Plant Growth & Natural Vegetation
The environmental factors of plant growth are external, abiotic conditions that directly or indirectly influence a plant's physiological and developmental processes. Plants are the integrated expression of their environment.
Part 1: Environmental Factors of Plant Growth
Click on any factor below to expand and learn how it influences plant growth.
Light is the primary energy source for all plant life, as photosynthesis is entirely light-driven.
Quantity (Intensity): Up to a threshold, greater intensity increases food production. Low light suppresses photosynthesis, resulting in etiolation (thin, spindly stems).
Quality (Wavelength): Blue light (~400–500 nm) drives vegetative growth, while red light (~600–700 nm) combined with blue encourages flowering.
Duration (Photoperiod): The length of uninterrupted darkness regulates flowering (e.g., Short-day vs. Long-day plants).
Influences photosynthesis, respiration, transpiration, germination, and flowering.
Thermoperiod: Plants grow best when daytime temperatures are 10–15°C higher than nighttime temperatures.
Germination: Cool-season crops need 15–18°C; warm-season crops need 18–24°C.
Effects: Cool nights can make winter squash sweeter, while high temperatures can cause bitter lettuce. Peaches require 700–1,000 hours of 0–7°C dormancy.
Water constitutes approximately 90% of a plant's living tissue.
Critical Roles: Turgor pressure (maintains cell shape), nutrient solvent, transpiration cooling, and stomatal regulation.
Humidity: Affects the rate of transpiration.
- >80%: Impairs transpiration and promotes fungal infections.
- <30%: Causes rapid moisture loss and leaf scorch.
- 50–70%: Optimal for balanced transpiration.
Plants require 17 essential chemical elements. Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen come from air/water; 14 must come from the soil.
Soil pH: A master variable controlling nutrient availability. Optimal range is pH 6.0–7.0.
Gases: Higher atmospheric CO₂ increases photosynthetic rates. Oxygen is required for aerobic root respiration; overwatering flushes O₂, causing root rot.
Important Note: Fertilisers are not plant food; they merely supply mineral raw materials.
Part 2: Major Types of Natural Vegetation
The four master controls determining vegetation biomes are Rainfall, Temperature, Soil, and Topography.
High year-round rainfall and temperatures (25–35°C) support continuous rapid growth — trees do not shed leaves seasonally.
Features: Extremely high biodiversity, dense multi-layered canopy, buttress roots, and epiphytes.
Species: Mahogany, Rosewood, Ebony, Bamboo.
Most widespread vegetation type in India. Trees shed leaves during distinct dry periods to reduce water loss.
Features: Trees shed leaves during Oct–Nov and grow new ones in Mar–Apr. Richer in organic matter than rainforests.
Species: Teak, Sal, Sandalwood, Bamboo.
Extreme aridity and high evapotranspiration force plants to adopt drought-resistant (xerophytic) adaptations.
Features: Long tap roots, thick fleshy stems to store water, and thorny leaves to reduce transpiration.
Species: Acacia, Babul, Cactus, Khejri.
Pronounced cold winter makes photosynthesis impossible, so trees shed leaves in autumn to conserve energy.
Features: Dramatic seasonal colour change; rich brown forest soils due to annual leaf litter.
Species: Oak, Beech, Maple, Elm.
Cold temperatures and short growing seasons (3–4 months) demand highly specialised adaptations.
Features: Conical tree shapes allow heavy snow to slide off. Needle-shaped leaves have a thick waxy cuticle. Acidic podzol soils.
Species: Pine, Spruce, Fir, Cedar.
Tropical (Savanna): 75–150 cm rain with a 4–6 month dry season. Periodic fires maintain grass dominance. Deep root systems survive drought.
Temperate: 25–75 cm rain. Low irregular rainfall prevents tree establishment. Deep, rich chernozem (black earth) soils form.
Found along tropical coastlines, tolerating saline water, tidal flooding, and anaerobic muddy soils.
Features: Survive through salt exclusion, salt secretion, and pneumatophores (aerial breathing roots). Distinctive prop and stilt roots.
Species: Sundari, Rhizophora.
Temperatures remain below freezing most of the year. Permafrost prevents deep root penetration.
Features: No trees due to cold and wind. Low-growing plants with cushion-form habits and dark pigmentation.
Species: Mosses, lichens, sedges, dwarf willows.
Montane Altitudinal Zonation
Temperature decreases ~6.5°C per 1,000 m of altitude, driving successive vegetation changes mimicking latitudinal zones.
| Altitude | Vegetation Type | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 1,500 m | Tropical/subtropical evergreen | Sal, Teak, Bamboo |
| 1,500–2,500 m | Temperate broadleaf forests | Oak, Rhododendron, Maple |
| 2,500–3,500 m | Temperate coniferous forests | Pine, Fir, Deodar, Spruce |
| 3,500–4,500 m | Sub-alpine scrub | Rhododendron, Juniper |
| Above 4,500 m | Alpine meadows and tundra | Mosses, Lichens, sedges |
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