Leaf Modifications
bud scales: protect perennial plants dormant shoot apical meristems
waxy, tight seal covering buds
buds underneath are tender modified stems
scales protect against wind, temperature, and herbivory
bracts: associated with flowers and inflorescenses
colorful part of the plant closest to inflorescense
tendrils: climbing modifications
sense touch of objects they grow around and increase/decrease growth accordingly
spine: pointed modified leaves
thorn: pointed modified stem
prickle: outgrowth of epidermis and/or cortex
bulb: enlarged leaves underground for storage of next seasons reproductive growth
store starch and sugar to be broken down into ATP
Reproduction
asexual reproduction: generation of genetically identical plants produced via mitosis
examples are rhizomes and cuttings
sexual reproduction: increases genetic diversity
fights disease resistance, allows evolution to genetically advantaged plants
natural selection: survival of the fittest
artificial selection: humans select for desired traits as opposed to what might actually be beneficial to the plant itself
adaptation: changes in structure and function to become better suited to the environment over successive generations
example of adaptation are hydrophyte and xerophyte plants
phenotype: observable physical traits
genotype: genetic makeup having to deal with genes and alleles
Chromosomes and Genetics
homolog: chromosomes coming in pairs that go together in the first stage of meisis
contain same genes at same gene locus
alleles come from mutations and determine phenotype, which happen when mistakes are made in the first mitotic stage
quantitative trait: controlled by genes and influenced by environment
Meiosis: reduces chromosomes by half and creates gametes
separates homologous pairs in diploid to form haploid
fertilization: recombines chromosomes to original number
haploid cells recombine to form diploid zygote
haploid: 1n, containing one set of homologs
diploid: 2n, containing two sets of homologs
Meiosis Specifics
prophase I: chromosomes condense, nuclear envelope dissolves, crossing over occurs
crossing over: swapping genetic material of homologous chromosomes
metaphase I: homologous chromosomes line on metaphase plate as homologous pairs instead of sister chromatids
anaphase I: homologous chromosomes are pulled apart by spindle fibers to opposite poles
telophase I & cytokinesis: chromosomes condense at poles and cytoplasm splits
prophase II: new spindle forms around chromosomes
metaphase II: chromosomes line up at sister chromatids
anaphase II: sister chromatids are pulled apart and centromeres divide
telophase II & cytokinesis: nuclear envelope reforms and cytoplasm divides
New Genetic Variation
crossing over: exchanges corresponding segments of DNA between chromatids of homologous chromosomes, which mixes up the alleles
independent assortment: the way homologs align in the middle, determining combinations of alleles in haploid cells equalling 2 to the nth power
Fertilization
self-fertilization: limited combinations of alleles
outcrossing: increases genetic variation by increasing number of alleles present
Flowers & Pollination
flower structures evolve to promote outcrossing and increase genetic diversity
sometimes the goal is to attract specific pollinators
pedicel / peduncle: stalk supporting flower head
receptacle: organs attached at the base
whorls
sepals: modified leaves which protect the bud
petals: delicate, thin, pigmented and can release compounds as fragrance
stamen: male reproductive organ
filament: attaches anther to rest of plant
anther: produces pollen
pistil / carpel: female reproductive organ
stigma: hairs and sugars which make it sticky, produce nutrients and allow pollen to germinate
style: connects to ovary
ovules: house eggs
ovary develops into seeds
alterations of generations life cycle
diploid generations alternate with haploid generations in a single life cycle
zygote has 2 copies of chromosomes and develops into a sporophyte
sporophyte: diploid individuals
during meiosis, sporophytes create haploid spores, which then undergo mitosis to create gametophytes
diploid, produced asexually, begins with a 2n zygote and end with n spores from meiosis
gametophyte: create gametes, which are sperm and eggs
haploid, produced sexually, contain n spores, end with n gametes producing a 2n zygote
pollen grain: mature male gametophyte made of 3 cells
sporopollenin: decay-resistant and chemical-resistant biopolymer making pollen yellow
pollen produces protein helping protect from environment
female parts
ovules are part of the sporophyte, which is diploid
meiosis produces spores
spores undergo mitosis, producing the gamete egg
egg plus sperm equals diploid zygote, which becomes a seed
endosperm is then formed within the seed
pollination
pollen from the same species lands on the stigma
there are 3 cells in pollen
1 cell elongates down style to ovule, forming the pollen tube
