrophy,
aerenchyma)
Auxin – Made in the shoot tip; Cell elongation; photo
and geotropism; apical dominance; prevents
abscission
Gibberellin – Made in apical portion of shoots and
roots; Stem and leaf elongation, delays
senescence
Hormones
ABA (Abscisic Acid) –
Stomatal closure, leaf elongation. Associated
with Root Growth
Cytokinin –
Made in the roots; prevents senescence,
promotes cell division, promotes lateral
branching; stomatal opening, controls shoot
extension; delays senescence .
Inhibition of Growth
Inhibition
Major causes: nitrogen deficiency and build
up of ethylene
Inhibition
of Leaf Growth
of Stem Extension
Caused by negative messages (e.g. lack of
gibberellin) as well as water stress, toxins etc.
Inhibition
of Photosynthesis
Reorientation of Growth
Vertical Growth of Stolons
Stimulation of cell extension
Epinastic curvature of leaf petioles
An acceleration of growth and elongation of leaf
petiole causing leaves to turn downward
Positive message caused by ethylene build up
Possibly minimizes radiation loading
Senescence
Deterioration that gives rise to the death of part
or all of the plant.
Negative Messages
Hormone deficiency
Nitrogen Deficiency
Positive Messages – P, H2S and Fe
Abscission
Leaf drop
Occurs most rapidly in the presence of ethylene (not
abscisic acid)
Senescence is probably a precursor to abscission
Senescing leaves produce a lot of ethylene and produce little
auxin.
Adaptive advantage
Form of self pruning
Reduce transpiration load
Prevent spread of microbial infection
Maintain root to shoot ratio
Wilting
“flopping”,
Principal
loss of turgor
cause
Rapid wilting is a consequence of higher
resistance to the mass flow of water through
the roots of flooded plants
Wilting is relieved by stomatal closure
Promotion of Extension Growth
Occurs in aquatics
and emergents
Such as water lilies
Shoot Elongation
Cell wall extension
caused by ethylene
build up and lack of
Gibberellin
Hypertrophy
Swelling of the stem base
or hypocotyls
Lenticels
Result of increase in
ethylene, photosynthate
and auxin at the plant
base
Induced in rising water
Adventitious Rooting
Roots that arise from the
stem in flood tolerant
trees and herbaceous
species just above the
anaerobic zone.
Adaptive Significance
and Features
Causes
Adventitious Roots
Shoot/Root Adaptations