Introduction to Water and Nutrients in Plants and Properties of Water in Plants HORT 301 – Plant Physiology September 21, 2007

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Transport in Plants
Advertisements

Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
Overview: The Molecule That Supports All of Life Water is the biological medium on Earth All living organisms require water more than any other substance.
Water’s Life support Properties Text pg
Understanding Water.
Ch3- Water and Plant Cell Dr. Huseyin Tombuloglu GBE310 Spring, 2015.
Introduction to Water and Nutrients in Plants & Properties of Water in Plants HORT 301 – Plant Physiology August 29, 2008
Transport in Plants.
Skotomorphogenesis Seed germination Genes and enzymes Embryo and Seed development Plant life cycle Photomorphogenesis Photoreceptors Phytochrome Cells.
Plant Physiology HORT 301 Robert Joly HORT
Water Absorption by Plant Roots and Movement through Plants
Skotomorphogenesis Seed germination Genes and enzymes Embryo and Seed development Plant life cycle Photomorphogenesis Photoreceptors Phytochrome Cells.
Plant Physiology Water and Plant Cells. Water and plant cells I. Background on water in plants II. The properties of water III. Understanding the direction.
Water. Water Water is a very unusual compound; it is very common and is found in all three conditional states, solid (as ice), liquid (as water) and gas.
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
Ch. 35 Plant Structure, Growth, and Development & Ch
Essential knowledge 2.A.3:
Energy and Matter Including Unique Water Properties.
Chapter 7 Lecture Outline Water in Plants Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Essential idea: Water is the medium of life. IB ASSESSMENT STATEMENT Draw and label a diagram showing the structure of water molecules to show their polarity.
Transpiration. Slide 2 of 32 Transport Overview  Plants need CO 2, Sunlight and H 2 O in the leaves  ONLY H 2 O needs to be transported to the leaves.
Transport in Vascular Plants Chapter 36. Review: Cell Transport Passive transport: – Diffusion across membrane with concentration gradient, no energy.
Water and Water Relations Plant Phys and Biotech, Biology 3470 Lecture 3; Jan. 10, 2006 Chapter 10: effects of H 2 O at cellular level Rost et al., “Plant.
Chemistry of Life Chapter 2. I. Matter and Substances A. What makes up matter? A. Atoms- smallest unit of matter that cannot be broken down by chemical.
Water In Plants. Outline Molecular Movement  Diffusion  Osmosis Water Movement  Cohesion-Tension Theory  Regulation of Transpiration  Transport of.
Water in Plants Chapter 9. Outline  Molecular Movement  Water and Its Movement Through the Plant  Regulation of Transpiration  Transport of Food Substances.
Transport and Nutrition in Plants
Properties of Water.
Unit 2: The Chemical Basis of Life Waters unique properties support life High specific heat: Specific heat is the amount of energy required to change.
 Most important inorganic molecule in living things.  Living organisms = 75-80% H 2 O.  Many biological processes require H 2 O › Survive days.
Chemistry of Life Chapter 2 Table of Contents Section 1 Composition of Matter Section 2 Energy Section 3 Water and Solutions.
Water Vocabulary Directions: Use your laptop/dictionary to define the following: 1. adhesion 2. boiling point 3. capillary action 4. cohesion 5. condensation.
Properties of Water.
WATER AND LIFE Without water there is no life Cells are 70-90% water Most cells are surrounded by water The abundance of water is the main reason there.
Molecular Biology 2.2 Water. Discuss: Why is water called “the primary molecule of Life”?
WJEC GCE BIOLOGY Properties of Water Water is important to living organisms because it is a medium for: Metabolic processes Transport Aquatic organisms.
Water : A Molecule Essential for Life. Thoughts to Ponder…… Why can’t we survive more than a week without water? How does water rise up 300 feet from.
Transport in Plants. Introduction What are plants made of?
Chemistry of Life Bio.2 a,b – Cells Macromolecules Molecules Atoms.
Chemistry of water. Water is _______________ A.Energy B.An element C.A compound.
The Chemistry of Life. Elements of Life Living things are comprised of molecules which are made of different combinations of atoms 4 most common elements:
Sian Taylor BY1: Water Sian Taylor Learning objectives: - Understand the importance of water, linking the properties of the substance to its uses.
Chapter 3 Water and plant cells. Importance of water on crop yield.
Plant Transport.
The Extraordinary Properties of Water. Water three A water molecule (H 2 O), is made up of three atoms --- one oxygen and two hydrogen. H H O.
The Extraordinary Properties of Water. 1. Ionic Bonds Types of Bonds: An ionic bond forms between a metal (cation) and a non metal (anion). Electrons.
Chapter 3 Water. 1. Overview H2OH2O Exists as a solid, liquid, or vapor required by living things cells surrounded by water cells 70-90% water Earth.
Do Now Make a food pyramid with 4 levels. Describe the movement and loss of energy between each level.
Basic Chemistry Review. Matter 1. Matter refers to anything that takes up space and has mass 1. Matter refers to anything that takes up space and has.
NOTES: 2.2 – Properties of Water
Chemistry of Life Topic 3.
The Extraordinary Properties of Water
Transport in Plants Chapter 37.
Plant Transport.
Resource Acquisition and Transport in Vascular Plants
Understanding Water.
Chapter 9 Water in Plants I. Molecular Movement A. Diffusion
Transport in Plants.
Biochemistry Biology Review L – Properties of Water Discuss the special properties of water that contribute to Earth's suitability as an environment.
Chemistry of Life Properties Of Water.
Transpiration.
The Chemical Context of Life & Water & Life
Chemistry of Water Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission
Chemistry of Life Topic 3.
Chemistry of Water Chapter 2.4
Chemistry of Life Topic 2.
The importance of water
Wonderful World of Water
Transportation in Plants
H2O Just Add Water.
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Water and Nutrients in Plants and Properties of Water in Plants HORT 301 – Plant Physiology September 21, 2007 Plants are autotrophic (self-nourishing) - access essential chemical resources from the environment and synthesize all other necessary molecules Light or chemical energy is used for acquisition (fixation), assimilation and biosynthesis

