Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.
Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.
Title: Plant Science
Description: Notes on tissues in plants, transport in plants and reproduction in plants. Suitable for Higher (also Advanced Higher), A-level, and IB students.
Description: Notes on tissues in plants, transport in plants and reproduction in plants. Suitable for Higher (also Advanced Higher), A-level, and IB students.
Document Preview
Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above
Plant Science
Tissues in plants
A land plant is made up of three types of major organs:
roots, stems and leaves
...
Some roots also absorb reserves of food
...
It also contains tissues for the
transport of materials from the root to the leaf and for the distribution of the
products of photosynthesis from leaves to the growing parts of the plant
...
The phloem is a two-‐way transport system, from the leaves to any part of the
plant and back to the leaves
...
Embedded in the cortex are several tissues, particularly the
xylem and phloem vessels, which make up vascular bundles
...
Some plants have just a single large leaf but many plants have many leaves
distributed on shoots or branches that arise from the main stem
...
The upper epidermis
of leaves is covered by an outer cuticle of wax, which allows the light to pass
through but prevents water loss through the upper surface
...
These help protect the leaf from invading pathogens such as fungal spores
...
The cells are closely packed together to maximise the
amount of photosynthesis that can take place
...
Below the palisade layer, spongy mesophyll cells exist also containing some
chloroplasts, are usually packed together with large air spaces surrounding
them
...
Diffusion of gases to and from the stomata can easily occur
through these airspaces
...
The guard cells contain chloroplast and have an uneven
thickening of cellulose in their cell walls
...
This allows
carbon dioxide, oxygen and water vapour to move in and out of the leaf
...
Leaves also contain vascular bundles, which are also continuous with those in
the stem
...
Water is necessary for photosynthesis and
minerals are necessary for the growth of the plant
...
Apart from the number of seed leaves there are a few more differences between
the two types of plant
...
The Roots
Unbranched, fibrous
Main taproots with
roots usually growing
branches from it
...
There are about 50,00 species of monocotyledons but there are over 200,000
species of dicotyledons
...
Some plants have large taproots for food reserves, e
...
carrots, turnips
...
Many cacti have extensive surface roots,
which can quickly absorb any rain that falls before it evaporates in the hot
conditions
...
These enable plants to survive over winter when photosynthesis
may not be possible
...
Leaves
Many plants survive in very arid climates where water loss from leaves would
cause problems
...
Plants in both
temperature and tropical region shave involved modified leaves called tendrils,
which has a mechanism for getting their leaves into sunlight even when they are
shaded by surrounding vegetation
...
Stem Tubers
Tubers are stems that grow below the ground and are used to store food
...
Meristems
Meristems are the growing part of a flowering plant, where cells may divide by
mitosis throughout the life of the plant
...
Number one, apical meristems, found at the tip of the root and
the shoot and number two, lateral meristems, found in the vascular bundles of
the stem
...
Many plants also grow ate lateral meristems, which makes
the stems and the roots thicker and is known as secondary growth
...
Auxin and Phototropism
Plants produce growth regulating substances that act to control growth and
development
...
It was
first observed by Darwin that the plant shoots grow towards the light because of
some influence, which he proposed was transmitted from the shoot tip to the
area immediately below
...
Auxin is found in the embryos of seeds and in apical meristems, where it controls
several growth responses
...
The exact mechanism of auxin action is not fully understood but it has been
suggested that auxin has been redistributed to the side of a shoot tip that is away
from any light source
...
Some proteins in the plasma membrane of certain cells in plant shoots are
sensitive to light
...
Transport in Angiospermophytes
Roots
Roots are responsible absorbing water and mineral ions from the soil
...
In addition as new roots grow,
numerous root hairs develop to increase the surface area even more
...
Plants require a number of minerals to make a variety of substances necessary
for growth as given below:
Mineral Ion
Importance
Calcium
Constituent of cell walls
Magnesium
Needed to make chlorophyll
Iron
Required as a co-‐factor for many
enzymes
Minerals are present in the soil as salts, e
...
calcium occurs in the form of
carbonates
...
Both of these processes are passive
and do not require energy in the form of ATP
...
Potassium, nitrate and phosphate are
usually absorbed using active transport
...
Experiments have shown that
potassium ions stop moving into root cells from the soil when potassium cyanide
is added
...
(3) In some cases there may be a close association known as a mutualistic
relationship between the roots and a fungus, and the name of the fungus is
hyphae
...
Minerals
can pass directly from fungal hyphae to root cells
...
Support is provided by cellulose cell walls, cell turgor and by thickening certain
structures with lignin and other materials
...
Over time some cells may thicken their cell
walls with other carbohydrates such as lignin, which provide additional
structure around the cell
...
This fluid exerts pressure on
the cell wall, so the cell becomes rigid and presses on the adjacent cells
...
This is sufficient to support in leaves and in new soft tissue
...
Here xylem tissue in the vascular bundles not only carries water but provides
support
...
Lignin is a
complex substance that is very hard and resistant to decay
...
Transpiration
Transpiration is the loss of Water vapour from the aerial parts of the plants (the
leaves and stems)
...
Most plants will grow in areas where the amount of water in the air, the
humidity is less than in the leaves
...
The evaporating water is drawn from the
vascular bundles in the leaf and stem
...
This is known as the transpiration stream
...
Cohesion -‐ Tension Theory
The movement of water in xylem can be explained by the cohesion -‐ tension
theory
...
• Water vapour re-‐enters air spaces in the leaves from the xylem vessels
...
• Cohesion is due to hydrogen bonding in water molecules and adhesion is
caused by the hydrogen bonds between water molecules and molecules in
the walls of the vessels
...