sperm is at the base of the ovule
double fertilization
pollen grains land on stigma, then the pollen tube elongates to egg
1 sperm combines with the egg to form a zygote, and eventually the embryo
2nd sperm combines with central cell in the ovule creating a triploid or 3n cell
containing 3 copies of genetic material
the triploid cell creates the endosperm
fertilized endosperm divides rapidly and cytoplasm gathers outside the nucleus
cell forms around each nucleus and then they harden
ovules become seed, zygote becomes embryo, ovary becomes fruit and the placenta provides nutrients
self pollination: plants with both the pistil and stamen can do this to themselves
examples are soybeans, peanuts, rice, wheat, and tomatos
cross pollination: pollen comes from the anther of a different plant
examples are corn, cotton, apples, raspberries and strawberries
these plants have more genetic diversity than self-pollinators, and therefore are more resistant to disease / unfavorable conditions
Genetic incompatibility
prevents self pollination from the same plant or clones
inside carpels, specific proteins are produces and the pollen tube wont allow pollen with matching proteins inside
Imperfect flowers
have either only male or only female parts
dioecious: individual plants are entirely male or female
monoecious: parts of the plant are entirely male or female
Dichogamy: stamens and pistils mature at different times
protandry: anther produces pollen before stigma can take it
protogyny: stigma are ready for pollen before anther produces it
dehiscense: controlled cell death
Co-Evolution
plants evolve specific traits to attract specific pollinators such as pigments or fragrances while pollinators evolve traits to move the pollen
bees: attracted to blue and yellow flowers and to sweet smells
plants co-evolve to have nectar and extra pollen for the bees
also have nectaries, which contain nectar guides
birds: attracted to red and orange flowers, which are usually unscented because birds can’t smell
butterflies: attracted to red, blue and yellow flowers with strong scents that are sweet or mimic pheromones
moths: attracted to white flowers because they are nocturnal
beetles: attracted to dull colored flowers with strong odors of fermentation and decay
bats: attracted to plants with many nectaries, dull colors, and strong odors of decay or bat pheromones
wind: plants have no nectar, petals or scent
Embryo Development and Fruit
double-fertilization: diploid zygote and triploid cell
seed: ovules connected to placenta by funiculus
embryogenesis: establishes plant body
1st division creates embryo and suspensor
next few divisions create globular stage and suspensor
a few more stages create the heart stage and hypophysis
torpedo stage: root meristem and cotyledons established
Embryo Structures
plumule: shoot inside seed
epicotyl: node above cotyledon
hypocotyl: node below coytledon
radicle: leaves seeds during germination
scuttelum: grass only, is the cotyledon
coleoptile: grass only, is the sheath
seed coat: comes from ovule, intermediate
micropyle: where sperm enters ovule through pollen tube
hilum: scar where ovule attached to ovary
Fruits - mature ovary containing seeds
pericarp: fruit wall developing from mature ovary wall
exocarp: skin or peel
mesocarp: fruit flesh
endocarp: touch inner layer just outside seed
accessory fruit: fruit derived from flower tissue instead of seed
parthenocarpic: very rare mutation where ovary develops into seedless fruit
fleshy fruit: can be simple, aggregate or multiple with layered pericarp
simple fruit - develop from one or multiple united carpels
aggregate fruit - many carpels from one carpel in a flower producing fruitlets
multiple fruit - multiple flowers attached together that become one connected fruit
dry fruit: can be dehiscent or indehiscent with dry, unlayered pericarp
dehiscent - mature ovary wall breaks open once seed matures after controlled cell death
indehiscent - seeds remain in pericarp after maturity
seed dispersal
wind-borne: dry, lightweight seeds with modified structures allowing them to float in the wind
water-borne: buoyant, water-resistant seeds
explosive dehiscence: seeds explosively open at maturity to spread
animal dispersal: seeds stick to animals or are excreted
self-planting: parent plant physically transfers seeds to surrounding soil
Seed germination
radicle: first structure to emerge
taproot: first root emerges
hypocotyl: leads through soil as stem to protect leaves and is beneath the cotyledon
epicotyl: stem above cotyledons
post-emergence, hypocotyl and epicotyl are grouped together and called the stem
Types of germination
epigeous: cotyledons are carried aboveground with the hypocotyl
hypogeous: cotyledons remain beneaht the soil
Seed Dormancy
seeds wont germinate even in favorable conditions to prevent vivipary
vivipary: seeds germinate while attached to parent plant
After-Ripening: takes a few months to occur and needs to happen in warm and dry conditions as opposed to hot and humid climates
