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A-level Biology - 3.4.5 Control Systems in Plants

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Flowering plants respond to changes in their environment to optimize conditions for growth, development, and reproduction. These responses, such as bending towards light or growing roots towards water, increase their chances of survival and successful reproduction in changing conditions.

Why do flowering plants respond to changes in their environment?

Increases their chances of survival

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

Why do flowering plants respond to changes in their environment?

Increases their chances of survival

Give examples of how flowering plants respond to changes in environment

They sense direction of light and grow towards it to maximise light absorption for photosynthesis

Sense gravity so roots and shoots grow in r...

What is tropism?

Response of plant to directional stimulus

How do plants respond to stimuli?

By regulating their growth

What is positive tropism?

Growth towards stimulus

What is negative tropism?

Growth away from stimulus

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TermDefinition

Why do flowering plants respond to changes in their environment?

Increases their chances of survival

Give examples of how flowering plants respond to changes in environment

They sense direction of light and grow towards it to maximise light absorption for photosynthesis

Sense gravity so roots and shoots grow in right direction

Climbing plants have a sense of touch = find things to climb up and reach sunlight

What is tropism?

Response of plant to directional stimulus

How do plants respond to stimuli?

By regulating their growth

What is positive tropism?

Growth towards stimulus

What is negative tropism?

Growth away from stimulus

Name 4 types of tropisms

Phototropism

Gravitropism

Hydrotropism

Responds to water

Chemotropism

Responds to chemicals

What is phototropism?

Growth of plant in response to light

Describe how the shoots and roots respond to light

Shoots are positively phototropic and grow towards light

Roots are negatively phototropic and grow away from light

What is gravitropism (aka geotropism)?

Growth of plant in response to gravity

Describe how the shoots and roots respond to gravity

Shoots are negatively gravitropic and grow upwards

Roots are positively gravitropic and grow downwards

What do plants use to respond to directional stimuli?

growth factors

What are growth factors?

Hormone-like chemicals that speed up or slow down plant growth

Where are growth factors produced?

In growing regions of plant (e.g. shoot tips, leaves)

& move to where they’re needed in other parts of plant

What do auxins (growth factors) do?

Stimulate growth of shoots by cell elongation

Where cell walls become loose and stretchy so cells get longer

What does high concentrations of auxin result in?

Inhibits growth in roots

What is indoleacetic acid (IAA)?

Important auxin that’s produced in tips of shoots in flowering plants

Describe how IAA is moved around a plant

Moves by diffusion and active transport over short distances & via phloem over long distances

What does an uneven distribution of IAA mean?

There’s uneven growth of plant

Describe where IAA moves to control phototropism

IAA moves to more shaded parts of shoots and roots so there’s uneven growth

Phototropism

State what happens to IAA and its effect in a shoot

IAA concentration increases on the shaded side

cells elongate and the shoot bends towards the light

Phototropism

State what happens to IAA and its effect in a root

IAA concentration increases on the shaded side

Growth is inhibited so root bends away from light

Describe where IAA moves to control gravitropism

IAA moves to the underside of shoots and roots, so there’s uneven growth

Gravitropism

State what happens to IAA and its effect in a shoot

IAA concentration increases on lower side

cells elongate so shoot grows upwards

Gravitropism

State what happens to IAA and its effect in a root

IAA concentration increases on the lower side

growth is inhibited so the root grows downwards

Describe how bananas are artificially ripened before they are sold

Placed in ripening rooms where temperature and humidity are raised optimum levels

Ethene concentration is raised using a catalytic generator

Rooms are airtight to prevent gases escaping

Describe the role of ethene in fruit ripening

Ethene switch on genes for enzymes responsible for changing colour (hydrolyses), softening fruit (pectinases), increasing sugar content (amylases)

Synthesis of these enzymes require ATP and hence linked to increased respiration rate

Describe the role of abscisic acid (ABA) on a plant

Key role in plants response to environmental stress

Closing the stomata in response to low soil water or high salinity

When is abscisic acid (ABA) needed? Describe how ABA is transported

When soil water is low, ABA is transported from roots where it is synthesised up to shoots via xylem

Describe how stomata open

H+ are actively transported out of guard cells causing inside to become more negative

Negative charge causes inward K+ gates to open and allows K+ to enter guards cells

K+ lowers water potential and water moves in by osmosis

Guard cells become turgid

Describe how abscisic acid (ABA) causes the stomata to close

ABA binds to receptors = production of H2O2 and other reactive oxygen species (ROS)

ROS then triggers an increase in Ca2+ in cytoplasm = Ca2+ enters from both outside the cell and from the vacuole

ROS inhibits H+ pumps

Rise in Ca2+ opens anion channels with Cl- and other negatively charged ions to leave

This caused inward K+ channels to close and outward K+ channels to open = causing K+ to leave the guard cell

Water then leaves guard cells via osmosis, so they become flaccid and close the stomata

Describe how you would investigate the effect of light intensity on the direction of shoot growth

Place same amount of compost into each small transparent plastic containers (about 2 spatulas)

Add same volume of water to each container

Then add 10 cress seeds to each container, distribute them evenly

Wrap black card around one container and leave a square hole in the card so light can pass through

Leave both containers in sunlight for a day

Then observe the results/measure the curvature (degrees) of the plant

Describe how you would investigate the effect of gravity on the direction of root growth

Cut blotting paper to fit into a CD jewel case & place into case

6 cases in total

Moisten bolting paper

No surface water

Place 4 seeds in middle of moist paper, evenly spaced from each other

None of the seeds should be close to sides of paper

Close CD case and repeat for each CD case

Label each CD case and mark the 4 edges on the front side of each CD case: Up, Down, Left and Right

Using modelling clay to hold them in place, set 2 CD cases upright each in their own shallow dish with Up on top edge

Place 2 CD cases horizontally into 2 shallow dishes

(Roots can't grow in direction of gravity)

Use modelling clay under the CD cases to lift them up

(Any water added can drip into dish to dry)

2 CD cases set vertically in modelling clay on 2 more shallow dishes, label Up at top

Rotate these CD cases 90° clockwise every 2 days

Put all of your CD cases inside a dark cupboard

Check seeds daily

Add water using dropper

Once roots start to grow measure angle of growth daily with protractor

‘Down’ = 0°, left = 90°, up = 180°, right = 270°

What does ABA do in plants cells besides closing stomatas? (linked to fruit development)

ABA (is a hormone) that regulates the expression of genes that matures fruit and causes abscission (fruit to drop off)

ABA increases while the fruit is maturing, causing some fruit to drop off