- Plant physiology
Plant physiology is a subdiscipline of
botany concerned with the function, orphysiology , ofplant s.Salisbury, Frank B. & Cleon W. Ross, 1992. "Plant physiology", 4th ed. (Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing). ISBN 0-534-15162-0] Closely related fields includeplant morphology (structure of plants), plantecology (interactions with the environment),phytochemistry (biochemistry of plants),cell biology , andmolecular biology .Fundamental processes such as
photosynthesis , respiration,plant nutrition ,plant hormone functions,tropism s,nastic movements ,photoperiodism ,photomorphogenesis ,circadian rhythms , environmental stress physiology, seedgermination ,dormancy and stomata function andtranspiration , both part of plant water relations, are studied by plant physiologists.cope
The field of plant physiology includes the study of all the internal activities of plants—those chemical and physical processes associated with
life as they occur in plants. This includes study at many levels of scale of size and time. At the smallest scale are molecular interactions ofphotosynthesis and internaldiffusion of water, minerals, and nutrients. At the largest scale are the processes of plantdevelopment ,season ality,dormancy , andreproductive control. Major subdisciplines of plant physiology includephytochemistry (the study of thebiochemistry of plants) andphytopathology (the study ofdisease in plants). The scope of plant physiology as a discipline may be divided into several major areas of research.First, the study of
phytochemistry (plant chemistry) is included within the domain of plant physiology. In order to function and survive, plants produce a wide array of chemical compounds not found in other organisms.Photosynthesis requires a large array ofpigment s,enzyme s, and other compounds to function. Because they cannot move, plants must also defend themselves chemically fromherbivore s,pathogen s and competition from other plants. They do this by producingtoxin s and foul-tasting or smelling chemicals. Other compounds defend plants against disease, permit survival during drought, and prepare plants for dormancy. While other compounds are used to attractpollinator s or herbivores to spread ripe seeds.Secondly, plant physiology includes the study of biological and chemical processes of individual plant cells. Plant cells have a number of features that distinguish them from cells of
animal s, and which lead to major differences in the way that plant life behaves and responds differently from animal life. For example, plant cells have acell wall which restricts the shape of plant cells and thereby limits the flexibility and mobility of plants. Plant cells also containchlorophyll , a chemical compound that interacts withlight in a way that enables plants to manufacture their own nutrients rather than consuming other living things as animals do.Thirdly, plant physiology deals with interactions between cells, tissues, and organs within a plant. Different cells and tissues are physically and chemically specialized to perform different functions.
Root s andrhizoid s function to anchor the plant and acquire minerals in the soil. Leaves function to catch light in order to manufacture nutrients. For both of these organs to remain living, the minerals acquired by the roots must be transported to the leaves and the nutrients manufactured in the leaves must be transported to the roots. Plants have developed a number of means by which this transport may occur, such asvascular tissue , and the functioning of the various modes of transport is studied by plant physiologists.Fourthly, plant physiologists study the ways that plants control or regulate internal functions. Like animals, plants produce chemicals called hormones which are produced in one part of the plant to signal cells in another part of the plant to respond. Many
flowering plant s bloom at the appropriate time because of light-sensitive compounds that respond to the length of the night, a phenomenon known asphotoperiodism . Theripening offruit and loss of leaves in the winter are controlled in part by the production of the gasethylene by the plant.Finally, plant physiology includes the study of how plants respond to conditions and variation in the environment, a field known as environmental physiology. Stress from water loss, changes in air chemistry, or crowding by other plants can lead to changes in the way a plant functions. These changes may be affected by genetic, chemical, and physical factors.
Biochemistry of plants
The list of simple elements of which plants are primarily constructed—
carbon ,oxygen ,hydrogen ,calcium ,phosphorus , etc.—is not different from similar lists for animals, fungi, or evenbacteria . The fundamental atomic components of plants are the same as for all life; only the details of the way in which they are assembled differs.Despite this underlying similarity, plants produce a vast array of chemical compounds with unusual properties which they use to cope with their environment.
Pigment s are used by plants to absorb or detect light, and are extracted by humans for use indye s. Other plant products may be used for the manufacture of commercially importantrubber orbiofuel . Perhaps the most celebrated compounds from plants are those withpharmacological activity, such assalicylic acid (aspirin),morphine , anddigitalis . Drug companies spend billions of dollars each year researching plant compounds for potential medicinal benefits.Constituent elements
Plants require some
nutrient s, such ascarbon andnitrogen , in large quantities to survive. Such nutrients are termed macronutrients, where the prefix "macro-" (large) refers to the quantity needed, not the size of the nutrient particles themselves. Other nutrients, calledmicronutrient s, are required only in trace amounts for plants to remain healthy. Such micronutrients are usually absorbed asion s dissolved in water taken from the soil, thoughcarnivorous plant s acquire some of their micronutrients from captured prey.The following tables list element nutrients essential to plants. Uses within plants are generalized.
