TPO-28-L3

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TPO 28 Plants' photoreceptors

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What is the lecture mainly about?
  • A . The differences in how humans and plants sense light

  • B . An explanation of an experiment on color and wavelength

  • C . How plants sense and respond to different wavelengths of light

  • D . The process by which photoreceptors distinguish wavelengths of light

显示答案 正确答案: C
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    Listen to part of a lecture in a botany class.
    OK. Last time we talked about photosynthesis, the process by which plants use light to convert carbon dioxide and water into food. Today I want to talk about another way light affects plants. I am sure you all know from physics class about how light moves in microscopic ways and that we can only see light when the wavelength of that light is in a specific range. Plus, depending on the wavelengths, we see different colors.
    Well, plants are also capable of distinguishing between different wavelengths of light. Now, I don't want to confuse you. It is not like plants have eyes. Plants don't see in the sense that humans or animals do, but they do have photoreceptors.
    Photoreceptors are cells that respond to light by sending out a chemical signal.And the organism, the plant, reacts to this signal. In fact, the signals that plants get from their photoreceptors sometimes cause significant reactions.
    And many plants are seasonal. And one way they know when winter is ending and spring is beginning is by sensing the change in light. The time when an adult plant flowers is based on the amount of light the plant senses.Certain plant species won't flower if they sense too much light and some plants will only flower if they sense a specific amount of light.Of course, these aren't conscious reactions. These plants just automatically respond to light in certain ways.
    Plants are also able to distinguish between specific wavelengths of light that the human eye cannot even see!Specifically there's a wavelength called far-red. Although why they call it far-red...I mean, it is not really red at all. It lies in the infrared range of the spectrum. We can't see it, but plants can sense it as a different wavelength.
    OK. Now I need to mention another thing about photosynthesis. I didn't explain how different wavelengths of light affect photosynthesis. When a plant absorbs light for performing photosynthesis, it only absorbs some wavelengths of light and reflects others. Plants absorb most of the red light that hits them, but plants only absorb some of the far-red light that hits them. They reflect the rest. Remember this, because it's going to be relevant in an experiment I want to discuss.
    This fascinating experiment showed that plants not only detect and react to specific wavelengths of light, plants can also detect and react to changes in the ratio of one wavelength to another.
    This experiment was called the Pampas experiment. The idea behind the Pampas experiment had to do with the response of plants to changes in the ratio of red light to far-red light that the plants sense with their photoreceptors. Some biologists hypothesize that a plant will stop growing if it's in the shade of another plant, a reaction that's triggered when it senses an unusual ratio of red light to far-red light.
    Imagine there are two plants. One below the other. The plant on top would absorb most of the red light for photosynthesis, but reflect most of the far-red light.That would lead to the plant in its shade sensing an unusual ratio. There will be less red light and more far-red light than normal.
    What that ratio signifies is important. A ratio of less red light to more far-red light would cause a reaction from the plant.It would stop growing taller, because that plant would sense that it wasn't going to get enough sunlight to provide the energy to grow large.
    To test their hypothesis, researchers took some electrical lights, um... actually, they were light-emitting diodes, or LEDs. These light-emitting diodes could simulate red light.So they put these LEDs around some plants that were in the shade.The LEDs produce light that the plants sensed as red. But, unlike sunlight, the light from these LEDs did not support photosynthesis.So the plants sensed the proper ratio of red light to far-red light and reacted by continuing to grow taller, while in reality these plants were not getting enough energy from photosynthesis to support all of that growth. And because they weren't getting enough energy to support their growth, most of the shaded plants died after a short time.

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    听一段植物学课程上的演讲
    好,上次我们讲了光合作用,植物利用光把二氧化碳和水转变为食物。天我要讲光线影响植物的另一种方式。我相信你们都在物理课上学过微观的光是如何运动的,并且我们只能看到某段波长的光。而且波长不同,我们看到的颜色不同。
    植物也能辨别出光的不同波长。我不想把你们弄糊涂。这不是说植物有眼睛植物不像人类和动物一样能看见,但是它们有感光器。
    感光器是通过发出化学信号来回应光照的细胞。然后,这株植物对该信号产生反应。事实上,植物从感光器感受到的信号有时会造成非常重大的反应。
    而且很多植物都是季节性的。它们感知冬天结束而春天来了的一个途径就是感知光的变化。一株成熟的植物什么时候开花是根据它感受到的光的数量决定的。有些植物品种如果感受到太多的光就不会开花,而有些如果感到某一定量的光才开花当然,这些都不是有意识的反应。这些植物只是自动的对光有一些反应方式。
    植物还可以分辨特定的人眼不能看到的波长。特别是一种叫做远红的波长。虽然叫做远红,但我想说它并不是真正的红色。它位于光波谱的红外线区域。我们不能看到它,但是植物能够感受到这一波长。
    好,下面我需要讲关于光合作用的另一件事。我还没解释不同的波长如何影响光合作用。当一株植物吸收光波来进行光合作用时,它只吸收某些波长并反射其他的。植物吸收大多数的红光,但它们只吸收一部分远红光。它们把剩下的反射出去。记住这个,因为他和下面讲的实验有关。
    这个神奇的实验说明植物不仅能够察觉并回应某些波长的光线,它们还可以察觉和回应波长比例的变化。
    这个实验叫做Pampas实验。个实验是关于植物回应用感光器得知的红光和远红光比例的变化。一些生物学家猜想到一株植物在另一株的阴凉里就不会生长了,这是个由感受到异常的红光和远红光比例引起的反应。
    好,想像两株植物,一株在另一株之下。上面的植物因为光合作用会吸收大多的红光,但是反射出大多数远红光。这就导致它的阴影下的植物会感知到异常的比例。与正常水平比,红光更少,远红光更多。
    这个比例的含义很重要。较少的红光,较多的远红光这种比例会引起植物的反应。植物会停止长高,因为它感受到没有足够的阳光来提供长大的能量。
    为了检验他们的假设,研究人员运用了电光源,嗯,其实是发光二极管,或LED。这些发光二极管能够模拟红光。于是他们把LED放到阴影中的植物旁边。LED发的光对植物来说是红光。但是和阳光不同,LED的光不支持光合作用。于是植物感受到了正常的红光与远红光比例,而且以继续长高作为回应,但其实这些植物并没有从光合作用中得到足够的能量来支持长高。而且因为没有足够能量来长高,大多数阴影中的植物很快就死了。

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教授今天讲的是光是如何影响植物的,植物也具有区分不同波长光的能力,也就是植物是如何 respond and sense 光的刺激的

当前解析由chien提供

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