What are stimuli?
What are 3 responses to stimuli?
1) Tropisms
2) Taxis and Kinesis
3) Simple reflexes
What is a tropism?
How are tropisms controlled?
Where are growth factors produced?
What is the main growth factor?
What is phototropism?
Outline phototropism in a shoot?
1) In shoots, IAA causes cell elongation.
2) In shoots, light is detected by photoreceptors
3) IAA diffuses to the darker side.
4) IAA increases on the darker side.
5) IAA causes cells on the darker side to elongate, and the shoots bend towards the light.
How does phototropism happen in roots?
Outline Gravitropism in shoots?
Outline gravitropism in roots?
What is taxis and kinesis?
What is a taxis response?
What is a kinesis response?
What are the 3 neurones involved in simple reflexes
1) Sensory
2) Relay
3) Motor
Outline the process of a simple reflex?
Receptor detects stimulus
Sensory neurone carries the impulse from the receptor to the relay neurone in the central nervous system.
The Relay neurone carries impulse directly from the sensory to motor neurone.
The motor neurone carries impulse from the relay neurone to the effector.
The effector carries out a response which may be a muscle contraction of a gland secreting a hormone.
Why are reflex arcs so important?
They result in fast responses, as they don’t involve the conscious part of the brain because the impulse is carried directly from a sensory neurone to a motor neurone via a relay neurone.
They are also fast as they travel along neurones.
The responses are localised, meaning that the neurotransmitters are secreted directly onto target cells.
Responses are shortlived, because the re-uptake of neurotransmitters is rapid.
How do simple reflexes aid survival?
Helps protect the body from tissue damage
Pressure/balance
Escape from predators
Involuntary response meaning there is no overriding.
Outline the role of 3 types of receptors?
What does the Pacinian corpuscle consist of?
How does a Pacinian corpuscle work?
Pressure causes the lamellae to be deformed and press on the sensory neurone ending.
This increase in pressure deforms the stretch mediated sodium ion channels.
Sodium ion channels open and sodium ions diffuse into the sensory neurone endings.
This depolarises the cell, creating a generator potential.
When the generator potential.
When the generator potential reaches the threshold an action potential is triggered.
How does the action potential get generated?
Potential difference between inside and outside of the cell is called a resting potential.
When a stimulus is detected, the membrane becomes more permeable so ions will diffuse across and the potential difference increases.
If the generator potential is large enough, there is triggering of an action potential.
How does the retina detect changes in light?
Light is detected by photoreceptors.
Light pigments absorb the light, light bleaches the pigments, altering the membrane permeability to sodium ions.
A generator potential is created.
If it is large enough and over the threshold, an action potential is created.
Bipolar neurones connects to optic nerves, which takes impulses to the brain.
Why do rods have a higher sensitivity to light?