Title: Plant Structure and Function I - Ecol 182
1Plant Structure and Function I - Ecol 182
4-14-2005
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2The Angiosperms Flowering Plants
- A number of synapomorphies, or shared derived
traits, characterize the angiosperms - They have double fertilization (upcoming figure).
- They produce triploid endosperm.
- Their ovules and seeds are enclosed in a carpel
(modified leaf). - They have flowers (modified leaves).
- They produce fruit (at minimum mature ovary and
seed). - Their xylem contains vessel elements (specialized
H2O transport) and fibers (structural integrity). - Their phloem contains companion cells (assists
with metabolic issues associated with transport).
3Angiosperm vascular systems
- Xylem in angiosperms consists of vessel elements
in addition to tracheids - Vessel elements also conduct water and are formed
from dead cells. - Vessel elements are generally larger in diameter
than tracheids and are laid down end-to-end to
form hollow tubes. - Sieve tube elements (Phloem) in Angiosperms are
stacked, similar to xylem - Have adjacent companion cells that retain all
organelles - Companion cells may regulate the performance of
the sieve tube members through their effects on
active transport of solutes
4Figure 35.10 Evolution of the Conducting Cells
of Vascular Systems
5Figure 35.11 Sieve Tubes
6Angiosperms Flowering Plants
- Monocots - a single embryonic cotyledon (grasses,
cattails, lilies, orchids, and palms) - Eudicots - two cotyledons, and include the
majority of familiar seed plants - Additional clades - water lilies, star anise, and
the magnoliid complex - Big question in plant evolution what is the
basal angiosperm?
7Plant Structure and Function
- Uptake and Movement of Water and Solutes
- Transport of Water ( Minerals) in the Xylem
- Transpiration and stomatal regulation of
water-loss (use) - Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
8General problem of water in plant function
- Need for H2O for
- photosynthesis,
- Solute transport,
- temperature control,
- internal pressure for growth
- Plants obtain water and minerals from the soil
via the roots - in turn roots extract carbohydrates other
important materials from the leaves. - Water enters the plant through osmosis
- but the uptake of minerals requires transport
proteins.
9Plant function in the context of the
soil-plant-atmosphere continuum
Plants bridge the steep potential energy gradient
between the soil and the air use it as a
mechanism for water and solute transport
But.
- The soil is not an endless supply of water!
- Compromises between biomechanics, size and
growth rate - set the stage for catastrophic loss of water
transport
- Decreases in leaf water content result in stress
that does - not allow for growth and may result in
mortality
10Uptake Movement of Water Solutes in Plants
- Osmosis is the diffusion of water through a
membrane primary means of water transport in
plants - Water movement across a membrane is a function of
osmotic potential, or solute potential. - Potential refers to the potential energy
contained in the system measured - Dissolved solutes effect the concentration of
water (changing the potential energy). - Greater solute concentration results in a more
negative solute potential and a greater the
tendency of water to diffuse to the solution.
11Figure 5.8 Osmosis Modifies the Shapes of Cells
12Uptake Movement of Water Solutes in Plants
- Water potential is the tendency of a solution to
take up water from pure water (Y). - Water potential of a system is the sum of the
negative solute potential (ys) and the (usually
positive) pressure potential (yp) along with
other potentials. - y ys yp
- Each component is measured in megapascals (Mpa).
13Figure 36.2 Water Potential, Solute Potential,
and Pressure Potential
14Figure 36.4 Apoplast and Symplast routes of
water movement from the soil into the plant
15Figure 36.5 Casparian Strips
16Transport of Water and Minerals in the Xylem
- The adhesion-cohesiontension theory of water
movement - Water vapor concentration is greater inside the
leaf than outside, so water diffuses out through
stomata - (this is transpiration).
- Tension develops in the mesophyll drawing water
from the xylem of the nearest vein into the
apoplast surrounding the mesophyll cells - Removal of water from the veins establishes
tension on the entire volume of water in the
xylem, so the column is drawn up from the roots.