Pigments
Among the most important molecules for plant function are the
pigment s. Plant pigments include a variety of different kinds of molecules, includingporphyrin s,carotenoid s, andanthocyanin s. Allbiological pigment s selectively absorb certainwavelength s oflight whilereflect ing others. The light that is absorbed may be used by the plant to powerchemical reaction s, while the reflected wavelengths of light determine thecolo r the pigment will appear to the eye.Chlorophyll is the primary pigment in plants; it is aporphyrin that absorbs red and blue wavelengths of light while reflectinggreen . It is the presence and relative abundance of chlorophyll that gives plants their green color. All land plants andgreen alga e possess two forms of this pigment: chlorophyll "a" and chlorophyll "b".Kelp s,diatom s, and other photosyntheticheterokont s contain chlorophyll "c" instead of "b", whilered algae possess only chlorophyll "a". All chlorophylls serve as the primary means plants use to intercept light in order to fuelphotosynthesis .Carotenoid s are red, orange, or yellowtetraterpenoid s. They function as accessory pigments in plants, helping to fuelphotosynthesis by gathering wavelengths of light not readily absorbed by chlorophyll. The most familiar carotenoids arecarotene (an orange pigment found incarrot s),lutein (a yellow pigment found in fruits and vegetables), andlycopene (the red pigment responsible for the color oftomato es). Carotenoids have been shown to act asantioxidant s and to promote healthyeyesight in humans.Anthocyanin s (literally "flower blue") are water-solubleflavonoid pigments that appear red to blue, according topH . They occur in all tissues of higher plants, providing color in leaves, stems,root s,flower s, andfruit s, though not always in sufficient quantities to be noticeable. Anthocyanins are most visible in thepetal s of flowers, where they may make up as much as 30% of the dry weight of the tissue. [Robinson, Trevor. 1963. "The Organic Constituents of Higher Plants", page 183 (Minneapolis: Burgess Publishing).] They are also responsible for the purple color seen on the underside of tropical shade plants such as "Tradescantia zebrina "; in these plants, the anthocyanin catches light that has passed through the leaf and reflects it back towards regions bearing chlorophyll, in order to maximize the use of available light.Betalain s are red or yellow pigments. Like anthocyanins they are water-soluble, but unlike anthocyanins they areindole -derived compounds synthesized fromtyrosine . This class of pigments is found only in theCaryophyllales (includingcactus andamaranth ), and never co-occur in plants with anthocyanins. Betalains are responsible for the deep red color ofbeet s, and are used commercially as food-coloring agents. Plant physiologists are uncertain of the function that betalains have in plants which possess them, but there is some preliminary evidence that they may have fungicidal properties. [cite journal
last= Kimler
first= L. M.
year=1975
title=Betanin, the red beet pigment, as an antifungal agent
journal= Botanical Society of America, Abstracts of papers
volume= 36 ]ignals and regulators
Plants produce hormones and other growth regulators which act to signal a physiological response in their tissues. They also produce compounds such as
phytochrome that are sensitive to light and which serve to trigger growth or development in response to environmental signals.Plant hormones
Plant hormone s, also known as plant growth regulators (PGRs) or phytohormones, are chemicals that regulate a plant's growth. According to a standard animal definition,hormone s are signal molecules produced at specific locations, that occur in very low concentrations, and cause altered processes in target cells at other locations. Unlike animals, plants lack specific hormone-producing tissues or organs. Plant hormones are often not transported to other parts of the plant and production is not limited to specific locations.Plant hormones are
chemical s that in small amounts promote and influence thegrowth , development and differentiation of cells and tissues. Hormones are vital to plant growth; effecting processes in plants from flowering toseed development,dormancy , andgermination . They regulate which tissues grow upwards and which grow downwards, leaf formation and stem growth, fruit development and ripening, as well as leafabscission and even plant death.The most important plant hormones are
abscissic acid (ABA),auxin s,gibberellin s, andcytokinin s, though there are many other substances that serve to regulate plant physiology.Photomorphogenesis
While most people know that
light is important for photosynthesis in plants, few realize that plant sensitivity to light plays a role in the control of plant structural development (morphogenesis ). The use of light to control structural development is calledphotomorphogenesis , and is dependent upon the presence of specializedphotoreceptor s, which are chemicalpigment s capable of absorbing specificwavelength s of light.Plants use four kinds of photoreceptors:
