Title: How Plants Grow
1How Plants Grow
- Mort Kothmann
- Texas AM University
2Plant Development and Responses to Grazing
- Objective 1
- Review the developmental morphology and growth
form of grass plants. - Objective 2.
- Evaluate some major physiological and
morphological plant responses to grazing. - Objective 3.
- Explore the mechanisms that convey grazing
resistance to plants.
3Functional Categories of Plants
- Annual (grass, forb)
- Perennial (grass, forb)
- Woody
- Deciduous or evergreen
- Sprouting or non-sprouting (basal)
- Cool season or warm season
- Anti-herbivory
- Chemical
- Physical
4Major Plant Groups on Rangelands
Tree
Dicots
Monocots
Shrub
Forb
5Surviving plants have strong drought resistance
and well developed chemical or structural
anti-herbivory.
6Grassland with scattered shrubs and small trees
on upland. Competition is for light and soil
resources. Fire is a major determinant of the
dominant vegetation. Grazing tolerance is more
important than anti-herbivory.
7Developmental Morphology
Phytomer Organization
Tiller Organization
Plant Organization
8Tiller Cross Section
Intercalary Meristem
Leaf Blade
Emerging Tiller
Leaf Sheath
Apical Meristem
Axillary Bud
Adventitious Root
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10Culmless Versus Culmed Tillers
Culmed
Apical Meristem
Culmless
Axillary Buds
11Basal Location of Grass Regrowth in Cumless
Tillers
12Meristematic Contribution to Grass Growth
(Activation of dormant buds)
(Cell division differentiation)
(Cell enlargement)
13Factors Limiting Plant Growth
- Heat (optimal temperature)
- Below-Ground (roots)
- Water
- Nitrogen and other nutrients
- Above-Ground (shoot)
- Light
- CO2
- Meristems (apical, intercalary, axillary)
14Resources and Meristems
- Intercalary meristems are primarily involved with
cell enlargement which requires primarily CHO and
has low N requirement. - Axillary meristems are sites of cell division and
differentiation. Cell division requires N thus N
availability will limit the number of active
meristems. - N content of leaves is generally 2X that of
roots thus, low N results in less shoot growth
relative to root growth.
15Allocation of Plant Resources
- Plants allocate resources (phytosynthetate) with
the priority towards acquiring the most limiting
resource(s). - If water is limiting, allocation is shifted
towards root growth over shoot growth. - If leaf area is limiting, allocation is shifted
towards leaf growth over shoot growth.
16Key Concepts
- N uptake is with water if water is limiting, N
will be limiting - Higher levels of available N increase water use
efficiency - Level of available NO3 in the soil affects the
species composition of the vegetation - Weeds require higher levels of NO3 than do climax
grasses
17Physiological Responses to Grazing
18Effects of Grazing on Plants
- Removal of photosynthetic tissues reduces a
plants ability to assimilate energy. - Removal of meristems (apical intercalary)
delays or stops growth. - Removal of reproductive structures reduces a
plants ability to produce new individuals. - Grazing is a natural ecological process and
overgrazing occurred prior to humans. - Properly managed grazing is a sustainable
enterprise, but destructive grazing can occur.
19Compensatory Photosynthesis
PN ( of preclipping Ps rate)
Time From Clipping (days)
20Resource Allocation
- Biomass partitioning to roots and sheath is
reduced much more than to leaves following
partial defoliation.
21Root Responses to Defoliation
50
70
90
All roots stopped growing for 17 days
50 of roots stopped growing for 17 days
No roots stopped growing
22Root Responses to Defoliation
- Root growth decreases proportionally as
defoliation removes greater than 50 of the plant
leaf area. - Frequency of defoliation interacts with
defoliation intensity to determine the total
effect of defoliation on root growth. - The more intense the defoliation, the greater the
effect of frequency of defoliation.
23Consequences of Reduced Root Growth
- The net effect of severe grazing is to reduce
- Total absorptive area of roots.
- Soil volume explored for soil resources e.g.
water and nitrogen. - How may this alter competitive interactions?
24TNC Contribution to Shoot Regrowth
- Carbohydrate reserves exist and they provide a
small amount of energy to contribute to initial
leaf growth following severe grazing or leaf
damage e.g., fire, late spring freeze. - Current photosynthesis is the primary source for
growth of new shoots.
25Growth is Exponential
- The initial or residual amount of plant tissue is
very important in determining the rate of plant
growth at any point in time. - The total amount of root and shoot biomass is
more important than the concentration of reserve
CHO.
26Morphological characteristics
- Primary growth forms of grasses
- Bunchgrasses
- Turf or sod grasses
27Stolons and Rhizomes
Stolon
Rhizome
28Variation of the Grass Growth Form
Bunchgrass Growth-form
Intermediate Growth-form
Sodgrass Growth-form
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30Bunchgrass Growth Form
31Herbivory Resistance
32Anti-quality Factors in Forages
33Classes of Anti-quality
- Structural plant traits
- Plant parts
- Spines, Awns, Pubescence
- Plant maturity
- LeafStem ratio
- LiveDead
- ReproductiveVegetative tillers
- Tensile/shear strength
34Structural Anti-quality
- Fiber components
- Cell walls
- Lignin
- Silica
35Anti-quality Mineral imbalances
- Excess
- Silicon
- Se
- Mo
- NO3
- Deficiency
- N, P, K, Mg (macro minerals)
- Cu, Co, Se, Zn
36Anti-qualityAlkaloids
- Western plants
- Largest class of secondary compounds
- Found in 20-30 of plant species
- Highly toxic
- Eastern plants
- Ergot alkaloids
- Fescue pastures
- Dallisgrass
- Perennial ryegrass
37Toxicity of anti-herbivory compounds
- Plants with highly toxic compounds do not allow
animals to learn from negative post-ingestive
feedback. - Plants with less toxic compounds allow animal to
learn and develop aversions. - When nutritious forage is limited, positive
feedback may override negative feedback and
animals will consume toxic plants.