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Presentation on theme: "Welcome."— Presentation transcript:

1 welcome

2 Chapter Stress Physiology
Stress in physics is any force applied to an object. Stress in biology is any change in environmental conditions that might reduce or adversely change a plant’s growth or development. Such as freeze, chill, heat, drought, flood, salty, pest and air pollution etc. Resistance: resistance is the ability adaptive or tolerant to stresses.

3 Resistance includes adaptation, avoidance and tolerance.
Adaptation is permanent resistance to stress in morphology and structure , physiology and biochemistry under long- term stress condition. a well-developed aerenchyma in hydrophytes, a pattern for stomata movement in CAM plant.

4 Avoidance is a manner to avoid facing with stress using neither metabolic process nor energy.
Very short lifecycle in desert plants. Dormancy during the cool,hot, and drought conditions. Tolerance is a resistant reaction to reduce or repair injury with morphology , structure, physiology, biochemistry or molecular biology, when plant counters with stresses. Hardening is a gradual adaptation to stress when the plant is located in the stress condition.

5 Section 1. Water stress in plant
1.1 Resistance of plant to drought Drought injure: Soil drought, no rain for long time and no- available water in the soil. Air drought, RH<20% in atmosphere, transpiration>>water absorption. If longer, soil drought occurs. Drought injury is actually in physiology.

6 Cell wall synthesis(-) Protein synthesis(-) Chlorophyll synthesis(-)
Metabolism relevant to water sensitive to range of water Inhibit (-) promotion (+) -0.5 -1.0 -1.5 -2.0 MPa Cell elongation(-) Cell wall synthesis(-) Protein synthesis(-) Chlorophyll synthesis(-) ABA synthesis(+) Seed germination(-) Stomata opening(-) CO2 assimilation(-) respiration(-) Proline accumulation(+)

7 Symptoms in plant facing to drought: stun, red color in base,small cell and leaf area,leaf yellowish and abscission. Young leaves or/and reproductive organs wilt to death. 1.1.1 Mechanism of drought injure Membrane damage. Like senescence, biomembrane changes in states, such as hexagonal phase and become leaked.

8 Hydrophilic groups of lipid aggregate together

9 Metabolic disorder (1)Redistribution of water among organs: drought Re-watering

10 (2)Photosynthesis decreases, while respiration rises after lowering
Starvation to death。 a. assimilate↓ SC↓ ,Photorespiration↑,electron transfer activity and PSP ↓.In sunflower, -1.1MPa,ET and PSP decrease obviously, -1.7 MPa, PSP is 0。 b. inhibition by photo assimilate feedback.

11 (5)Changes in plant hormones, promoters↓,inhibitors↑,esp. ABA↑.
(6)Poisonous agents accumulation。 NH3 and amines↑. Mechanical injure Cytoplasm is broken down Formation of -S-S-.

12 1.1.2 Mechanisms of resistance to drought and the methods to increase the resistance
(1)Morphologyhigher ratio of root to shoot: increase in water absorption and transportation , declination of transpiration. a. Developed root system and higher ratio root to shoot

13 b. Thick leaf , smaller leaf area and thick cuticle
c. Developed bundle and veins,smaller and more stomata

14 Temperature stress Temperature stress: Low or high temperature, called frost injury or heat injury, respectively. 2.1 Frost ( freezing )injury The injury is caused by low temperature below freezing point (〈 0℃),companied with frost.

15 (1) Intercellular freezing
2.1.1 Mechanism of freezing (frost )injury Freezing:(intercellular and intracellular freezing) (1) Intercellular freezing Freezing ice Intercellular freezing occurs when temperature falls gradually.

16 (2)Intracellular Freezing :
Intracellular freezing often occurs when temperature falls suddenly. Ice results in the direct injury in cytoplasm, biomembrane and organelle, and damages to cell compartmentation and metabolic disorder. Much more serious damage is caused by Intracellular Freezing than by Intercellular Freezing. damage of protein: Sulfhydryl group hypothesis(disulfide bridge hypothesis )

17 1. Damage in biomembrane system 2. Disorder in metabolism
Section6 General response to stresses 1. Damage in biomembrane system 2. Disorder in metabolism 3. Functional proteins denuturation and stress protein synthesis 4. Osmotic substance synthesis 5. Change in plant hormones

18 Water potentials and water transport in plant
water plats a pivotal role in living organism that we can scarcely imagine life without it. the importance of water in living organism result from its unique physical and chemical properties. Water has the highest specific heat of any substance except liquid ammonia which is about 13% higher. The heat of vaporization is the highest known 540cal/g at 1000c and the heat of melting 80 cal/g is also usually high.

19 Water potential Water uptake and transport In plant are passive processes which do not require metabolic energy . The energy status is described by total water potential denoted by psi (Ψ). The component potentials of plant water relations can now be written as: Ψw= Ψs + Ψm+ Ψp + Ψg Where, Ψw = water potential Ψs = osmotic or solute potential Ψp = pressure potential Ψm = metric potential Ψg = gravitational potential

20 Water transport in the soil-plant system
Water potential gradients arising from transpiration are generally assumed to be the driving force behind water absorption by the root system . The actual flow of water movement depends on water potential gradient and resistance to flow . flow rate (f): Ψroot – Ψleaf Rroot +Rstem +Rleaf

21 Since Ψm and Ψg are insignificant in vacuolated cells of crop plant the
final equation could be expressed as Ψw= Ψs + Ψp

22 If cotton leaves were arranged like tiles on a floor,
one layer of leaves would be sufficient to intercept all of the sunlight. This amount of leaves is referred to as a Leaf Area Index (LA I) of 1, measured as area of leaves per area of ground. Since leaves are unevenly shaped and distributed, an LAI of 3 is usually required before most of the sunlight is fully absorbed by the plant. In the above figure, on July 11, the LAI just exceeded 3 with all but 4 % of the sunlight intercepted

23 The uneven distribution of cotton leaves actually is
beneficial because a cotton leaf in the top of the canopy cannot efficiently utilize direct sunlight. On a bright sunny day, that leaf in the top of the canopy receives 50% more light than it can efficiently use.


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