phytochrome ,cryptochrome , aUV-B photoreceptor , and protochlorophyllide "a". The first two of these, phytochrome and cryptochrome, arephotoreceptor protein s, complex molecular structures formed by joining aprotein with a light-sensitive pigment. Cryptochrome is also known as the UV-A photoreceptor, because it absorbsultraviolet light in the long wave "A" region. The UV-B receptor is one or more compounds that have yet to be identified with certainty, though some evidence suggestscarotene orriboflavin as candidates.cite book |last=Fosket |first=Donald E. |title=Plant Growth and Development: A Molecular Approach |year=1994 |publisher=Academic Press |location=San Diego |isbn=0-12-262430-0| pages=498-509] Protochlorophyllide "a", as its name suggests, is a chemical precursor ofchlorophyll .The most studied of the photoreceptors in plants is
phytochrome . It is sensitive to light in thered andfar-red region of thevisible spectrum . Many flowering plants use it to regulate the time offlower ing based on the length of day and night (photoperiodism ) and to set circadian rhythms. It also regulates other responses including the germination of seeds, elongation of seedlings, the size, shape and number of leaves, the synthesis of chlorophyll, and the straightening of theepicotyl orhypocotyl hook ofdicot seedlings.Photoperiodism
Many
flowering plant s use the pigment phytochrome to sense seasonal changes inday length, which they take as signals to flower. This sensitivity to day length is termedphotoperiodism . Broadly speaking, flowering plants can be classified as long day plants, short day plants, or day neutral plants, depending on their particular response to changes in day length. Long day plants require a certain minimum length of daylight to initiate flowering, so these plants flower in the spring or summer. Conversely, short day plants will flower when the length of daylight falls below a certain critical level. Day neutral plants do not initiate flowering based on photoperiodism, though some may use temperature sensitivity (vernalization ) instead.Although a short day plant cannot flower during the long days of summer, it is not actually the period of light exposure that limits flowering. Rather, a short day plant requires a minimal length of uninterrupted darkness in each 24 hour period (a short daylength) before floral development can begin. It has been determined experimentally that a short day plant (long night) will not flower if a flash of phytochrome activiting light is used on the plant during the night.
Plants make use of the phytochrome system to sense day length or photoperiod. This fact is utilized by
florist s andgreenhouse gardeners to control and even induce flowering out of season, such as the "Poinsettia ".Environmental physiology
Paradoxically, the subdiscipline of environmental physiology is on the one hand a recent field of study in plant ecology and on the other hand one of the oldest. Environmental phyiology is the preferred name of the subdiscipline among plant physiologists, but it goes by a number of other names in the applied sciences. It is roughly synonymous with
ecophysiology , crop ecology,horticulture , andagronomy . The particular name applied to the subdiscipline is specific to the viewpoint and goals of research. Whatever name is applied, it deals with the ways in which plants respond to their environment and so overlaps with the field ofecology .Environmental physiologists examine plant response to physical factors such as
radiation (includinglight andultraviolet radiation),temperature ,fire , andwind . Of particular importance arewater relations and the stress ofdrought or inundation, exchange of gases with theatmosphere , as well as the cycling of nutrients such asnitrogen andcarbon .Environmental physiologists also examine plant response to biological factors. This includes not only negative interactions, such as competition,
herbivory ,disease , andparasitism , but also positive interactions, such asmutualism andpollination .Tropisms and nastic movements
Plants may respond both to directional and nondirectional stimuli. A response to a directional stimulus, such as
gravity or sunlight , is called a tropism. A response to a nondirectional stimulus, such astemperature orhumidity , is a nastic movement.Tropism s in plants are the result of differential cell growth, in which the cells on one side of the plant elongate more than those on the other side, causing the part to bend toward the side with less growth. Among the common tropisms seen in plants isphototropism , the bending of the plant toward a source of light. Phototropism allows the plant to maximize light exposure in plants which require additional light for photosynthesis, or to minimize it in plants subjected to intense light and heat.Geotropism allows the roots of a plant to determine the direction of gravity and grow downwards. Tropisms generally result from an interaction between the environment and production of one or more plant hormones.In contrast to tropisms,
nastic movement s result from changes inturgor pressure within plant tissues, and may occur rapidly. A familiar example isthigmonasty (response to touch) in theVenus fly trap , acarnivorous plant . The traps consist of modified leaf blades which bear sensitive trigger hairs. When the hairs are touched by an insect or other animal, the leaf folds shut. This mechanism allows the plant to trap and digest small insects for additional nutrients. Although the trap is rapidly shut by changes in internal cell pressures, the leaf must grow slowly in order to reset for a second opportunity to trap insects. [Slack, Adrian. "Carnivorous Plants", page 160. (Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press). ISBN 0-262-19186-5]Plant disease
