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turgorbedingten

Turgorbedingten is a term used in plant physiology to describe processes and phenomena that are influenced or driven by turgor pressure within plant cells. Turgor pressure refers to the hydrostatic pressure exerted by the cell contents against the cell wall, arising when water is taken up into the cell’s vacuole by osmosis. The concept is central to understanding how plant cells maintain rigidity and how tissues respond to changes in hydration.

The generation of turgor pressure depends on water potential, which combines solute potential and pressure potential.

Turgor pressure has several key roles. It provides structural support for non-woody tissues, drives rapid movements

Methods exist to measure turgor, such as pressure probes, and turgor-related concepts are fundamental in studies

When
the
cell
wall
is
capable
of
withstanding
internal
pressure,
water
entry
increases
turgor,
contributing
to
cell
expansion
and
the
mechanical
support
of
tissues.
Conversely,
loss
of
water
reduces
turgor
and
can
lead
to
wilting
or
plasmolysis,
where
the
plasma
membrane
pulls
away
from
the
cell
wall
under
hypertonic
conditions.
in
some
plants,
and
enables
growth
through
controlled
cell
expansion
as
the
cell
wall
loosens
in
response
to
turgor
and
developmental
signals.
In
guard
cells,
changes
in
turgor
regulate
stomatal
aperture,
affecting
gas
exchange
and
transpiration.
of
drought
tolerance,
irrigation
strategies,
and
postharvest
physiology.
In
German-language
literature,
turgorbedingten
emphasizes
the
dependence
of
observed
effects
on
internal
hydrostatic
pressure.