Light Promotion: light is required for the seeds to germinate
Light Inhibition: seeds can only have a certain amount of light to germinate and will remain dormant in sunny conditions
stratification: seeds must be exposed to cold (NOT freezing) conditions to germinate
scarification: seeds must be scratched in order to open and germinate through a tough seed coat
high temperatures: seeds in chapparal regions must be exposed to the heat of fire in order to kill the competition and promote germination
chemical promoters: seeds in chapparal regions must be exposed to compounds in wildfire smoke to germinate
parasitic plants must sense a hormone from their host plant in order to germinate
chemical inhibitors: desert plants store chemicals, but after a heavy rainfall washes the chemicals away they germinate
Photosynthesis and Carbon Assimilation
growth - irreversible increase in size
primary growth - occurs at meristems of roots and shoots as well as axillary buds
increase in length
stem length determined by internode length, internode length determined by length of internode cells
biomass crops heavily depend on internode and stem length
secondary growth - growth in diameter of nonvascular plants from vascular cambium and cork cambium
mostly xylem, which is wood
development - sequence of changes and milestones in organisms
seedling = germination
vegetative = primary growth
reproduction = sexual and asexual
senescence = death
measures of growth
productivity - dry matter
RGR - relative growth rate measuring increase of dry matter per unit of time
yield - dry matter accumulated at the harvestable unit
harvest index - dry weight of harvestable unit divided by the total plant dry weight
photosynthesis - 6 carbon dioxide plus 12 water → C6H12O6 (glucose) + 6 water + 6 oxygen
respiration - glucose + 6 oxygen → 6 carbon dioxide + 6 water + 686 kCal
plants get carbon from atmosphere and hydrogen from water
photoautotroph - plants using sunlight to produce energy
heterotroph - organisms eating plants to extract energy and produce macros
productivity = photosynthesis - respiration - photorespiration
photosynthesis is the net gain of carbon
respiration and photorespiration are the net losses of carbon
carbon cycle: inputs come from photoautotrophs, are consumed and excreted by heterotrophs
chlorophyll: captures and conducts light energy and converts to CO2 via light reactions
the 686kCal produced by respiration builds molecules, produces heat and powers mechanical work
light reactions: convert solar to chemical energy
potential energy stored in chlorophyll is converted to ATP and NADPH, fueling dark reactions
dark reactions: convert chemical energy to sugar
use CO2 to produce sugar (CH2O)
each CO2 fixed needs 3 ATP and 2 NADPH
ATP - stores potential energy in phosphate groups, which release a lot of potential energy when broken
converts to ADP, which doesnt have as much chemical energy
NADPH - NADP+ bonds with H to store lots of potential energy and is more stable than ATP
ATP: 7.3kCal
NADPH: 52kCal
Glucose: 686kCal
Leaves and Photosynthesis
chloroplasts: contain thylakoids, grana, and stroma and are the site of light reactions
in light reactions within thylakoids, water, light, NADP+, ADP, and a phosphate group are taken in and produce O2, ATP and NADPH
in dark reactions within the stroma, the Calvin Cycle takes CO2, ATP and NADPH to produce sugar
Chlorophyll
Chlorophyll A: blue and green pigmented, are 2-3x more prevalant than Chlorophyll B and are the reaction center
Chlorophyll B: yellow and green pigmented, accessory pigment
accessory pigment - allow plant to absorb more wavelengths of light
Photosystem - complex of proteins, chlorophyll and carotenoids on the thylakoid membrane
Photosystem I: provide electrons for NADPH, which are replenished by Photosystem II, have many Chlorophyll A and few Chlorophyll B
Photosystem II: replenish electrons of Photosystem I, reduce H2O to oxygen, 2 electrons and 2 protons and contain equal amounts of Chlorophyll A and B
Chemiosmosis: concentrated protons in the thylakoid move down the concentration gradient via ATP synthase to produce ATP
Calvin Cycle: ATP + NADPH used to build glucose from carbon dioxide and hydrogen
Dark Reactions
Carbon Fixation: incorporates CO2 into RuBP by enzyme RUBISCO, splitting into two three-carbon sugars
RUBISCO: most prevalent protein on earth, doesn’t require ATP, has an oxygenase activity
Reduction: input of phosphate group from ATP and electrons from NADPH to form G3P sugar
every three CO2 form 6 G3P
Regeneration of RuBP from G3P by using ATP
mesophyll cells are the site of fructose and glucose production from G3P
sucrose is made in the cytoplasm
Allocation Regulation
sucrose is tightly regulated by cell depending on needs
Transport of Assimilates
fixed carbon produces sucrose for transport, respiration, storage, structure and defense