17Figure 36.8 The TranspirationCohesionTension
Mechanism
- Hydrogen bonding results in cohesion (sticking
of molecules to one another). - The narrower the tube, the greater the tension
the water column can stand. - Maintenance of the water column also occurs
through adhesion of water molecules to the walls
of the tube.
18Transport of Water and Minerals in the Xylem
- The key elements in water transport in xylem
- Transpiration
- Tension
- Adhesion / Cohesion
- The adhesioncohesiontension mechanism does not
require energy. - At each step, water moves passively toward a
region with a more negative water potential. - Mineral ions in the xylem sap rise passively with
the solution. - Transpiration also contributes to the plants
temperature regulation, cooling plants in hot
environments.
19Figure 36.9 A Pressure Bomb
20Why is there a disconnect (temporally) between
leaf, root and soil?
21Short and long-term responses to water limitation
When water is withheld the pressure potential
of the cells declines (hours to days) and rates
of cell expansion are reduced (long-term).
-Rates of photosynthesis declines (stomata close-
short). -New leaves are smaller, with smaller
cells (long). -Profound change in patterns of
allocation (long).
22Regulation of Transpiration by Stomata
- Leaf and stem epidermis has a waxy cuticle that
is impermeable to water, but also to CO2. - Stomata, or pores, in the epidermis allow CO2 to
enter by diffusion. - Guard cells control the opening and closing of
the stomata. - Most plants open their stomata only when the
light is intense enough to maintain
photosynthesis. - Stomata also close if too much water is being
lost.
23Figure 36.11 Stomata (Part 2)
- Stomatal aperture is regulated by controlling K
concentrations in the guard cells. - Blue light activates a proton pump to actively
pump protons out of the guard cells. The proton
gradient drives accumulation of K inside the
cells. - Increasing K concentration makes the water
potential of guard cells more negative, and water
enters by osmosis. - The guard cells respond by changing their shape
and allowing a gap to form between them. - Abscisic acid (a stress hormone) can invoke
this stomatal closure in addition to blue light - Changes in guard-cell photosynthesis can also
invoke this stomatal response
24Leaf temperature
VPD
CO2 demand
PPFD
Transpiration
Stomatal Conductance
Hydraulic resistance
Soil Y
25Types of stomatal responses
- Isohydric species control gas exchange such
that daytime leaf water status is unaffected by
soil water deficits. (Primarily responds to ABA) - Anisohydric species exhibit decreases in leaf
water potential proportional to changes in soil
water potential. (responds to both ABA and Yleaf)
26Conceptual understanding of stomatal function
- Optimization theory (Cowan 1977) stomata work
to optimize or maximize water exchanges for
carbon dioxide - Long-distance transport hypothesis Tyree and
Sperry stomata regulate water loss to maintain
long-distance water and nutrient transport - Operate to avoid of catastrophic xylem
dysfunction (cavitation), that occurs through the
development of excessive tension.
27Cavitation or Embolism
- Breakage of the xylem water column
- Entry of air into the conduit
- Primarily through the pit membrane
- Large tensions in the xylem stream
- Species and individuals differ in their
vulnerability to cavitation trade-offs produced
relative to water flow rates
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30Mechanisms of cavitation
- Desiccation-induced vulnerability to cavitation
through air entry from pit membrane - size and number of pits becomes the important
traits - EVEN THE WIDEST VESSELS IN RING-POROUS TREES ARE
SUFFICIENTLY NARROW TO PREVENT BREAKING OF A
WATER COLUMN.(Sperry 1995) - Other mechanisms besides vessel diameter alone
are important in determining drought stress
tolerance
31Mechanisms of cavitation
- Freeze-thaw events dissolved gases in sap are
insoluble in ice and form bubbles under repeated
low temperature conditions - DIFFERENCES IN CONDUIT DIAMETER CAN AFFECT THE
POTENTIAL FOR GAS EMBOLISMS FORMING FROM GAS
MOVING OUT OF SOLUTION
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33Constraints on water transport when embolism
occurs differences in phenology and distribution
Ring Porous
Vessels confined to spring wood (uniform
distribution) Oaks (Quercus)
Emboli zed vessels cannot be re-filled water
transport is dependent upon new spring wood
construction (which tent to have large vessels)
Diffuse porous
Vessels occur uniformly throughout the annular
ring re-filling can occur over the winter.
