Plant and Animal Responses

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119 Terms

1
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abiotic stresses that plants respond to

-daylength

-falling temperatures

-water availability

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how plants respond to changes in day length

-deciduous plants lose leaves and enter dormancy

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how plants know when to respond to changes in day length

-ratio of Pr and Pfr (forms of phytochrome)

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what are Pr and Pfr examples of

phytochromes

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photoperiodism

-sensitivity to lack of light in the environment

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plant responses that are affected by photoperiodism

-breaking dormancy of leaf buds

-timing of plant flowering

-tubers are formed

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why do deciduous plants do leaf abscission

-temperature is low; amount of glucose req for respiration in the leaves and to produce chemicals to prevent freezing is more than the amount produced by photosynthesis

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how do plants do leaf abscission

-less light levels decrease the concentration of auxin

-more ethene produced

-ethene initiates the switching on of genes in the abscission zone to produce enzymes such as cellulase, cellulase

-digests the cell wall in the separation zone

-vascular bundles sealed off

-fatty material deposited into cells in protective layer which forms scar

-cells in separation zone retain wate

-increases strain on separation zone

-strain is too much

-leaf falls

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how do plants respond to lower temperatures

-cytoplasm and sap of plant cells contain solutes to lower freezing point

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how do plants respond to lower water availability

-roots provide early warning system by producing ABA

-transported to leaves

-binds to receptors on plasma membrane of guard cells

-causes changes in ionic concentration of guard cells

-reduces water potential of cells

-guard cells lose turgor

-stomata close

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type of plant responses to herbivory

-physical

-chemical

-pheromones

-folding in response to touch

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physical plant responses to herbivory

-thorns

-barbs

-spikes

-spiny leaves

-fibrous tissue

-inedible tissue

-hairy leaves

-stings

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chemical plant responses to herbivory

-tannins

-alkaloids

-terpenoids

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how do tannins protect plants against herbivory

-bitter tasting

-toxic to insects

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why are tannins toxic to insects

-bind to digestive enzymes and inactivate them

16
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how do alkaloids protect plants against herbivory

-bitter tasting

-affecting metabolism of animals

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examples of alkaloids protecting plants against herbivory

-caffeine produced by coffee bush seedlings is toxic to fungi and insects

-caffeine prevents germination of seeds of other plants

-nicotine produced by tobacco plants is a toxin stored in vacuoles

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how do terpenoids protect plants against herbivory

-toxins to insects and fungi

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examples of terpenoids protecting plants against herbivory

-pyrethrin from chrysanthemums is an insect neurotoxin

-citronella from lemon grass is an insect repellent

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pheromone

-chemical made by an organism which affects the social behaviour of other members of the same species

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examples of pheromones being used to protect plants against herbivory

-maple trees attacked by insects release a pheromone

-absorbed by leaves on other branches which can then prepare

22
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plant version of pheromones

-volatile organic compounds

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how VOCs work

-made when plant defences detected chemicals in insect saliva

-cause gene switching

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examples of VOCs protecting plants against herbivory

-cabbages can produce a signal which attracts parasitic wasps which eats the caterpillar eggs; signal deters other butterflies from laying their eggs

-apple trees do the same things

-wheat seedlings produce signals that repel aphids when attacked

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example of a plant that folds in response to touch

Mimosa pudica

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Examples of plant tropisms

-phototropism

-geotropism

-thigmotropism

-chemotropism

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tropism

-directional growth response in response to a stimuli

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phototropism

response to light

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geotropism

response to gravity

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chemotropism

response to chemicals

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thigmotropism

response to touch

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how phototropism works

-light causes the auxin to move laterally across the shoot

-greater conc on side w/out light

-stimulates cell elongation and growth on the dark side

33
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practical investigations into phototropism

-grow seedlings in different light conditions and use

-time-lapse photography to observe the changes, grow in unilateral light with different colour filters to see which wavelengths result in the greatest response,

34
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which kind of organisms are used to study tropisms

Germinating seeds and young seedlings of monocotyledonous

35
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why germinating seeds and young seedlings used to study tropisms

-easy to work with

-changes affect the whole organism

-seedlings of monocotyledonous have a single spike with no leaves known as a coleoptile

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practical investigations into geotropisms

-place a plant in a clinostat; is rotating and the plant will grow straight

-seeds placed in petri dishes stuck to walls of lab

-roots show geotropism

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how hormones are involved in seed germination

-seeds absorb water

-embryo activated

-gibberellins produce

-production of enzymes to break down food stores stimulated

-food stores used to make ATP

-ABA is antagonistic to gibberellins

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how do gibberellins stimulate the production of enzymes?

