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Mineral Nutrition

Mineral Nutrition

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Mineral Nutrition. Mineral Nutrition - Overview. Some minerals can be used as is: e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be useful: e.g. Some minerals compounds have to be altered to be useful:. Chemical composition of plants. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Mineral  Nutrition

Mineral Nutrition

Page 2: Mineral  Nutrition

Mineral Nutrition - Overview•Some minerals can be used as is:

– e.g.

•Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be useful:

– e.g.

•Some minerals compounds have to be altered to be useful:

Page 3: Mineral  Nutrition

Chemical composition of plants•80–85 % of an herbaceous plant is water.•Water is a nutrient since it supplies most of the hydrogen and some oxygen incorporated into organic compounds by photosynthesis.

•Water also is involved in cell elongation and turgor pressure regulation

Page 4: Mineral  Nutrition

Chemical composition of plants: dry weight

•95% “organic” –

•5% inorganic minerals

Page 5: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 37.2

Page 6: Mineral  Nutrition

Essential Nutrients

• =

•2 types: macronutrients & micronutrients

Page 7: Mineral  Nutrition

Macronutrients

• =

CHOPKNS CaMg

Page 8: Mineral  Nutrition

Micronutrients•= elements required by plants in relatively small amounts (<0.1% dry mass). •Major functions:

– Optimal concentrations highly species specific

• FeBCl MoCuMnNi Zn

Page 9: Mineral  Nutrition

Mineral Deficiency•Not common in natural populations. Why?

•Common in crops & ornamentals. Why?

•Deficiencies of N, P, and K are the most common.•Shortages of micronutrients are less common and often soil type specific.• Overdoses of some micronutrients can be toxic.

Page 10: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 37.4

Page 11: Mineral  Nutrition

Soils

•What do soils give to plants??•

Page 12: Mineral  Nutrition

Soil properties influence mineral nutrition1. Chemistry – determines which minerals are present and

available, thus affecting plant community composition2. Physical nature –

3. Soil organisms –

• Nitrogen! The only mineral that the plant can ONLY get from reactions mediated by soil organisms.

Page 13: Mineral  Nutrition

Soil texture & composition• Soil created by weathering of solid rock by:

• Topsoil: mix of weathered rock particles & humus (decayed organic matter)

• Texture: sand, silt, clayLarge, spaces for water & air

Small, more SA for retaining water & minerals

Page 14: Mineral  Nutrition

More about topsoil…..

• Bacteria, fungi, insects, protists, nematodes, &• Earthworms!

• Humus:

• Bacterial metabolism recycles nutrients

Page 15: Mineral  Nutrition

Availability of soil nutrients

• Cations in soil water adhere to clay particles (negatively charged surface)

• Humus – negatively charged & holds water & nutrients. Thus very important in the soil!!!!!

Page 16: Mineral  Nutrition

Soil conservation• Natural systems: decay recycles nutrients

• Fertilizers: N:P:K– Synthetic: plant-available, inorganic ions. Faster

acting.• Problem:

– Organic: slow release by cation exchange, holds water, thus less leaching

Page 17: Mineral  Nutrition

Why nitrogen?

• Air is 80% Nitrogen, but…..• Macronutrient that is most often limiting. Why?

• What’s it used for?

Page 18: Mineral  Nutrition

The Nitrogen Cycle

Organic NNH4

NO3Decompositi

on

N2

Ammonification Nitrification

Immobilization

Uptake

Leaching

DenitrificationN2 fixation

Page 19: Mineral  Nutrition

Nitrogen Fixation

• conversion of N2 in air to NH3 by microbes

Page 20: Mineral  Nutrition

But N is also lost….

• Leaching –

• Denitrification – conversion of NO3- back to

N2

Page 21: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 37.9

All steps within the soil are mediated by bacteria!!!!

Page 22: Mineral  Nutrition

Nitrogen Fixation

• is catalyzed by the enzyme nitrogenase.• Requires energy (ATP)• 3 ways:

1. Lightening –

2. Non-symbiotic –

3. Symbiotic

Page 23: Mineral  Nutrition

Symbiotic Nitrogen Fixation

•Legumes: peas, beans, alfalfa

•Plant – gets ample inorganic N source•Bacteria – gets ample carbon source

Page 24: Mineral  Nutrition

Fixation in Nonlegumes

•Here in the NW: alder•Azolla (a fern) contains a symbiotic N fixing cyanobacteria useful in rice paddies.

•Plants with symbiotic N fixers tend to be first colonizers. Why?