34So..water transport
- Vessel diameter and pit membrane density
- (why do desert species tend to have both reduced
vessel diameter AND pit membrane density?) - Constraints from the interaction of water stress
and temperature stress affect vulnerability to
cavitation - Implications for plant functional strategies and
controls over the distribution of plants
35Think about this figure as a general example of
how soils and plants interact in all different
ecosystems
36Safety Margins
Mesic species with the ability to recover each
night operate close to the xylem tensions that
cause 100 cavitation Xeric species that do not
have that opportunity to recover operate with a
much larger safety margin
37Mesic habitats
Variation within and between species associated
with variation in PSN capacity, leaf N content,
leaf morphology/ontogeny
Variation between species associated with
adaptation to aridity
Range of leaf conductance
Arid habitats
Photosynthetic capacity
38Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- Sugars, amino acids, some minerals, and other
solutes are transported in phloem and move from
sources to sinks. - A source is an organ such as a mature leaf or a
starch-storing root that produces more sugars
than it requires. - A sink is an organ that consumes sugars, such as
a root, flower, or developing fruit. - These solutes are transported in phloem, not
xylem, as shown by Malpighi by girdling a tree.
39Figure 36.12 Girdling Blocks Translocation in
the Phloem
40Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- Translocation (movement of organic solutes) stops
if the phloem is killed. - Translocation often proceeds in both directions
both up and down the stem simultaneously. - Translocation is inhibited by compounds that
inhibit respiration and the production of ATP.
41Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- Plant physiologists have used aphids to collect
sieve tube sap from individual sieve tube
elements. - An aphids inserts a specialized feeding tube, or
stylet, into the stem until it reaches a sieve
tube. - Sieve tube sap flows into the aphid. The aphid
is then frozen and cut away from its stylet,
which remains in the sieve tube. - Sap continues to flow out the sieve tube and can
be collected and analyzed by the physiologist.
42Figure 36.13 Aphids Collect Sieve Tube Sap
43Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- There are two steps in translocation that require
energy - Loading is the active transport of sucrose and
other solutes into the sieve tubes at a source. - Unloading is the active transport of solutes out
of the sieve tubes at a sink.
44Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- Sieve tube cells at the source have a greater
sucrose concentration that surrounding cells, so
water enters by osmosis. This causes greater
pressure potential at the source, so that the sap
moves by bulk flow towards the sink. - At the sink, sucrose is unloaded by active
transport, maintaining the solute and water
potential gradients. - This is called the pressure flow model.
45Figure 36.14 The Pressure Flow Model
46Table 36.1 Mechanisms of Sap Flow in Plant
Vascular Tissues
47Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- If the pressure flow model is valid, two
requirements must be met - The sieve plates must be unobstructed.
- There must be effective methods for loading and
unloading the solute molecules. - The first condition has been shown by microscopic
study of phloem tissue. - Mechanisms for loading and unloading the solutes
exist in all plants.
48Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- Sugars and other solutes produced in the
mesophyll cells leave the cells and enter the
apoplast. - The solutes are then actively transported to
companion cells and phloem tubes, thus reentering
the symplast. - The passage of solutes to the apoplast and back
to the symplast allows for selectivity of solutes
to be transported.
49Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- Secondary active transport loads the sucrose into
companion cells and sieve tubes. - Sucrose is carried across the membrane by
sucroseproton symport. For this symport to work,
the apoplast must have a high concentration of
protons. - These protons are supplied by a primary active
transport the proton pump.