-switch on genes for amylases and proteases

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where are the food stores in dicot seeds?

Cotyledon

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Where are the food stores in monocot seeds?

Endosperm

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Role of auxins

Stimulate the growth of the main apical shoot, apical dominance, low concentration of auxins promote root growth

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How do auxins stimulate the growth of the main apical shoot?

Auxin binds to specific receptor sites in the plant cell membrane, pH falls to 5, optimum pH for enzymes to keep walls flexible and plastic

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How auxin does apical dominance?

Growth in the main shoot is stimulated by auxin produced at the tip so it grows quickly, lateral shoots inhibited by the hormone that moves back down the stem, further down the stem there is less auxin so the shoots grow more

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Practical investigations into apical dominance

Apical shoot removed, lateral shoots grow faster, the application of artificial auxin to the cut apical shoot reasserts apical dominance

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How do gibberellins cause stem elongation?

Affect the length of the internodes

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Practical investigations into how gibberellins result in stem elongation

Plants infected by the fungus that produces gibberellins grow tall and thin, plants with short stems produce few or no gibberellins

47
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Experimental evidence into how gibberellins affect seed germination

Mutant varieties which lack the gene that allows them to make gibberellins make seeds that don't germinate, gibberellins applied to the seeds cause them to germinate normally, gibberellin inhibitors cause the seeds to not germinate

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How to investigate the effect of hormones on plant growth

Grow seeds hydroponically in serial dilutions of different hormones, apply different concentration to the cut ends of stems

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What can plant hormones be used for commercially?

Controlling ripening, rooting powders, hormonal weed killers

50
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How hormones are used to control ripening

Fruits can be harvested when they aren't ripe, greengrocers then spray them with ethene to cause them to ripen

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How hormones are used in rooting powders

Auxin applied to cut shoots of cuttings to stimulate root production, increases chances of successful propagation

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How hormones are used in hormonal weedkillers

Synthetic auxins can be used as weedkillers as they are absorbed by broad-leaved weeds, causing their growth rate to become unsustainable so they die

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How is the mammalian nervous system organised structurally?

Central nervous and peripheral nervous systems

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Central Nervous System

Brain and spinal cord

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Peripheral nervous system

The neurones that connect the CNS to the body,

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How is the mammalian nervous system organised functionally?

Somatic and autonomic nervous systems

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Somatic nervous system

System under conscious control, carries impulses to the muscles

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Autonomic nervous system

System under subconscious control, carries impulses to glands and smooth muscle and cardiac muscle

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How is the autonomic nervous system organised?

Sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems

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Gross structure of the brain

Protected by the skull, surrounded by meninges, five main areas

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Main areas of the brain

Cerebrum, cerebellum, medulla oblongata, hypothalamus, pituitary gland

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Functions of the cerebrum

To receive sensory information and interpret it with respect to previous experiences, to send impulses along motor neurones to act on the information, used to control both voluntary and involuntary responses

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Structure of the cerebrum

Highly convoluted, split into two halves, has discrete areas for different functions, outer layer called cerebral cortex

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How the cerebrum responds to sensory information

Sensory areas receive information from receptor cells in sense organs, information passed to association areas, impulses go into motor areas so impulses can be sent through motor neurones to move muscles

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How is the brain able to judge distance and perspective?

Impulses from right side of the field of vision sent to left hemisphere, impulses from left side sent to right hemisphere, integration gives distance and perspective

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Function of the cerebellum

To control muscle movement, body posture and balance.

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How does the cerebellum work?

