Title: Plants in Motion
1Plants in Motion
- http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
starthere.html
2Germination
- Germination is the process where growth emerges
from a resting state. - If germination occurs in darkness, root growth
slows after the shoot emerges and shoot
elongation accelerates. - This behavior increases the chance that the
seedling will emerge from soil into the light
where it will be able to obtain energy from
sunlight by photosynthesis. - Once a seedling emerges into the light, the plant
undergoes dramatic changes such as turning green
and producing leaves. This light-dependent
developmental transformation is called
photomorphogenesis.
3Corn Seed Germinating
- This short movie shows corn seeds germinating and
growing in darkness over a period of a few days
starting 36 hours after being planted in wet
soil. The time between images in this movie was 1
hour. - Note that the root is the first part of the
seedling to emerge from the seed. - The seed on the left was planted with the embryo
aligned with its root pointing down. - The seed on the right was oriented with the
embryo upside down. - As the movie shows, the roots from both seeds
grew down regardless of the initial orientation
of the embryo. Also, the shoots that emerged
later grew up from both seeds. - The ability of the seedling to orient its growth
occurs as a result of the process of
gravitropism. Gravitropism is the process by
which plants sense and respond to the direction
of gravity.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
earlygrowth/germination/germ.html
4Sunflower Germination
- This movie shows germination and early growth of
sunflower seedlings under low intensity white
light. The time between images in this movie was
1 hour and they are shown at 6 frames per sec - As the seedlings emerge from the soil, they are
already beginning to make chlorophyll and turn
green. The cotyledons and apical hook unfold as
the plant emerges into the light. - One of the more striking things is the robust
nutational movement (rotation of the stem) shown
by these seedlings under continuous dim light. In
darkness and in bright light, the nutational
movement is present but less robust (see
photomorphogenesis movie for comparison). It is
almost like the seedlings are searching for a
better light source..
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
earlygrowth/germination/germ.html
5Arabidopsis thaliana Germination
- This short movie shows Arabidopsis thaliana seeds
germinating in the light. - Once the root has emerged and anchored the plant,
the shoot begins to grow. As the shoot is exposed
to the light, the plant undergoes the process
called photomorphogenesis. - As the seedlings emerge from the soil, they are
already beginning to make chlorophyll and turn
green. - The cotyledons and apical hook unfold as the
plant emerges into the light. and the cotyledons
expand and turn green and the seedling begins to
grow photosynthetically and no longer depends on
food stored in the seed
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
earlygrowth/germination/germ.html
6Photomorphogenesis
- Plant development is dependent on the
environmental conditions where it is growing. The
process by which plant development is controlled
by light is called photomorphogenesis. Typically,
photomorphogenic responses are most obvious in
germinating seedlings but light affects plant
development in many ways throughout all stages of
development. The movies in this section will
demonstrate some of the photomorphogenic
responses in plants.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
earlygrowth/photomorph/photomorph.html
7Sunflower germination dark
- The movie on the left documents the growth of
sunflower seedlings in darkness. Because the
seedlings were imaged with infrared illumination,
the movie is in black and white. However, the
seedlings did not turn green like the light-grown
seedlings in the other movie. - While in the darkness of the soil, seedlings are
dependent on stored food reserves in the embryo. - Plants put most of their energy into stem
elongation and suppress leaf development and
chlorophyll production (i.e. they do not turn
green). - In addition, dark-grown dicotyledonous plants
keep the end of the stem hooked and their
cotyledons closed together. Presumably, this
growth strategy is an adaptation for rapidly
emerging from the dark soil.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
earlygrowth/photomorph/photomorph.html
8Sunflower germination light
- The movie on the right documents the growth of
sunflower seedlings under white light. - The movie shows shows approximately 2 days of
growth. By advancing the movie frame by frame,
the effects of light on plant development can
readily be seen. - When a seedling emerges from the soil into the
light, growth and development changes
dramatically. - Elongation is suppressed, the apical hook opens
and the cotyledons separate, enlarge and turn
green as chloroplast's develop for carrying out
photosynthesis.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
earlygrowth/photomorph/photomorph.html
9Tropism
- Tropisms are directional movement responses that
occur in response to a directional stimulus. One
of the most commonly observed tropic responses in
plants is phototropism, in which plant stems grow
towards light.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
movements/tropism/tropisms.html
10Cool Corn
- After 3 days of growth in darkness, the pot of
corn seedlings in this movie were exposed to
light from a single light bulb placed in the
center of the pot just above the seedling. The
plants were then imaged at 10 min intervals for
about 18 hours. - For the first 14 hours the seedlings appear to be
worshiping the light as they maintain phototropic
curvature. - After 14 hours, the point light source was turned
off and diffuse room lighting was turned on and
the seedlings quickly return to a vertical
orientation.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
vegetative/veg.html
11Vegetative Phase
- The period of growth between germination and
flowering is known as the vegetative phase of
plant development. - During the vegetative phase, plants are busy
carrying out photosynthesis and accumulating
resources that will be needed for flowering and
reproduction. - Different types of plants show different growth
habits. - The movies in this section will document various
growth processes that occur during the vegetative
phase of development.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
vegetative/veg.html
12Rosette Plant
- The time-lapse movie shows the development of a
rosette over a period of approximately 13 days,
starting from about a week after germination. - The seedlings were grown in continuous light for
the movie but had been in a 12 h photoperiod
prior to filming. - If you look closely at the cotyledons and leaves
as they grow, you can see that the leaves exhibit
brief periods of movement (they appear to wiggle)
approximately every 24 hours. - These movements are most likely due to the action
of the circadian clock that had been entrained
prior to moving the plants to continuous light.
The time interval between images in the movie is
4 hours.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
vegetative/veg.html
13Time Course of leaf area increase
- The graph above shows the time-course of the
increase in leaf area of the plants shown in the
time-lapse movie. - The data shown were obtained from images captured
every hour (the movie only shows images 4 hours
apart). - In addition, data from several seedlings were
averaged with the data obtained from the seedling
in the time-lapse movie. - After about 12 days, it appears that growth
starts to decrease. However, this apparent
decrease is the result of leaves overlapping each
other as the leaves expanded so that they were no
longer detected by the automated technique used
to measure the leaf area.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
vegetative/veg.html
14Root Growth
- The main root of a plant typically grows
downwards towards earths gravity. - This downwards oriented growth is termed positive
gravitropism. - As a root elongates, the cells behind the root
apical meristem differentiate, with some
epidermal cells forming root hairs. - Root hairs are thought to function in uptake of
water and minerals from the soil.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
vegetative/veg.html
15Wilting
- Water makes up about 95 of the fresh weight of a
plant. - Water is essential for plants to take up
nutrients from the soil and deliver them through
the plant body. - When water becomes limiting, plants are said to
"wilt". Wilting occurs when water availability is
seriously limiting and can lead to damage or
death if wilting goes on too long. - Fortunately, if additional water is provided
before serious damage occurs, a plant will
quickly rehydrate and resume normal growth and
metabolism. - The time-lapse movie here shows a coleus plant
wilting as the soil in the pot become
progressively drier.
http//plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/
vegetative/veg.html