Page 25: Mineral  Nutrition

Nutritional Adaptations of Plants

1. Parasitic Plants2. Carnivorous plants3. Mycorrhizal relationships

Page 26: Mineral  Nutrition

1. Parasitic plants

• .

• Ex. Mistletoes on Doug Fir & Ponderosa pine• Ex. Indian pipe – parasite on trees via mycorrhizae

Page 27: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 37.15

Page 28: Mineral  Nutrition

http://www.nofc.forestry.ca/publications/leaflets/mistletoe_e.html

Page 29: Mineral  Nutrition

http://cals.arizona.edu/pubs/diseases/az1309/

Page 30: Mineral  Nutrition

2. Carnivorous plants

• Digest animals & insects – why?

• Motor cells!

• Ex. Venus flytrap, pitcher plant, Darlingtonia

Page 31: Mineral  Nutrition

37.16

Page 32: Mineral  Nutrition
Page 33: Mineral  Nutrition

3. Mycorrhizal relationships

• Plants get greater SA for water & phosphorus uptake

• Almost all plant species!

Page 34: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 37.12

Page 35: Mineral  Nutrition

Three levels of transport in plants:

1. Cellular –

2. Short-distance –

3. Long-distance – throughout whole plant (xylem & phloem)

Page 36: Mineral  Nutrition

Transport at the Cellular Level

• Diffusion = ?

• Osmosis –

• (i.e. water always acts to dilute)

Page 37: Mineral  Nutrition

Examples of Short Distance Transport

• Absorption of water & minerals by roots

Page 38: Mineral  Nutrition

Guard cells

• control stomatal diameter by changing shape.

– Lose water, become flaccid, stomata close

Page 39: Mineral  Nutrition

Guard cells• Opening Mechanism:

– Sunlight, circadian rhythms, & low CO2

concentration in leaf air spaces stimulate the proton pumps & thus stomatal opening

Page 40: Mineral  Nutrition

Guard cells• Closing mechanism:

– Stomatal closure during the day stimulated by water stress – not enough water to keep GCs turgid

Page 41: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 36.15

Page 42: Mineral  Nutrition

Motor Cells

• Motor cells are the “joints” where this flexing occurs. • Accumulate or expel potassium to adjust their water

levels & thus turgidity. • Oxalis – leaves fold in sunlight to minimize

transpiration; open in shade• Transpiration = loss of water vapor from the stomata

Page 43: Mineral  Nutrition

Absorption of water & minerals by roots

• Soil solution moves freely through epidermal cells & cortex

• Endodermis – selective barrier to soil solution between cortex & stele. Sealed together by the waxy Casparian strip –

• Once through the endodermis, soil solution freely enters the xylem

Page 44: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 36.9

Page 45: Mineral  Nutrition

Mechanisms of Long Distance Transport

• Xylem:

• Phloem: Pushing pressure of water at one end of the sieve tube forces sap to the other end of the tube (= bulk flow).

Page 46: Mineral  Nutrition

Transport of xylem sap

• Pushed by root pressure– Stele has high concentration of minerals.

Water flows in, creating pushing pressure

Page 47: Mineral  Nutrition
Page 48: Mineral  Nutrition

Pulling xylem sap

• Transpiration – cohesion – tension mechanism• Transpirational pull:

Page 49: Mineral  Nutrition

Ascent of xylem sap against gravity

• Aided by:

– Adhesion of water to hydrophyllic cell walls of the xylem,

– Diameters of tracheids & vessel elements are small, so lots of surface area for adhesion

Page 50: Mineral  Nutrition

Control of Transpiration

• Guard cells! – balance two contrasting needs of the plant:

Page 51: Mineral  Nutrition

• Desert plants have adaptations to increase their WUE:

– High-volume water storage (cacti)– Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) – plants take in

CO2 only at night, so that stomata only have to be open at night.

Page 52: Mineral  Nutrition

Wilting

Page 53: Mineral  Nutrition

Translocation of Phloem Sap

• Sieve tubes carry sap from sugar source (e.g. leaves) to sugar sink (e.g. growing roots, shoot tips, stems, flowers, fruits)

• Thus not unidirectional– e.g. tubers can be source in spring and sink in fall

Page 54: Mineral  Nutrition

Mechanism of phloem translocation

• Pressure-flow hypothesis:

– Thus water flows into sieve tubes, creating hydrostatic pressure (pushing pressure: positive).

– Less pressure at sink end, where sugar is leaving sieve tube for consumption

– Thus movement from source to sink

Page 55: Mineral  Nutrition

Fig 36.18