50Translocation of Substances in the Phloem
- Many substances move from cell to cell within the
symplast through plasmodesmata. - The plasmodesmata participate in the loading and
unloading of sieve tubes. - Solutes enter companion cells by active transport
and move into the sieve tubes through
plasmodesmata. - At sinks, plasmodesmata connect sieve tubes,
companion cells, and the cells that will receive
the solutes. Plasmodesmata in sink tissues are
abundant and allow large molecules to pass.
51Nutrient classification
- Amount
- Macronutrients (H,C,O,N,K,Ca,Mg,P,S)
- Micronutrients (Cl,B,Fe,Mn,Zn,Cu,Mo)
- Function
- Constituents of organic material (C,H,O,N,S)
- Osmotic potential or contribute to enzyme
structure/function (K,Na,Mg,Ca,Mn,Cl) - Structural factors in methalloproteins
(Fe,Cu,Mo,Zn)
52Nutrient Dynamics (outline)
- Nutrient availability
- Sources of nutrients
- Direct and indirect controls over sources
- Nutrient Uptake
- Plant and environmental interactions
- Nutrient Return from the plant to the soil
(cycling) - Ecological and environmental processes
53Nutrient sources for plants
- Mineral nutrients in the soil
- 98 bound in organic matter (detritus), humus,
and insoluble inorganic compounds or incorporated
in minerals - NOT DIRECTLY AVAILABLE TO PLANTS
- 2 is absorbed on soil colloids
- These are positively charged ions
- 0.2 is dissolved in the soil water
- Usually negatively charged, nitrates and
phosphates
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55Soil Colloids
- Ion exchangers
- Exchange capacity depends upon surface area
- Clay (montmorillonite) 600 800 m2 g-1
- Many humic substances 700 m2 g-1
- Retain charged substances (mainly cations, but to
a lesser extent, anions)
56Soil Colloids
- Adsorptive binding of nutrient ions result in
- Nutrients freed by weathering and decomposition
are collected and protected from leaching - Concentration in soil solution remains low and
constant - Removes a potential osmotic effect
- Adsorbed nutrient ions are readily available to
plants
57Nutrient uptake
- Conditions that affect nutrient content in the
soil - Soil texture (clay content)
- Soil organic matter content
- Soil water content (precipitation)
- Soil temperature
58Environments that tend to result in low nutrient
contents
- Sandy soils low clay content and thus
inadequate exchange capacity - High rainfall excessive leaching of nutrients
- Low rainfall inadequate soil moisture for
organic matter decomposition - Cold soils low decomposition low root
respiration and thus low nutrient uptake - Waterlogged soils inadequate oxygen for root
respiration and decomposition
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60Ion uptake by roots
- The rate at which nutrients are supplied to a
plant depends on - The concentration of diffusible minerals in the
rooted soil strata - Ion-specific rates of diffusion and mass
transport - Nitrate is fast and phosphate and potassium are
slower (diffusivities) - Ions of nutrient salts are taken up by a purely
passive process - Following the concentration and charge gradients
between the soil solution and the interior of the
root
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63Mass flow versus diffusion nutrient delivery
- Nutrient uptake is a function of BOTH plants and
soils and includes two processes (1) Mass Flow
and (2) Diffusion - Mass flow in soils is a rapid process, whereas
diffusion is only measured in mm per day in soils - Where mass flow is insufficient to satisfy plant
demand, ion concentrations at the root surface
are reduced below that of the surrounding soil
volume - Zones of depletion create concentration gradients
