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About 5 results
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Norco_College/BIO_5%3A_General_Botany_(Friedrich_Finnern)/09%3A_Environmental_Responses
    Animals can respond to environmental factors by moving to a new location. Plants, however, are rooted in place and must respond to the surrounding environmental factors. Plants have sophisticated syst...Animals can respond to environmental factors by moving to a new location. Plants, however, are rooted in place and must respond to the surrounding environmental factors. Plants have sophisticated systems to detect and respond to light, gravity, temperature, and physical touch. Receptors sense environmental factors and relay the information to effector systems—often through intermediate chemical messengers—to bring about plant responses.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Norco_College/BIO_5%3A_General_Botany_(Friedrich_Finnern)/11%3A_Plant_Hormones
    Hormones are long-distance chemical signals in plants. They coordinate many responses including growth, reproduction, dormancy, and stress responses. The five major categories of plant hormones are au...Hormones are long-distance chemical signals in plants. They coordinate many responses including growth, reproduction, dormancy, and stress responses. The five major categories of plant hormones are auxins, cytokinins, gibberellins, abscisic acid, and ethylene.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Botany/Botany_(Ha_Morrow_and_Algiers)/04%3A_Plant_Physiology_and_Regulation/4.04%3A_Hormones
    Hormones are long-distance chemical signals in plants. They coordinate many responses including growth, reproduction, dormancy, and stress responses. The five major categories of plant hormones are au...Hormones are long-distance chemical signals in plants. They coordinate many responses including growth, reproduction, dormancy, and stress responses. The five major categories of plant hormones are auxins, cytokinins, gibberellins, abscisic acid, and ethylene.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Botany/Botany_(Ha_Morrow_and_Algiers)/04%3A_Plant_Physiology_and_Regulation/4.02%3A_Environmental_Responses
    Animals can respond to environmental factors by moving to a new location. Plants, however, are rooted in place and must respond to the surrounding environmental factors. Plants have sophisticated syst...Animals can respond to environmental factors by moving to a new location. Plants, however, are rooted in place and must respond to the surrounding environmental factors. Plants have sophisticated systems to detect and respond to light, gravity, temperature, and physical touch. Receptors sense environmental factors and relay the information to effector systems—often through intermediate chemical messengers—to bring about plant responses.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/University_of_California_Davis/PLS_002%3A_Botany_and_physiology_of_cultivated_plants/16%3A_Environmental_plant_biology/16.01%3A_Environmental_Responses
    Animals can respond to environmental factors by moving to a new location. Plants, however, are rooted in place and must respond to the surrounding environmental factors. Plants have sophisticated syst...Animals can respond to environmental factors by moving to a new location. Plants, however, are rooted in place and must respond to the surrounding environmental factors. Plants have sophisticated systems to detect and respond to light, gravity, temperature, and physical touch. Receptors sense environmental factors and relay the information to effector systems—often through intermediate chemical messengers—to bring about plant responses.

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