module 5 - 16.4 tropisms in plants & 16.5 the commercial uses of plant hormones Flashcards

1
Q

what is a tropism?

A
  • the growth or turning movement of a plant in response to an environmental stimulus
  • directional growth responses
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2
Q

what are phototropisms?

A

movement or growth in response to light

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3
Q

what are chemotropisms?

A

movement or growth in response to chemicals

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4
Q

what are geotropisms?

A

movement or growth in response to gravity

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5
Q

what are heliotropisms?

A

seasonal motion of plants in response to direction of the sub e.g. sunflower

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6
Q

what do plant roots show?

A
  • positive phototropism
  • plant shoots will grow towards unidirectional light
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7
Q

what is a coleoptile?

A
  • the pointed protective sheath covering the emerging shoot in monocotyledenos e.g. grass
  • contain cells that are all specialised to fast stretch growth but they do not divide
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8
Q

what does unilateral mean?

A

unidirectional

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9
Q

what does the tip contain?

A

photoreceptor cells, and the bending takes place lower down on the coleoptile

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10
Q

what is etiolation?

A

process in flowering plants grown in partial or complete absence of light

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11
Q

what is etiolation characterised by?

A
  • elongation of stems and leaves due to auxins and lack of light
  • weakening of ell walls in stems and leaves due to auxins
  • longer internodes so fewer leaves per unit of stem due to gibberellins and lack of light
  • chlorosis, pale-yellowish colour due to lack of chlorophyll
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12
Q

what are statoliths?

A

dense amyloplasts (organelles that synthesise and store starch involved in perception of gravity)

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13
Q

where are statoliths?

A

located near vascular tissue in shoots and caps of roots

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14
Q

what is the composition of the denser amyloplasts?

A

denser than cytoplasm and can sediment according to gravity

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15
Q

what is a clinostat?

A

device which uses rotation to negate effects of gravitational pull on plant growth

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16
Q

what are climactic fruits?

A

fruits that continue to ripen after harvest

17
Q

why do climactic fruits need control of their ripening?

A

to increase respiration rate

18
Q

what plant hormone is involved in fruit ripening and what happens when this hormone reaches a peak?

A
  • ethene
  • chemical reactions are triggered