that drives diffusional processes in the soil (as
a function of soil water content)
64Nutrient Uptake
- Absorption of nutrient ions from soil solution
- NO3-, SO42-, Ca2, Mg2 (lt1000 mg l-1)
- K (lt100 mg l-1)
- PO42- (lt1 mg l-1)
- Exchange absorption of adsorbed nutrient ions
- Release of H and HCO3- as dissociation products
of the CO2 resulting from respiration - Mobilization of chemically bound nutrients
- H ions and organic acids, nutrients fixed in
chemical compounds are liberated and form
chelated complexes
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67Nitrogen acquisition
- Nitrogen is the mineral nutrient that plants
require in the greatest quantity and that most
frequently limits growth in both agricultural and
natural systems - The carbon expended in acquiring nitrogen can
make up a significant fraction of the total
energy a plant consumes - Plants have developed several approaches to
nitrogen acquisition, including - Root absorption of inorganic ions ammonium and
nitrate - Fixation of atmospheric nitrogen
- Mycorrhizal associations
- carnivory
68Nitrogen acquisition consists of
- Absorption bringing N from the environment into
the plant - Translocation moving inorganic N within the
plant - Assimilation converting N from inorganic to
organic forms
69- Carbon costs for N absorption include
- Growth and maintenance of absorbing organs
(usually roots) - Transport of minerals against a concentration
gradient - Assimilation of N in leaves
70- Variation in Acquisition a cost / benefit
function of availability - Variation in N acquisition additional carbon
costs for other absorbing organs - NITROGEN FIXERS
- Some plants have developed associations with
bacterial symbionts that allow for the use of
atmspheric nitrogen - These plants incur the expense of (1)
constructing root nodules (locations of
symbiosis) and (2) providing bacterial symbionts
with carbon compounds
71- Variation in Acquisition a cost / benefit
function of availability - Variation in N acquisition additional carbon
costs for other absorbing organs - MYCORRHIZAL ASSOCIATIONS
- Associations with fungi that allow greater soil
exploration - Endomycorrhizae fungus penetrates root tissue
- Ectomycorrhizae fungus forms a sheath over root
- Effectively increases absorbing surface area
- Costs (carbon compounds) can be extensive 15
of total net primary production in a Fir species
72- Variation in Acquisition a cost / benefit
function of availability - Assimilation costs
- N-FIXATION, MYCORRHIZAL ASSOCIATIONS and
CARNIVORY - Transfer N to host as amino acids
- Conversions
- Ammonium to amino acid 2 electrons and 1 ATP
- Nitrate assimilation 10 electrons and 1 ATP
- N-fixation 4-5 electrons and 7-10 ATP per
nitrogen atom - Costs increase from MYCORRHIZAE to CARNIVORY to
AMMONIUM to NITRATE to NITROGEN FIXATION - Fraction of carbon budget spent on nitrogen
acquisition (absorption, translocation, and
assimilation) - 25-45 for ammonium
- 20-50 for nitrate
- 40-55 for N fixation
- 25-50 for mycorrhizae
73- Variation in Acquisition a cost / benefit
function of availability - Advantages of each strategy shift with the
availability of the different nitrogen forms - Advantages shift with the varying limitations by
water, carbon and nitrogen - Gaseous N is always abundant but has a high
carbon cost - In environments where N limits growth more than C
or H2O, N fixation becomes advantageous (early
successional sites)
74- Variation in Acquisition a cost / benefit
function of availability - Preference for ammonium versus nitrate
- Substantial species-specific variation
- Mixtures of ammonium and nitrate are requirements
for many species flexible N acquisition plans?
