Horticultural Reviews 1993
DOI: 10.1002/9780470650547.ch6
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Gravitropism: Changing Ideas

Frank B. Salisbury
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Cited by 60 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Plant gravitropism is divided into three stages: perception, transduction, and response. During the perception phase, starch‐filled statoliths interact with cytoplasmic objects in the specialized gravity‐sensing columella cells (Sack, ; Salisbury, ; Kiss, ; Vandenbrink et al., ). Once the gravity signal is perceived, a differential auxin gradient is sent along opposing sides of the root to the root elongation zone (transduction stage), where differential plant growth occurs and leads to reorientation of the root in the direction of the gravity vector (reviewed by Vandenbrink et al., ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plant gravitropism is divided into three stages: perception, transduction, and response. During the perception phase, starch‐filled statoliths interact with cytoplasmic objects in the specialized gravity‐sensing columella cells (Sack, ; Salisbury, ; Kiss, ; Vandenbrink et al., ). Once the gravity signal is perceived, a differential auxin gradient is sent along opposing sides of the root to the root elongation zone (transduction stage), where differential plant growth occurs and leads to reorientation of the root in the direction of the gravity vector (reviewed by Vandenbrink et al., ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, gravitropism is a widely studied physiological process (Salisbury, 1993), which plays a key mechanical role in explaining how plant stems can maintain an erect habit, by generating internal forces that counteract the above-mentioned external disturbance by wind or gravity. The control of aerial organ orientation with respect to gravity is necessary to allow the self-standing habit of terrestrial plants, especially in extremely slender, long-lived gigantic structures such as trees .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plant tropisms occur in response to gravity, touch, light, temperature, water, ions, chemicals and various gases such as oxygen and ethylene. Gravity is one of the most important cues and plant roots and shoots grow downward (positive gravitropism) or upward (negative gravitropism), respectively (Salisbury, 1993;Molas and Kiss, 2009). Practical reasons to better understand how plants respond to gravity include the reorientation of a crop from the horizontal to normal vertical growth with minimal consequences after a heavy rainfall, strong winds or mechanical perturbance (Blancaflor and Masson, 2003); post harvest quality of flower and vegetable crops such as snapdragons and asparagus; the ability to grow plants in space stations many miles above the earth's surface; and circumnutation movements involved in normal growth in a wide variety of plants (Johnsson et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%