Receives information from balance organs, relays information to areas of the cerebral cortex

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Function of the medulla oblongata

To control reflex activities as part of the autonomic nervous system, such as ventilation and heart rate

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Function of the hypothalamus

Main controlling region for the autonomic nervous system, one centre for parasympathetic system, one centre for sympathetic system, controls complex behaviour patterns, monitors composition of blood plasma, produces hormones

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Function of the pituitary gland

To control most of the glands in the body

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Structure of the pituitary gland

Divided into anterior and posterior pituitary gland

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Function of anterior pituitary gland

To produce hormones such as FSH

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Function of posterior pituitary gland

To store and release hormones made by the hypothalamus such as ADH

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Reflex arc

Receptor detects stimulus, creates action potential for sensory neurone, sensory neurone carries impulse to motor neurone within the spinal cord via a relay neurone, motor neurone carries impulse to effector

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What type of reflex is the knee jerk reflex?

Spinal reflex

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Spinal reflex

When the neural circuit only goes up to the spinal cord, not the brain

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How does the knee jerk reflex work?

Leg tapped just below the patella, stretches the patellar tendon, initiates the reflex arc, extensor muscle on top of the thigh contracts, relay neurone inhibits motor neurone of the flexor muscle so it relaxes, contraction of the extensor muscle causes the leg to kick

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What is the knee jerk reflex used for?

Maintaining posture and balance

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Examples of reflex actions

Knee jerk, blinking

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What type of reflex is the blinking reflex?

Cranial reflex

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Optical reflex

Blinking as a reaction to overly bright light

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Cranial reflex

A reflex that occurs in the brain

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How does the blinking reflex work?

Irritation of the cornea triggers an impulse along the fifth cranial nerve, passes through a relay neurone in the lower brain stem, impulses then sent along branches of the seventh cranial nerve, results in the eyelids closing

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Consensual response

Both things respond in the same way to a stimulus

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Example of a consensual response

Blinking reflex

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How do reflexes increase your chances of survival?

Involuntary responses so the brain can deal with more complex responses, not learnt so provide immediate protection, fast

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Stressor

Stimulus that causes the stress response which causes wear and tear on the body's physical or mental resources

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Fight or flight response

Full range of coordinated responses of animals to situations of perceived danger

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What is the cause of the fight or flight response?

Shift in the balance of stimulation to increase activity of the sympathetic nervous system and a decrease in activity of the parasympathetic nervous system

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How is the fight or flight response coordinated?

Hypothalamus activates sympathetic nervous system and the adrenal-cortical system by releasing CRF, sympathetic nervous system activates the adrenal medulla which releases adrenaline and noradrenaline, sympathetic nervous system leads to impulses that activate glands and smooth muscles, anterior pituitary gland releases ACTH which leads to the adrenal cortex which releases hormones

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Hormones that are released by the adrenal cortex in the fight-or-flight response

Cortisol, corticosterone

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Role of cortisol

To regulate metabolism and blood pressure responses to stress

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Role of corticosterone

Regulates immune response and suppresses inflammatory reactions

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How does adrenaline use cell signalling?

Binds to its receptor, activates inactive adenyl cyclase to make active adenyl cyclase which is an enzyme, ATP is then converted into cAMP, cAMP is the second messenger

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How is the nervous system involved in increasing heart rate?

Centre in the medulla oblongata which increases heart rate sends impulses through the sympathetic nervous system in the accelerator nerve to the SAN

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How is the nervous system involved in decreasing heart rate?

Centre in the medulla oblongata which decreases heart rate sends impulses through the parasympathetic nervous system in the vagus nerve to the SAN

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Types of receptors involved in changing heart rate

Chemoreceptors, baroreceptors

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How are chemoreceptors involved in increasing heart rate?

Decreases in blood pH are detected due to increased CO2 concentration so heart rate increases to get CO2 to the lungs faster

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How are chemoreceptors involved in decreasing heart rate?

pH of the blood rises, detected by receptors in wall of the carotid arteries and aorta, reduction in frequency of impulses sent to the medulla oblongata, reduces frequency of impulses sent to the SAN

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How are baroreceptors involved in decreasing heart rate?

Receptors in the aorta and carotid artery detect increase in blood pressure, impulses sent to medulla oblongata, medulla oblongata sends impulses along parasympathetic neurones to the SAN