sucrose is water soluble, transported in the phloem, makes ATP, stored as starch in roots, can make cellulose / lignin or be a secondary metabolite
transported through leaf mesophyll cells via plasmodesmata
vascular bundles transport sugar through plants
mesophyll cells are very close to vascular bundles
diffusion - movement of solute from high to low concentration
osmosis - movement of water from low to high concentration with the purpose of dilution
semipermeability - membranes are permeable to water and small nonpolar molecules
plants can withstand high turgor pressure because of the cell wall
this means the plants should have higher concentrations of sucrose within the cell to promote osmosis and turgidity
plants prefer to be turgid rather than equilibrium
facilitated diffusion: cell membranes have channel and pump proteins allowing certain molecules to diffuse across without ATP
Active transport: cell membranes have carrier proteins that require ATP to form around the molecule and actively carry it across the membrane
Phloem - transports sucrose from source to sink
source: area of high solute concentration and high pressure
sink: area of a low solute concentration and low pressure
rate of phloem transport depends on pressure gradient
trees have a slow rate due to their size, while herbaceous annuals such as corn and other forage crops have high rates
sieve tube element: living cells, made for long distance water and sucrose transport
companion cell: living cells, loads sucrose into sieve tube element
sieve pore: dead cell with no cell wall
Assimilate Partitioning
yield: total dry matter in harvestable unit
harvest index: sucrose should be going to the harvestable portions of the plant rather than the unconsumed parts
sink strength: sink size (size of harvestable unit) divided by sink activity
sink activity: sucrose is unloaded
greater rate of unloading, stronger sink and lower pressure in sieve tube elements
Phloem Repair
p proteins: plug leaks in sieve tube elements like blood clots
callose: carbohydrates that act as scabs to cover the sieve tube element wound after p-proteins clot them
both of these prevent phloem assimilates from leaking out of the sieve tube element
phloem feeding insects - aphids, leafhoppers and whiteflies are the most common due to their piercing-sucking mouthparts, which consume the assimilates. Then they spit out chemicals that repair the wound they created
Chemicals
Systemic Chemicals: water soluble, taken up by phloem and move the chemicals from source to sink
examples include glyphosate and paraquat
Fate of Assimilates
respiration and storage, structure, and secondary metabolites
sucrose used in dark respiration to produce ATP is used in respiration compounds; glucose and oxygen are used to create CO2, water and energy
energy builds molecules, releases heat and conducts mechanical work
respiration begins in the cytosol and ends in the mitochondria
glycolysis - breaks hexoses into pyruvate and produces a little bit of ATP to kick off the reactions
pyruvate oxidation - produces acetyl CoA, which is used in the Citric Acid Cycle
Citric Acid Cycle - breaks carbon bonds to release ATP
Oxidative Phosphorylation: runs the electron transport chain and conducts chemiosmosis, producing the most ATP
respiration is only 34% effective in capturing the energy stored in glucose
remaining 76% is lost as heat
reduces the relative growth rate by 30-60%
temperature - influences growth rate due to effect on respiration rate
less dry weight is lost on cool nights, which slow the plants metabolism and use less energy
Without oxygen, what will happen to the electron transport chain?
A. nothing, it will stay the same
B. it will happen at a faster rate
C. it will happen at a slower rate
D. it will stop completely
the answer is D because it won’t undergo chemiosmosis and the system backs up
Fermentation
converts NADH to NAD+ in absence of oxygen to produce ethanol
flooding: some crops such as corn can tolerate temporarily flooded conditions due to highly active alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH)
this type of fermentation supplies just enough ATP for growth, but cannot remain in that state for long
in wine and beer fermentation, yeast ferment glucose and excretes CO2 and ethanol
Storage Compounds
starch: a carbohydrate glucose polymer that is stored in amyloplasts, water insoluble and digestible
inulin: fructose polymer, stored. in vacuole, water soluble and indigestible
sucrose: stored in some forms and give fruits more calories
triglyceride: lipids, which are high energy and used for long-term storage
Structural Compounds
phospholipids: cell membranes
cutin, suberin and waxes: act as physical barriers from environment
cell walls: composed of cellulose, hemicellulose and pectin
lignin: tough secondary cell walls
Defense Compounds
secondary metabolites such as fragrances or poisons
Jasmonate: defends against herbivory
Citronellate: defends against insects