plant nutrition by bridget floyd, neeloo rahbari, and amber gallant

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Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

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Page 1: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Plant NutritionBy Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Page 2: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

First of all….

NUTRITION!

Page 3: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Chemical Elements Original Propositions

• Aristotle: thought soil provided all of the necessary nutrients

• Jan Baptista van Helmont: after conducting an experiment he came to the conclusion that water provided the necessary nutrients

• Stephan Hales: postulated that plants are nourished by air

The correct answer…

Page 4: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Chemical Elements THEY WERE ALL CORRECT!!!

• The air, water and soil all have one thing in common…all are composed of chemical elements

Air: carbon dioxide, nitrogen and oxygen Water: hydrogen and oxygen Soil: nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen,

magnesium, calcium, potassium,

Page 5: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Chemical Elements Key Terms

• Essential Elements: chemical elements that are required for a plant to sustain itself and therefore live and procreate Hydroponic culture: put plants in mineral

solutions in order to determine if a chemical is essential or not

• Able to identify 17 essential elements• Macronutrients: elements that a plant

requires in relatively large amounts Carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen,

phosphorus and sulfur

Page 6: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Chemical Elements Key Terms Continued…• Micronutrients: elements that are

needed by plants in very small amounts

Chlorine, iron, manganese, boron, zinc, copper, nickel, molybdenum

Co-factors: non-protein helpers in enzymatic reactions

Page 7: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Chemical Elements Mineral Deficiencies depend on soil content/environment Depend on mobility of plant• nutrient moves freely, older plants

affected more• nutrient immobile, young plants

affected more common for nitrogen, phosphorus and

potassium

Page 8: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Chemical Elements Mineral Deficiencies continued… Treatment• Deficiency distinct enough for farmer

recognize • Add a bit of missing element• Moderate element so it doesn’t become

toxic to plant

Page 9: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Soil Components and Quality The texture and composition of soil

determine if particular plants can grow well in a certain locations

Texture is the soils general structure Porous vs. Compact Composition is its components Deficient vs. Toxic

Page 10: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Plants and Soil The interaction between plants and soil is very

crucial to the chemical cycles in ecosystems Topsoil is the richest soil that provides a strong

environment for plants to flourish in Humus is an important component of topsoil and is

formed by organic refuse. It builds a porous soil that allows for the aeration of the roots

Soil composition includes organic compounds as well as minerals

Plant roots can release organic acids, reinforcing the soil against erosion, and affecting soil composition and texture pH

Page 11: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Soil Particles and Ion Uptake Negatively charged ions (nitrate,

sulfate, phosphate) are bound tightly to negatively charged soil particles and are easily available for uptake by roots

Heavy rain causes the ions to drain away and become less available for uptake

Cation exchange is where mineral cations are available for absorption after being displaced by H+

Page 12: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Impact of soil on Agriculture Agriculture depletes the mineral content of

the soil Each year the soil fertility diminishes unless

fertilizer replaces the lost minerals (nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium)

The three goals of soil conservation are: prudent fertilization, irrigation, and prevention of erosion

Soil reclamation returns agricultural productivity to exhausted or damaged soil

Page 13: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Irrigation

Water is the limiting factor in plant growth.

Irrigation in an arid area makes the soil salty and unfertile

Page 14: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Topsoil Sustainable agriculture, a goal of soil

management is a commitment embracing a variety of conservation-minded environmentally safe and profitable farming methods.

Page 15: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Soil Reclamation A technique of soil reclamation is

phytoremediation, a biological technology that reclaims contaminated areas by using the ability of some plants to extract soil pollutants and concentrate them in portions of the plants that can be removed easily for safe disposal

Page 16: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Plant Nutritional Adaptations Nitrogen fixation: Swellings called nodules along a plant’s roots are

“infected” by nitrogen-fixing Rhizobium bacteria when a plant releases flavonoid molecules detected by the bacteria.

A specific strain of bacteria is able to absorb them, and activate nodulin genes, releasing Nod factors to signal the plant to begin the infection process.

The plant’s response involves activation of a set of early nodulin genes involving Calcium ions as second messengers.

The bacteria then assumes a bacteroid form within vesicles formed by the root.

Page 17: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Nitrogen Fixation…. continued

A protein called leghemoglobin acts as an oxygen buffer in this process, binding reversibly to oxygen and keeping the concentration of free O2 low.

Rhizobium can fix gaseous nitrogen and supply it as ammonium, a form that can be readily used by the plant.

The location of bacteroids inside living, nonphotosynthetic cells provides an anaerobic environment, favoring nitrogen fixation.

While the bacteria supplies nitrogen in a usable form, the plant supplies carbohydrates and other organic compounds to the bacteria.

Crop rotation!

Page 18: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant
Page 19: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Mycorrhizae Mycorrhizae are modified roots consisting

of mutualistic associations of fungi and roots.

The fungus benefits from sugar supplied by the plant and in return the fungus increases the surface area for water uptake and selectively absorbs minerals such as phosphate for the plant and secrete growth factors stimulating the roots.

Page 20: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Ectomycorrhizae In ectomycorrhizae, the mycelium

forms a dense mantle over the surface of the root, the fungae extending from the mantle into the soil and forming an extracellular space in the cortex of the root, facilitating nutrient exchange.

The hyphae of ectomycorrhizae are generally thicker and more branched.

Page 21: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Endomycorrhizae In endomycorrhizae, fine fungal hyphae

extend into the soil; they also extend into the root by digesting small patches of root membrane, forming tubes by invagination of the plasma membrane.

They form into densely branched structures called arbuscules, important sites of nutrient transfer between the cells and the fungi.

Hyphae may also form oval vesicles, which store food for the fungus.

This type of mycorrhizae is much more common than ectomycorrhizae; it occurs in about 85% of plant species.

Page 22: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant
Page 23: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Nonmutualistic Relationships An epiphyte, such as an orchid, may nourish

itself but grows on another plant, usually branches or trunks of trees. They absorb water and minerals from the rain.

Parasitic plants, such as mistletoe, absorb sugars and minerals from their hosts. Many have roots that can enter the host plant to obtain these nutrients.

Carnivorous plants are photosynthetic but obtain some nitrogen and minerals by killing and digesting insects. Traps are often modified leaves equipped with glands that secrete digestive juices.

Page 24: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

Carnivorous Plants!• media.pearsoncmg.com%2Fbc%2Fbc_campbell_biology_7%2Fmedia%2

Fvideos%2FSunDewTrapPrey-V.html&h=4AQF5VjuI• http://www.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DVUWQFF0RJN4&h=4AQ

F5VjuI

Page 25: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

humerus soil reclamation topsoil

micronutrients hydroponic culture texture

macronutrients humus hummus

Page 26: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

nitrate oxygen potassium

calcium phosphate water (good old H2O!)

gaseous nitrogen

magnesium iron

Page 27: Plant Nutrition By Bridget Floyd, Neeloo Rahbari, and Amber Gallant

cation exchange arbuscule ectomycorrhizae

endomycorrhizae Nod factors nodule

ectoplasmycorrhizae Rhizobium mineral deficiency