PLANT GROWTH

  1. PLANT GROWTH

Definition: Irreversible permanent increase in size, mass, and volume of a plant or its parts.

Types of Growth: a) Primary Growth

  • Occurs in apical meristems
  • Results in increase in length
  • Found in roots and shoots
  • Responsible for primary plant body

b) Secondary Growth

  • Occurs in lateral meristems
  • Results in increase in girth/thickness
  • Found in dicot stems and roots
  • Forms secondary plant body

Characteristics of Growth:

  1. Cell Division (Mitosis)
  2. Cell Elongation
  3. Cell Differentiation

Plant Growth Generally is Indeterminate:

  1. Characteristics of Plant Growth
  • Plants have unlimited growth potential throughout their life
  • Growth is indeterminate
  • Due to presence of meristems in specific locations
  • Called “open form of growth”
  1. Meristems
  • Contain cells capable of division and self-perpetuation

  • Two main types: a) Primary Meristems

    • Root apical meristem
    • Shoot apical meristem
    • Responsible for primary growth
    • Causes elongation along plant axis

    b) Lateral Meristems

    • Vascular cambium
    • Cork-cambium
    • Appear later in life
    • Found in dicots and gymnosperms
    • Responsible for secondary growth
  1. Growth Patterns
  • Primary Growth

    • Elongation of plant along axis
    • Controlled by apical meristems
  • Secondary Growth

    • Increase in girth/thickness
    • Controlled by lateral meristems
    • Occurs in dicots and gymnosperms
  1. Cell Development
  • Meristematic cells divide continuously
  • Daughter cells lose division capacity
  • These cells form permanent plant body tissues
  1. GROWTH MEASUREMENT

  2. Basic Definition:

  • Growth is primarily the increase in protoplasm at cellular level
  • Direct measurement of protoplasm increase is difficult
  1. Parameters for Measuring Growth:
  • Fresh weight
  • Dry weight
  • Length
  • Area
  • Volume
  • Cell number
  1. Examples of Growth Rates: a) Maize Root:
  • Apical meristem produces 17,500+ new cells/hour
  • Growth measured by cell number increase

b) Watermelon:

  • Cells can increase in size by up to 350,000 times
  • Growth measured by cell size increase
  1. Specific Growth Measurements:
  • Pollen tube: Measured by length
  • Dorsiventral leaf: Measured by surface area

Growth Patterns: a) Arithmetic Growth

  • Linear growth pattern
  • Common in root/shoot elongation
  • Formula: L = Lβ‚€ + rt (L = length, Lβ‚€ = initial length, r = growth rate, t = time)

b) Geometric Growth

  • Exponential growth pattern
  • Shows ‘J’ curve
  • Formula: W = Wβ‚€ert (W = final size, Wβ‚€ = initial size, r = growth rate, t = time)

c) Sigmoid Growth (S-curve) Phases:

  1. Lag Phase (slow growth)
  2. Log/Exponential Phase (rapid growth)
  3. Stationary Phase (growth stops)

Differentiation, Dedifferentiation, and Redifferentiation:

A) Differentiation

  • Definition: Process where cells mature to perform specific functions
  • Structural Changes: Changes in cell walls and protoplasm
  • Example: Tracheary elements

B) Dedifferentiation

  • Definition: Living differentiated cells regain division capacity
  • Example: Formation of interfascicular cambium and cork cambium

C) Redifferentiation

  • Definition: Cells from dedifferentiation mature for specific functions
  • Examples: Xylem, Phloem, Cork, Pith, Cortex

D) Additional Concepts:

  • Tumors: Abnormal growths from uncontrolled cell division
  • Callus: Dividing parenchyma cells in tissue culture
  • Open Differentiation: Different structures based on cell location
  1. DEVELOPMENT IN PLANTS

  2. DEFINITION AND REPRESENTATION

  • Growth: Irreversible increase in mass and size
  • Development: Qualitative changes leading to maturation
  • Growth can be measured through:
    • Fresh/dry weight
    • Length/height
    • Surface area
    • Cell number
  1. PLASTICITY
  • Ability of plants to modify their growth based on environment Heterophylly Examples:
  • Cotton: Juvenile vs mature leaves
  • Coriander: Ground-level vs stem leaves
  • Larkspur: Submerged vs aerial leaves
  1. FACTORS AFFECTING GROWTH

A) EXTERNAL FACTORS:

  1. Light
  • Essential for photosynthesis
  • Affects phototropism
  • Influences flowering
  • Controls chlorophyll synthesis
  1. Temperature
  • Affects enzyme activity
  • Influences germination
  • Controls flowering time
  • Impacts growth rate
  1. Water
  • Essential for cell turgidity
  • Required for photosynthesis
  • Affects nutrient transport
  • Influences germination
  1. Oxygen
  • Necessary for respiration
  • Important for root growth
  • Required for seed germination

B) INTERNAL FACTORS (PLANT HORMONES):

  1. Auxins
  • Promotes stem elongation
  • Controls apical dominance
  • Stimulates root formation
  • Prevents leaf abscission
  1. Gibberellins
  • Promotes stem elongation
  • Breaks seed dormancy
  • Induces flowering
  • Fruit development
  1. Cytokinins
  • Promotes cell division
  • Delays senescence
  • Lateral bud growth
  • Chloroplast development
  1. Ethylene
  • Fruit ripening
  • Triple response
  • Leaf abscission
  • Root hair formation
  1. Abscisic Acid (ABA)
  • Promotes dormancy
  • Stomatal closure
  • Stress response
  • Inhibits growth
  1. PHOTOPERIODISM

Short Day Plants (SDP):

  • Flower when night length > critical duration
  • Examples: Chrysanthemum, Rice

Long Day Plants (LDP):

  • Flower when night length < critical duration
  • Examples: Spinach, Wheat

Day Neutral Plants (DNP):

  • Flowering independent of day length
  • Examples: Tomato, Cotton
  1. VERNALIZATION
  • Cold treatment requirement for flowering
  • Duration varies by species
  • Examples: Winter wheat, Beet
  • Prevents premature flowering
  1. SEED DORMANCY

Causes:

  1. Hard seed coat
  2. Immature embryo
  3. Chemical inhibitors
  4. Light requirement
  5. Temperature requirement

Breaking Dormancy Methods:

  1. Scarification

    • Mechanical
    • Chemical (acid treatment)
  2. Stratification

    • Cold treatment
    • Moist chilling
  3. Other Methods:

    • Light exposure
    • Hormone treatment
    • Leaching inhibitors
    • Temperature alternation


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