The
thickening provided by lignin prevents this happening
...
Tension caused by transpiration also causes water to be
drawn into the roots from the soil
...
Guard cells have unevenly shaped cell walls with more
cellulose on the side adjacent to the stomata
...
When the guard cells lose water, the cell walls
relax and the stoma close
...
In darkness, these ions leave the guard cells and move
into surrounding cells
...
This creates an increased solute
concentration so that water enters by osmosis, making the cells turgid
and opening the stomata
...
When abscisic acid is present, potassium ions leak out and
water follows by osmosis, this means that guard cells lose turgor pressure
and stomata close thus conserving water
...
(1) Light affects transpiration directly by controlling the opening and closing of
stomata
...
(2) Temperature affects transpiration because heat energy is needed for the
evaporation of water
...
(3) An increase in atmospheric humidity reduces the rate of transpiration
...
(4) An increase in wind speed increases the rate of transpiration because it
blows away the air just outside of the stomata, which is saturated with water
vapour
...
Transpiration in Xerophytes
Xerophytes are plants that live in arid climates
...
In both cases plants have evolved specialisations that enable them to survive
shortages of water while reducing water loss
...
Stomata are protected deep inside pits, which themselves are rolled up
inside leaves
...
Hairs prevent water loss by diffusion
...
At night the stomata open and carbon
dioxide diffuses into the leaf
...
Translocation in the Phloem
Translocation is the movement of organic molecules through the phloem tissue
of the plant
...
(2) Companion cells -‐ which are connected to the siebe tube cells
...
Translocation moves materials from the source where it is made or stored to a
sink where they are used
...
Once
in the phloem, they are translocated into sink regions such as growing tissues in
the meristems of roots, buds and stems or storage organs like fruits and seeds
...
Sugar is usually
carried as sucrose, which enters and leaves the phloem by active transport using
energy provided by the companion cells
...
Sink and source can change depending on the needs of the plant or seasonal
changes
...
g
...
Flowers
also differ in the way they are pollinated
...
When the flower is at the bud stage, it is surrounded by sepals, which fold
around the bud to protect the developing flower
...
Petals of animal pollinated flowers are often brightly coloured to attract insects
or other animals that may visit
...
Pollen, containing the male gametes is produced in the anthers, which are held
up on long filaments in many flowers, so that as pollinators enter, they brush
past the anthers and are dusted with pollen
...
The stigma receives pollen grains, which arrive with pollinators
as they delve into the flower to obtain nectar
...
Pollination and Fertilisation
Pollination is the transfer of pollen (containing the male gametes) from the
anther to the stigma
...
If the pollen travels from the anthers of one plant to the stigma of the other plant,
the process is known as cross-‐pollination
...
Self-‐pollination produces less
variation than cross-‐pollination
...
When pollen grains from a plant of the same species arrive at the stigma, they
germinate and produce a pollen tube, which grows down the style to the ovary
...
Seeds
Fertilised ovules develop over time into seeds, which protect the developed the
embryo inside
...
Plants have evolved many ingenious means by which thy disperse their seed, e
...
(1) some seedpods such as those in the pea family, mature and dry out so they
eventually snap, causing the seedpod to open quite suddenly, ejecting the seeds
some distance from the plants
...
These seeds may appear long distances from the parent plant and are
contained within a rich fertiliser
...
They may burry several
groups of nuts and fail to dig them up during the winter
...
Seeds have all the necessary components to insure successful germination and
the growth of a new plant
...
Once a seed has been formed in the ovary, it
loses water so that it can enter a dormant phase and not develop further until
conditions for growth are favourable
...
The cotyledons are surrounded by a
hard protective seed coat called the testa
...
In the wall of the testa there is a wall called
the micropyle through which water is absorbed to begin the process of
germination
...
A dormant seed
needs three vital factors to be in place for germination to occur:
(1) Temperature -‐ a suitable temperature is essential for the enzymes in a seed
to become active, this cannot work in cold conditions and very high
temperatures also inhibit their activity
...
(2) Water -‐ most things only contain about ten percent water, so water must be
taken in to start the germination process
...
The enzymes breakdown food stores to provide
energy for the emerging root and stem
...
Metabolism and Germination
Germination begins as the seed in a process called imbibition absorbs water
...
Water rehydrates stores of food
reserves in the seed and in a starch seed, such as Barley grain, triggers the
embryo plant to release a plant growth hormone called gibberellin
...
The amylase hydrolises
starch molecules in the endosperm converting them to soluble maltose
molecules
...
Absorption of
water by the seed splits the testa so that the radical and plumule can emerge and
grow
...
Control of flowering
At certain times of the year, shoot meristems produce flowers
...
It is also shown that
the period of darkness is the critical factor in controlling flowering
...
There are two types:
(1) Long day plants flower when days are longest and the nights are short
...
(2) Short day plants flower as nights are become longer
...
Short day plants cannot flower if the
period of darkness is interrupted by a pulse of artificial light shone on them even
for a few minutes
...
This pigment can exist in two interconvertible forms:
(1) Inactive Pfr
(2) Active PR
Active Pfr is produced from inactive Pr during daylight hours
...
In darkness Pfr reverts slowly to the more stable Pr (this happens
whenever the wavelength is beyond is 660nm -‐ independent of the time of day)
...
Flowering in short day plants is inhibited by Pfr but during long nights sufficient
Pfr is removed to allow them to flower
...
Title: Plant Science
Description: Notes on tissues in plants, transport in plants and reproduction in plants. Suitable for Higher (also Advanced Higher), A-level, and IB students.
Description: Notes on tissues in plants, transport in plants and reproduction in plants. Suitable for Higher (also Advanced Higher), A-level, and IB students.