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Ch. 36 - Plant Nutrition

Chapter 35, Problem 8

Why is it important for plants to exclude certain ions? Summarize the difference between active and passive exclusion mechanisms.

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Hello everyone here. We have a question asking what is the purpose of ion exclusion mechanism and plants a filter out metal ions that are poisonous? This is correct. Be filter out ions that are toxic at high concentrations. This is correct. C filter out potentially harmful microorganisms. Microorganisms have nothing to do with the ion exclusion mechanism that on exclusion mechanism only deals with ions. So C. Is incorrect, which means is incorrect. So our answer here is D. Both A and B. Thank you for watching. Bye.
Related Practice
Textbook Question

Suppose that certain root cells have an overall charge that is more negative than normal. What impact would this likely have on the uptake of anions such as NO3−? a., Anions would be less likely to enter roots. b. Anions would be more likely to enter roots. c. This would have no impact on the ability of anions to enter roots. d. This would make anions and cations equally likely to enter roots.

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Textbook Question

In a semester-long experiment tracking growth in plants, your lab partner—who often skips class—carefully records the mass of water added to a potted plant with the expectation that this addition will be fully accounted for in the mass gained by the plant. Is your lab partner right or wrong? Explain.

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Textbook Question

Your friend claims that all plants are autotrophs because they perform photosynthesis. Is that a correct statement? Explain.

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Textbook Question

There is a conflict between van Helmont's data on willow tree growth and the data on essential nutrients listed in Table 36.1. According to the table, nutrients other than C, H, and O should make up about 4 percent of a willow tree's mass. Most or all of these nutrients should come from soil. But van Helmont claimed that the soil in his experiment lost just 60 g, while the tree gained 74,000 g. Calculate the percentage of the added mass accounted for by soil, and compare it to the predicted 4 percent. State at least one hypothesis to explain the conflict between expected and observed results. How would you test this hypothesis?

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Textbook Question

Design an experiment, using radioactive carbon and the heavy isotope of nitrogen (15N2), that would test whether the rhizobia–pea plant interaction is mutualistic.

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Textbook Question

The carnivorous plant Nepenthes bicalcarata ('fanged pitcher plant') has a unique relationship with a species of ant—Camponotus schmitzi ('diving ant'). The diving ants are not digested by the pitcher plants, but instead live on the plants and consume nectar. Diving ants also dive into the digestive juices in the pitcher, swim to the bottom, and capture and consume trapped insects, leaving uneaten body parts and ant feces behind. What nutritional impact do the ants have on fanged pitcher plants? Do the pitcher plants derive any nutritional benefit from this relationship? Nitrogen is a key nutrient often obtained by carnivorous plants from the insects they digest. Are the results presented here what would be expected if nitrogen is a limiting nutrient? Explain.

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