Top Banner
Mineral Nutrition
55

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.

Dec 20, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 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.

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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Chemical composition of plants: dry weight

•95% “organic” –

•5% inorganic minerals

Page 5: 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.

Fig 37.2

Page 6: 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.

Essential Nutrients

• =

•2 types: macronutrients & micronutrients

Page 7: 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.

Macronutrients

• =

CHOPKNS CaMg

Page 8: 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.

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 Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Fig 37.4

Page 11: 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.

Soils

•What do soils give to plants??•

Page 12: 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.

Soil properties influence mineral nutrition

1. Chemistry – determines which minerals are present and available, thus affecting plant community composition

2. 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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

More about topsoil…..

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

• Earthworms!

• Humus:

• Bacterial metabolism recycles nutrients

Page 15: 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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Why nitrogen?

• Air is 80% Nitrogen, but…..

• Macronutrient that is most often limiting. Why?

• What’s it used for?

Page 18: 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.

The Nitrogen Cycle

Organic NNH4

NO3Decomposit

ion

N2

Ammonification Nitrification

Immobilization

Uptake

Leaching

Denitrification

N2 fixation

Page 19: 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.

Nitrogen Fixation

• conversion of N2 in air to NH3 by microbes

Page 20: 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.

But N is also lost….

• Leaching –

• Denitrification – conversion of NO3- back to

N2

Page 21: 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.

Fig 37.9

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

Page 22: 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.

Nitrogen Fixation

• is catalyzed by the enzyme nitrogenase.

• Requires energy (ATP)

• 3 ways:1. Lightening –

2. Non-symbiotic –

3. Symbiotic

Page 23: 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.

Symbiotic Nitrogen Fixation

•Legumes: peas, beans, alfalfa

•Plant – gets ample inorganic N source

•Bacteria – gets ample carbon source

Page 24: 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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Nutritional Adaptations of Plants

1. Parasitic Plants

2. Carnivorous plants

3. Mycorrhizal relationships

Page 26: 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.

1. Parasitic plants

• .

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

Page 27: 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.

Fig 37.15

Page 28: 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.

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

Page 29: 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.

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

Page 30: 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.

2. Carnivorous plants

• Digest animals & insects – why?

• Motor cells!

• Ex. Venus flytrap, pitcher plant, Darlingtonia

Page 31: 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.

37.16

Page 32: 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.
Page 33: 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.

3. Mycorrhizal relationships

• Plants get greater SA for water & phosphorus uptake

• Almost all plant species!

Page 34: 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.

Fig 37.12

Page 35: 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.

Three levels of transport in plants:

1. Cellular –

2. Short-distance –

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

Page 36: 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.

Transport at the Cellular Level

• Diffusion = ?

• Osmosis –

• (i.e. water always acts to dilute)

Page 37: 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.

Examples of Short Distance Transport

• Absorption of water & minerals by roots

Page 38: 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.

Guard cells

• control stomatal diameter by changing shape.

– Lose water, become flaccid, stomata close

Page 39: 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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Guard cells

• Closing mechanism:

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

Page 41: 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.

Fig 36.15

Page 42: 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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Fig 36.9

Page 45: 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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Transport of xylem sap

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

Water flows in, creating pushing pressure

Page 47: 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.
Page 48: 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.

Pulling xylem sap

• Transpiration – cohesion – tension mechanism• Transpirational pull:

Page 49: 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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Control of Transpiration

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

Page 51: 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.

• 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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Wilting

Page 53: 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.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

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. Mineral Nutrition - Overview Some minerals can be used as is: –e.g. Some minerals have to be incorporated into other compounds to be.

Fig 36.18