The Pressure-Flow Hypothesis: Gibberellins (Gas) Are
The Pressure-Flow Hypothesis: Gibberellins (Gas) Are
The Pressure-Flow Hypothesis: Gibberellins (Gas) Are
each 24 hour period to induce flowering. Long day plants typically flower in the late
spring or early summer Plants use the phytochrome system to sense daylength or
photoperiod.
A short day plant is a plant that cannot flower under the long days of summer. Short day
plants typically flower in the fall of the year. These plants require a certain number of
hours of darkness in each 24 hour period (a short daylength) before floral development
can begin. Plants use the phytochrome system to sense daylength or photoperiod.
The hypothesis used to explain how water can travel upwards against gravity in a plant.
Transpiration is believed to play a large factor in this, where the cohesive water travels
upwards replacing water lost.
photoperiodism
APICAL
a condition where vertical growth supercedes lateral growth in a plant. this is controlled
by auxins, where in high concentrations can inhibit growth but on the whole promote it.
Removal of the apex can induce lateral growth.
Gibberellins (GAs) are plant hormones that regulate growth and influence various
developmental processes, including "stem elongation, germination, dormancy, flowering,
sex expression, enzyme induction and leaf and fruit senescence."[1]
Gravitropism [or geotropism] is a turning or growth movement by a plant or fungus in
response to gravity. Charles Darwin was one of the first Europeans to document that
roots show positive gravitropism and stems show negative gravitropism. That is, roots
grow in the direction of gravitational pull (i.e., downward) and stems grow in the
opposite direction (i.e., upwards). This behaviour can be easily demonstrated with a
potted plant. When laid onto its side, the growing parts of the stem begin to display
negative gravitropism, bending (biologists say, turning; see tropism) upwards.
Herbaceous (non-woody) stems are capable of a small degree of actual bending, but most
of the redirected movement occurs as a consequence of root or stem growth in a new
direction.