Essential chemical resources of plants are necessary for growth, development and survival Carbon – carbon (as CO 2 ) is fixed and assimilated into sugars from which carbohydrate macromolecules (starch, cellulose), nucleic acids (RNA, DNA), proteins, and lipids are produced Water (H 2 O) – absorbed into roots from the soil solution and moved throughout the plant, H and O are essential Mineral nutrients – essential elements (excluding C, H and O), usually accessed by roots from the soil solution

Series of lectures will focus on: Water and mineral nutrients – properties, acquisition, assimilation and movement (transport) through the plant Sugar/photosynthetic assimilate movement (translocation) through the phloem, and assimilate allocation and partitioning

Water and Plants - Lectures Properties of water- structure and physico-chemical properties of water that are fundamental to function in plants Water movement into and through plant cells – bulk flow, diffusion and osmosis; water potential Water absorption/uptake into roots – movement of water from the soil solution, absorption by roots and loading into the xylem for movement to the shoot Water movement through the plant – water transport in the xylem Stomatal function in transpiration – control of water loss to the atmosphere, water movement to the shoot and carbon fixation (~500 g H 2 O transpired/g organic matter fixed) Water relations and horticulture (Mike Mickelbart)

How or why is water important to plants? Properties of Water in Plants Taiz and Zeiger, Chapter 3 (p )

Water (H 2 O) is the most limiting plant resource – essential for plant survival, growth and development, exchanged for CO 2

Plant volume (fresh weight, size) and cell expansion – water constitutes about 80-95% of cellular volume and “drives” cell expansion (volume increase) Maintenance of temperature – heat buffer (absorbs heat energy) and other cooling properties of water, continuous movement through the plant because of transpiration (evaporation to the atmosphere) facilitates temperature maintenance (97% of water absorbed by roots is lost by transpiration) Essential for some biochemical chemical reactions – e.g. carbon fixation Solvent for ions and organic molecules – most elemental nutrients are absorbed by roots from the soil solution

Molecular structure of water – H 2 O, two hydrogen atoms (H) bound covalently to oxygen (O), electrons are shared between H + and O 2- Oxygen has a stronger attraction for the electrons in the covalent bond (more electronegative than hydrogen) creating a negative charge (oxygen) and positive charge (hydrogen) and creating polarity Separation of the negative and positive charged regions because of the covalent bond angles makes it a polar molecule (molecule has positively and negatively charged regions, although without a net charge )

Hydrogen bonding (weak electrostatic interaction) – Localized negative and positive charges in the water molecule results in formation of hydrogen bonds (H  O) that facilitates water molecule aggregation

Water is a solvent for biochemical molecules – Hydrogen bonding between water and ions or polar molecules reduces intramolecular electrostatic interaction and increases solubility Attraction of water molecules to charged groups in marcromolecules produces a hydration shell that enhances solubility

Temperature buffering and cooling properties of water – due to high specific heat and latent heat of vaporization properties Specific heat - energy required to raise the temperature of a substance Specific heat of water relative to other substances; water (1.00 cal/g/deg) > alcohol (0.58) > air (0.25) > copper standard pressure, thermal energy is dissipated to raise the temperature, plant transpires 97% of water taken up by roots Latent heat of vaporization - energy required to change the state of a molecule from the liquid to the gas phase Water (539 cal/g) > alcohol (204), thermal energy is used for vaporization, evaporation at the leaf surface facilitates cooling

Cohesive, tensile strength, adhesive and surface tension properties of water – facilitate water movement in cells, root to shoot Cohesion – intermolecular attraction of water molecules due to hydrogen bonding

Water can be compressed forming a positive pressure Tensile strength – maximum (pulling) force (per unit area) that a water column can withstand without separating causing air spaces, due to cohesion

Adhesion – attraction of water molecules to a solid phase, e.g. glass tube or cell walls (pores) of xylem vessels Surface tension – negative pressure created at the water-air interface (liquid-vapor) surfaces because water molecules have greater attraction for each other than for air Tensile strength, cohesion and adhesion cause capillary movement (capillarity) of water up a small diameter tube (or xylem vessel) from a basal source, and surface tension is the primary driving force for water transport up the xylem