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Subject: Re: What is Piece´s tropism?

Author: Roy Eassa

Date: 12:34:05 10/08/01

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On October 08, 2001 at 15:31:06, Joshua Lee wrote:

>Can you use that in a sentence like : I went to the Store yesterday to find some
>tropism for my Piece's but they were sold out.


Involuntary response of an organism, or part of an organism, involving
orientation toward (positive tropism) or away from (negative tropism) one or
more external stimuli.

The term tropism is usually applied to growth and turgor movements in plants; an
involuntary orientation of a microorganism toward or away from an external
stimulus is commonly called a taxic movement, or taxis-e.g., the negative
phototaxis of certain protozoans that move away from light. Tropistic stimuli
include light, heat, moisture, gravity, electricity, and chemical agents. Plant
stems are positively phototropic and negatively geotropic, i.e., they grow
toward light and against gravity; roots are the reverse, as well as positively
hydrotropic (moisture-seeking). Tropistic growth in plants is believed to be
triggered by the presence of plant hormones (see auxin) that promote cell
growth. Auxin action is apparently inhibited by light; hence, if a plant is
placed in a position of unequal lighting, the cells on the shadier side elongate
faster than those on the illuminated side, and the plant bends toward the light.
There is also evidence that auxins are affected by gravity, i.e., they
accumulate in the lower portions of the plant organs. Since an overconcentration
of these hormones inhibits growth, the cells on the underside of a root elongate
more slowly than those on the upper side, resulting in the root's downward
growth. Generalized plant responses to a stimulus are called nastic movements,
or nasties. These include the opening of bud scales and of flower petals, growth
movements that occur in response to stimuli such as light and heat without
regard for the direction of the stimulus. Some spring flowers exhibit
thermonasties, i.e., their flowers open in response to warmth rather than the
amount of light. Turgor movements are effected by changes in the water content
of cells and are often quite rapid. Examples are the "sleep movements of clover,
the sudden drooping of the leaves of the sensitive plant (mimosa) when touched
(thigmotropism), and the reactions of insectivorous plants to the presence of
their prey. The exact mechanism controlling the sudden loss of water pressure in
certain cells, producing turgor movements, is not clearly understood.



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