Title: Environmental Adaptations of Plants
1Environmental Adaptations of Plants
Topic 14.5
- Biology 1001
- November 30, 2005
2Introduction
- Seed pollen dispersal means that plants occupy
numerous environments - Plants have developed evolutionary adaptations to
many environments - These include morphological, physiological,
anatomical reproductive modifications - Environmental stressors can be biotic or abiotic,
periodic or continuous - Drought, flooding, cold, low light, and poor
nutrient availability are abiotic stressors - Herbivores and pathogens are biotic stressors
3Newfoundlands Environment
- Dwarf black spruce (Picea mariana) or tuckamore
is an adaptation to a cold, windy coastal
environment - Influences the pattern of growth and form or
morphology of the plant
Lise Sorensen
4Newfoundlands Environment
- Pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea)
- Adapted to low nutrient availability in peatland
bogs
- Sarracenia purpurea (Botanical Latin, purple,
referring to the colour of the mottled pitchers)
is the floral emblem of Newfoundland and
Labrador. Our pitcher plant is the stout little
carnivore of Canadas peat-quilted swamps and
jelly-earthed bogs, where it traps insects in
leaves modified to hold water, hence pitcher
plant. The slippery sides of each pitcher are
lined with downward-pointing hairs that help
insects slide into the pitcher but prevent them
from escaping. Trapped without mercy, they
struggle, fall exhausted back into the water, and
drown in the liquid to which the plant has added
a flesh-dissolving enzyme. The decomposed bodies
of the insects provide essential nutrients for
the pitcher plant.- Bill Casselman, Common
Garden Words, Macarthur and Company, 1997
5PLANT Adaptations to Drought
- When water is scarce or only seasonally
available, plants need to transpire but at the
same time minimize water loss - Adaptations of Plants That Endure Dry Periods
- Mechanisms to reduce transpiration rate during
dry spells - - Control of stomatal opening and closing
- - Inhibition of growth of young leaves
- - Leaves that roll or fold
- (- Loss of leaves by deciduous trees in the
autumn - - Needle-shaped leaves of conifers)
- Such mechanisms are a compromise because they
also reduce photosynthesis - Roots also respond to dry periods
- - Shallow root growth is inhibited
- - Deep roots continue to grow to where the soil
is still moist - See Topic 14.34 Notes and Text Reading
- () Loss of water due to freezing
6Leaves that fold - Oxalis
- Leaves that roll
- Ammophila arenaria
7Xerophytes are Plants Adapted to Arid Environments
See Topic 14.34 Text Reading
- Mechanisms to reduce water loss while transpiring
- Waxy cuticles, sunken stomata on the lower
epidermis, trichomes (hairs) - Photosynthetic stems that store water leaves
that are spines - Leaves of xerophytes may also have an abundance
of fibers to provide support when turgour
pressure is low
Nerium oleander Fig. 36.16
8Xerophyte Adaptations That Reduce Transpiration
- Crassulacean acid metabolism of succulents in the
family Crassulaceae and ice plants - Stomata stay closed during the day, open at night
to take in CO2 - Store CO2 as malic acid (organic acid) in
vacuoles - Malic acid is broken down during the day to
provide CO2
Crassula portulaceae 'Hobbit' - Baby Jade
Ice Plant Carpobrotus edulis
9ADAptations to life in water
- Excess water leads to oxygen deprivation
- The aerial roots of mangroves, called
pneumatophores, provide access to oxygen - Oxygen deprivation in other plants stimulates the
production of the hormone ethylene, which causes
some of the cells in the root cortex to undergo
apoptosis, or programmed cell death
10Hydrophytes are Plants Adapted to An Aquatic
Environment
- Such plants are secondarily aquatic their
ancestors evolved on land - Adaptations include leaf heterophyly (floating
and submerged leaves have different forms) and
stomata on the upper surface of the leaf
11Reproductive Adaptations to Cold
- Sun-tracking flowers
- Hairy flowers that absorb IR radiation
- Higher rates of asexual reproduction stolons,
rhizomes, bulbs on flowering stalks
Salix
Allium canadense
12PREDATION BY HERBIVORES
- Predation is important in chemical recycling
because it returns nutrients to the soil - Plant defenses to predation include
developmental, mechanical and chemical
modifications - Grasses are supremely adapted to grazing,
continuing to grow throughout the season due to a
meristem at the base of the leaf - Spines (modified leaves), thorns (modified
stems), and prickles (epidemal outgrowths) are
mechanical deterrents to predators
13Chemical Defense Against Predation
- Many plants produce secondary compounds that are
poisonous or bitter tasting to animals often
the source of our drugs - Nicotine from tobacco (Nicotiana sp.)
- Caffeine from coffee (Coffea arabica)
- Morphine, codeine, and heroin from poppies
(Papavar sp.) - Strychnine from the tropical vine Strychnos
toxifera - Jackbeans produce canavanine, which replaces
arginine in the proteins of the herbivore
14Coffea Nicotiana?