What does auxin do?
What does gibberellin (growth hormones) do?
What does ethene do?
Causes fruit ripening, promotes abscission
What does ABA (Abscisic acid) do?
Maintains dormancy of seeds and buds, stimulates stomatal closing
What are examples of auxins?
Indoleacetic acid (IAA)
What are tannins?
phenols, toxic to insects: they bind to the digestive enzymes produced in saliva and inactivate them.
What are alkaloids?
What hormones play a role in seed germination?
Gibberellins and ABA
How does seed germination occur?
1) When seeds absorb water, the embryo is activated and begins to produce gibberellins.
2) They in turn stimulate the production of enzymes that break down the food stores found in the seed.
3) The embryo plant uses these food stores to produce ATP for building materials so it can grow and break through the seed coat.
4) Evidence suggests that gibberellins switch on genes which code for amylases and proteases- the digestive enzymes required for germination.
Where is indoleacetic acid produced?
Indoleacetic acid is produced in the shoots and roots in flowering plants.
What is the role of auxins such as indoleacetic acid?
What is apical dominance?
What does synergism mean?
When different hormones work together and complement each other, giving a greater response than on their own.
Give an example of when hormones are synergistic?
Auxins and gibberellins work together to help plants grow very tall.
What does antagonism mean?
When hormones have opposite effects
Give an example of when hormones are antagonistic.
Gibberellins stimulate growth of side shoots but auxins inhibit the growth of side shoots.
What do low concentrations of auxins promote?
Root growth
What is abiotic stress? Give examples.
Abiotic stress is anything that’s potentially harmful to a plant e.g changes in day length, cold and heat, lack of water, excess water, high winds
What is photoperiodism?
When plants are sensitive to a lack of light in their environment
How do leaves respond to the falling auxin concentration?
They produce the gaseous plant hormone ethene
What is the abscission zone?
What does ethene do?
Ethene seems to initiate gene switching in cells resulting in the production of new enzymes.
- These digest and weaken the cell walls in the outer layer of the abscission zone (separation zone)
How do leaves fall off?
How do leaves prevent freezing?