Practical 24 PDF
Practical 24 PDF
Practical work
Procedure
1. Use a sharp razor blade to cut a leafy shoot under water.
2. Insert the leafy shoot through the hole of the stopper
provided with the potometer.
3. Fill the potometer with water and fit the stopper holding
the leafy shoot to the apparatus.
4. Use vaseline to seal all the connections of the apparatus.
Practical work.........63
Note
1. The total surface area of leaf should include the areas of
both upper and lower surfaces.
2. This potometer only measures the rate of water uptake,
it cannot find out the actual transpiration rate.
3. The volume of water transpired can be estimated using
the formula below:
Procedure
1. Use a needle or a pair of fine forceps to make a
shallow cut on the lower surface of the leaf.
2. Use a pair of fine forceps to peel off the lower
epidermis.
3. Mount the epidermis in a drop of water on a
slide.
4. Using 100x magnification, move the slide to find
a portion which occupies the entire field of view,
count the number of stomata within the area
occupied.
5. Repeat step (4) 3-5 times to obtain a good
average value.
6. Repeat steps (1) to (5) for the upper epidermis of
the same leaf.
7. Given a copper wire of known diameter,
estimate the area covered by the microscope
field of view at 100x magnification.
8. Calculate the stomatal density of the upper and
lower epidermis of the plant.
Note
1. Plant materials suitable for this experiment are:
Hibiscus rosa-sinensis, Ligustrum sinense,
Bauhinia blakeana and Ficus microcarpa.
2. If it is difficult to obtain the epidermis by the
method described above, then try the nail
varnish method as mentioned in Practical work
6 of this Resource Kit.
3. Alternative method for estimating the diameter
is given in Practical work 5 of this Resource Kit.