Title: Plant Defences
1Plant Defences
2Plant Defences
1- First line of defense Plant perimeter
protection 2- Second line of defense Chemical
warfare - Terpenes
3- Classes of plant defenses
- PHYSICAL DEFENCES
- Spines, thorns
- Cutins, waxes, suberins
- SECONDARY DEFENCES
- Terpenes
4Physical Defenses
5Stem spines Colletia paradoxa
Leaf spines- Opuntia invicta
Shoot spines- Dovyalis caffra Otherwise known as
kei apple Drought tolerant
6A closer look
7- Why did spines often evolve in areas that are dry
or in other ways stressful? - Other roles - competition, camouflage?
8Waxes, Cutins, and Suberins
9Cutin, Waxes, Suberins
- Hydrophobic having water-repelling properties
- These compounds are non-polar
- Fatty acids are one type of hydrophobic compound
10Cutin
- composed of long fatty acid chains
- a major component of plant cuticle
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12Cutin
- Plants cuticles often vary with the climate in
which they live.
Cactus cuticle
Cactus cuticle
13Waxes
- complex mixtures of long-chain lipids that are
extremely hydrophobic. - are synthesized by epidermal cells.
- exuded through pores in the epidermal cell wall
by an unknown mechanism.
14Suberin
- Also formed from fatty acids but has a different
structure from cutin. - A cell wall constituent.
15Suberin
- often within roots.
- can protect against pathogens and other damage.
- older parts of roots more suberized
- endodermis has suberin side walls, water
- must pass through plasma membrane to get to
stele
16Suberin can form transport barriers between the
soil and the roots
17Secondary Compounds
- protect primary metabolism by deterring
herbivores, reduce tissue loss. - also attract pollinators and seed-dispersing
animals. - formed from the byproducts or intermediates of
primary metabolism
18Secondary Defences
Secondary defence may be in place prior to an
organism invading a plant, or as a result of the
invading organism
19Terpenes
- constituents of essential oils
- function as herbivore deterrents
- can be produced in response to herbivore feeding,
and to attract predatory insects and parasites of
the feeding herbivore.
20- Terpene functions
- Growth and development
- 2. As defensive compounds
- Toxins
- feeding deterrents to insects and mammals
21Non-volatile terpenes - limonene apparently
distasteful to herbivores
22Volatile terpenes such as menthol broadcast a
smell that warns herbivores that the plant is
toxic to them before herbivore feeding commences.
23- Phytoecdysones are plant steroids (within the
terpene class) that have the same basic structure
as insect molting hormones and thus interfere
with molting. These compounds sometimes cause
death of the insect herbivore.
24- Terpenes such as pyrethrum (from chrysanthemums)
and azadirachtin (from the Asian and African Neem
tree) can be used as natural insecticides in
agricultural practices or in horticulture.