Economically, one of the most important areas of research in environmental physiology is that of
phytopathology , the study ofdisease s in plants and the manner in which plants resist or cope with infection. Plant are susceptible to the same kinds of disease organisms as animals, includingvirus es,bacteria , andfungi , as well as physical invasion byinsect s androundworm s.Because the biology of plants differs from animals, their symptoms and responses are quite different. In some cases, a plant can simply shed infected leaves or flowers to prevent to spread of disease, in a process called abscission. Most animals do not have this option as a means of controlling disease. Plant diseases organisms themselves also differ from those causing disease in animals because plants cannot usually spread infection through casual physical contact. Plant
pathogen s tend to spread viaspore s or are carried by animal vectors.One of the most important advances in the control of plant disease was the discovery of
Bordeaux mixture in the nineteenth century. The mixture is the first knownfungicide and is a combination ofcopper sulfate and lime. Application of the mixture served to inhibit the growth ofdowny mildew that threatened to seriously damage the Frenchwine industry. [Stern, Kingsley R., 1991. "Introductory Plant Biology", 5th edition. page 309. (Chico, California: Wm. C. Brown Publishers). ISBN 0-697-09948-2]History
Early history
Sir
Francis Bacon published one of the first plant physiology experiments in 1627 in the book, "Sylva Sylvarum." Bacon grew several terrestrial plants, including a rose, in water and concluded that soil was only needed to keep the plant upright.Jan Baptist van Helmont published what is considered the first quantitative experiment in plant physiology in 1648. He grew a willow tree for five years in a pot containing 200 pounds of oven-dry soil. The soil lost just two ounces of dry weight and van Helmont concluded that plants get all their weight from water, not soil. In 1699, John Woodward published experiments on growth ofspearmint in different sources of water. He found that plants grew much better in water with soil added than in distilled water.Stephen Hales is considered the Father of Plant Physiology for the many experiments in the 1727 book [Hales, Stephen. 1727. "Vegetable Staticks" http://www.illustratedgarden.org/mobot/rarebooks/title.asp?relation=QK711H341727] ; thoughJulius von Sachs unified the pieces of plant physiology and put them together as a discipline. His "Lehrbuch der Botanik" was the plant physiology bible of its time. [Isely, Duane. "Julius von Sachs", pages 216-219 in "One Hundred and One Dalmatians" (Ames: Iowa State University Press). ISBN 0-8138-2498-2]Researchers discovered in the 1800s that plants absorb essential mineral nutrients as inorganic ions in water. In natural conditions, soil acts as a mineral nutrient reservoir but the soil itself is not essential to plant growth. When the mineral nutrients in the soil are dissolved in water, plant roots absorb nutrients readily, soil is no longer required for the plant to thrive. This observation is the basis for
hydroponics , the growing of plants in a water solution rather than soil, which has become a standard technique in biological research, teaching lab exercises, crop production and as a hobby.Current research
One of the leading journals in the field is "Plant Physiology", started in 1926. All its back issues are available online for free. [http://www.plantphysiol.org/contents-by-date.0.shtml] Many other journals often carry plant physiology articles, including "Physiologia Plantarum", "Journal of Experimental Botany", "
American Journal of Botany ", "Annals of Botany", "Journal of Plant Nutrition" and "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ."Economic applications
Food production
In
horticulture andagriculture along withfood science , plant physiology is an important topic relating tofruit s,vegetable s, and other consumable parts of plants. Topics studied include: "climatic" requirements, fruit drop, nutrition,ripening , fruit set. The production of food crops also hinges on the study of plant physiology covering such topics as Optimal planting and harvesting times and post harvest storage of plant products for human consumption and the production of secondary products like drugs and cosmetics.ee also
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Biomechanics
*Phytochemistry
*Plant anatomy
*Plant morphology References
Further reading
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* Salisbury, Frank B. & Ross, Cleon W. (1992). "Plant physiology", 4th, Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing. ISBN 0-534-15162-0.External links
* [http://www.aspb.org/ American Society of Plant Biologists]
* [http://www.newphytologist.org/tansley.htm "New Phytologist" free Tansley Reviews]
* [http://www.plantphys.net/ "Plant Physiology" online study aid]
* [http://webpages.ull.es/users/efisveg/e1.html "Plant Ecophysiology Group - Universidad de La Laguna"]cientific journals
*" [http://www.bio21.bas.bg/ipp/gapbfiles/content.html General and Applied Plant Physiology] "
*" [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01761617 Journal of Plant Physiology] "
*" [http://www.plantphysiol.org/ Plant Physiology] "
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