75Nitrogen allocation
- 75 of leaf N is located within chloroplasts
(most in PSN function) - Recall, leaf age / leaf thickness /
photosynthetic capacity / leaf nitrogen
relationships
76Emergent patterns at ecosystem scale
Evergreen Forests
Productivity (g m-2 y-1)
Deciduous forests
N uptake (g m-2 y-1)
77Integrating nitrogen acquisition into a
whole-plant function perspective
- Processes / factors to consider
- Water-use
- Photosynthetic gas exchange
- Root shoot allocation
- Reproduction
- Stress tolerance
- Competition
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85Whole plant integration function in the context
of life-history
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87Nutrient Dynamics (outline and big deals)
- Nutrient availability
- Sources of nutrients
- Direct and indirect controls over sources
- Nutrient Uptake
- Plant and environmental interactions
- Nutrient Return from the plant to the soil
(cycling) - Ecological and environmental processes
- Complexity of cycling
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89Big Point Tight coupling of nutrient cycling
in an ecosystem and the functional diversity of
dominant plant species
90Whole plant integration function in the context
of life-history
91Resource flow and growth rate
- Inputs of resources govern growth potential (not
necessarily growth rate) - Plants adjust allocation schedules to match
resource supply rates (or loss rates) (e.g.,
adjustment of sources and sinks)
92Theory of allocation
- Major assumption
- Finite supply of resources
- Distributed among
- Growth
- Maintenance / defense
- Reproduction
- Key to linking life history theory and physiology
(the basis for ecophysiology)
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94Relative conducting abilities of aboveground and
belowground structures surface area
characteristics Biomass is often used as a proxy
of this allocation of energy to function (both
surface exchange capacity and rates of
exchange) Compensatory changes in each exchange
surface result in different patterns of growth
95Trade-offs
- Resources are allocated among COMPETING functions
- Generates trade-offs
- Not always true
- Photosynthetic fruit
- Stems as biomechanical support
- Vegetative reproduction
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97How do plants know that a neighbor is near?
- Reduction in resource availability?
- Reduction in PAR
- Reduction in nutrients, etc.
- Cryptochrome and phytochrome pigments
- perceive red / far-red ratios of radiation
98Phytochromes
- Plants growing in closed-spaced rows or high
densities receive lower red / far-red ratios than
sparse populations - Red light is absorbed to a greater extent by
plant tissue than far-red light - Reductions in R / fR promote stem growth (height)
- Species specific
99How do plants sense their neighbors?
- Chemical signals
- Jasmonate herbivory induced and may influence
neighbors (illicit a defensive response) - Ethylene often a senescence inducing hormone
100How do plants sense their neighbors?
- Microclimate manipulation
- Differential heat exchange
- Eucalyptus seedlings surrounded by grass see a
lower minimum air temperature inducing stress - Belowground interactions (black box!)
101Interactions among species
- From a physiological viewpoint .to understand
the mechanistic basis for patterns - Competition
- Occurs between individuals using a common
resource pool - similar to our understanding of allocation
dynamics within a plant
102Theories of competitive mechanisms
- Phillip Grime (1977) relative growth rate
defines competitive potential - High RGR facilitates rapid growth and allows a
species to dominate space and acquire resources
103Theories of competitive mechanisms
- David Tilman (1988) ability to tolerate the
drawdown of resources to some critical level - Species that can reduce a critical resource to a
level not tolerated by neighbors is competitively
superior - Described by R
- R is the level at which growth matches loss for
any given speciesit also varies by species
104Theories of competitive mechanisms
- Tilman and Grime do not present competing
hypotheses, but each has slightly different
implications - Dependence on stable-state dynamics
- Resource levels
- Species composition
105Resource competition
- Depletion of a shared limiting resource occurs
by - A species effectively removing the resource from
the environment - A species tolerating relatively low resource
environments - The physiological underpinnings of these two
strategies are quite different but as a result of
physiological trade-offs, these strategies may be
highly correlated
106Trade-offs
- Two major physiological trade-offs
- Between rapid growth to maximize resource
acquisition versus resource conservation through
reductions in tissue turnover (recall Chapin N
figure) - Between allocation to roots to acquire water and
nutrients versus allocation to shoots to capture
light - Because of these trade-offs, there are not
competitively superior species for all
environments
107What keeps a species from dominating an
environment
- Some environments are dominated by a single
species - Some environments have significant environmental
heterogeneity that influence the costs / benefits
of these trade-offs - This influences competitive ability