Plant Physiology
Plant Physiology = plant functions
Chapter Outline
I. Essential Concepts in Plant
Physiology
II. Plant Respiration and Secondary
Products
III. Photosynthesis
IV. Mineral Nutrition
V. Transport and Translocation of
Water and Solutes
VI. Growth and Development
VII. Plants in Relation to the
Environment
Plant Physiology = plant
functions
Dynamic processes that account for
plant life which encompasses:
plant growth, metabolism and reproduction
Crop physiology – applied plant
physiology involving the study of plant
functions in genetically-similar
community of plants, cultivated in a
particular location
Importance of Plant
Physiology
Efficient use of nutrients
Coping with abiotic and biotic stresses
drought, heavy metals pollution, salinity,
atmospheric CO2 increase, pests, weeds,
waterlogging
Increasing crop yield through plant
growth regulators
Improving food and feed quality
Kingdom Plantae
Bryophytes Ferns
Gymnosperms Angiosperms
Diversity of Modern Land Plants
Evolutionary Tree for Land
Plants
Life Cycle of Land Plants
Summary: Plant Kingdom
Bryophytes Seedless vascular plants Gymnosperms Angiosperms
• Nonvascular • Vascular tissue present • Vascular tissue present • Vascular tissue present
• Haploid dominance • Diploid dominance • Diploid dominance • Diploid dominance
• Water required for • Water required for • Pollen grains; water not • Seeds form inside an
fertilization fertilization required for fertilization ovary that develops
• Seedless • Seedless • “Naked” seeds into a fruit
whisk
ferns,
liverworts mosses club mosses, horsetails, gnetophytes, ginkgos, monocots, dicots,
hornworts spike mosses ferns conifers, cycads magnoliids, basal
groups
ancestral alga
Basic Requirements of Unifying Principles of Plant Life
Plant Life
Photoautotrophs
Light
Cellulosic cell wall
Carbon dioxide
Non-motile (sedentary)
Water Mechanism to avoid
desiccation (land plants)
Minerals
Transport processes
Oxygen (produced by
plants via
photosynthesis)
The
Plant
Body
Plant
Tissue
Systems
The Tissue Systems Give Rise to the
Organs of a Plant
Plant Tissue Systems
Ground tissue system
Photosynthesis, storage, and structural support
of other tissues
Vascular tissue system
Distributes absorbed water and mineral ions
and products of photosynthesis
Dermal tissue system
Covers and protects exposed plant surfaces
Simple Tissues: Ground Tissues
Parenchyma makes up most primary growth
Functions in secretion, storage, photosynthesis
(mesophyll), and tissue repair
Collenchyma supports growing plant parts
Pectin provides flexibility
Sclerenchyma contains lignin for support
Cells (fibers, sclereids) are dead at maturity
Simple Tissues
Complex Tissues: Vascular Tissues
Xylem carries water and ions through the plant
Consists of two types of cells that are dead at
maturity: tracheids and vessel members
Lignin-filled secondary walls
Phloem conducts sugars, other organic solutes
Sieve tubes connect end to end at sieve
plates
Companion cells load sugars into sieve tubes
Vascular Tissues
Complex Tissues: Dermal
Tissues
Epidermis
Usually a single outer layer of cells that
secrete a waxy, protective cuticle
May contain specialized cells that form
stomata for gas exchange
Periderm
Replaces epidermis in woody stems and
roots
Plant Cuticle
Flowering Plant Tissues