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Plant Structure and Growth

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Plant Structure and Growth. Topic 9.1. To review. Study the chart on pg 239 for your different types of plants The seeded vascular plants include the angiosperms and gymnosperms Do you remember the difference between angiosperms and gymnosperms??? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Plant Structure and Growth Topic 9.1
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Page 1: Plant Structure and Growth

Plant Structure and Growth

Topic 9.1

Page 2: Plant Structure and Growth

To review

• Study the chart on pg 239 for your different types of plants

• The seeded vascular plants include the angiosperms and gymnosperms

• Do you remember the difference between angiosperms and gymnosperms???

• In this unit we will be referring to angiosperms unless otherwise noted.

Page 3: Plant Structure and Growth

3 tissue systems in plants

• Dermal

• Vascular

• Ground

Page 4: Plant Structure and Growth

Dermal tissue

• Outer protective covering

• Single cell layer

• Root hairs are extensions of epidermal cells

• Most dermal tissue is covered by waxy cuticle which prevents water loss

Page 5: Plant Structure and Growth

Vascular tissue

• Includes xylem and phloem

Page 6: Plant Structure and Growth

xylem

– xylem is dead at maturity, only secondary cell wall remains

– Consist of 2 cell types, either vessel elements (wide/short) or tracheids (long, thin, tapered).

– carries water and minerals– Pits between cells allow water to flow through

Page 7: Plant Structure and Growth

phloem

• Carries sucrose through cells called sieve-tube members.

• Alive at maturity but lack nuclei, ribosomes and vacuoles.

• Companion cells lie adjacent and provide for sieve tube members via plasmodesmata

Page 8: Plant Structure and Growth

Ground tissue (3rd type!)

• Photosynthesis, support, storage

• “filler” tissue

• In dicots, center of stem is GT referred to as pith, outer stem GT is cortex.

Page 9: Plant Structure and Growth

Ground tissue made of 3 cell types

• Parenchyma – unspecialized cells. Lack secondary walls, have large central vacuole. Important in psyn and food storage. All plant cells begin as unspecialized parenchyma cells.

• Collenchyma – lack secondary walls but have thick primary walls. Form strands which support plant parts.

• Sclerenchyma – thick secondary walls w/ lignin (strength). Include fibers and sclerids

Page 10: Plant Structure and Growth
Page 11: Plant Structure and Growth

• All 3 types of tissue originate from meristematic tissue.

• Meristematic tissue retains the ability to divide.• If a meristematic cell divides one cell begins

differentiation (the derivative) and the other cell remains meristematic (the initials)

• Where would you expect to find meristematic cells in a plant?

Page 12: Plant Structure and Growth

Plant organs

Page 13: Plant Structure and Growth

Roots

• Obtain water and minerals• Anchor plant• May store food• Have a protective epidermis• Cortex conducts water from soil to interior

vascular tissue. May also store material• Endodermis surrounds vascular tissue• Vascular tissue

Page 14: Plant Structure and Growth
Page 15: Plant Structure and Growth

• Shoot system – stem and leaves. Absorb light and carbon dioxide.

Page 16: Plant Structure and Growth

Shoot system

• Stem – alternating nodes (point of leaf attachment) w/ internodes in between.

• Axillary bud – at angle between leaf and stem

• Terminal bud – developing leaves and compacted nodes and internodes at tip of plant

• Apical dominance – when terminal bud inhibits growth of axillary bud.

Page 17: Plant Structure and Growth

• Vascular tissue arranged in rings in dicots and scattered in monocots.

Page 18: Plant Structure and Growth

Leaves

• Blade – flat, photosynthetic

• Petiole – stalk of leaf

monocots – leaves lack petiole, veins are parallel

dicots – leaves have netted venation, petiole.

Page 19: Plant Structure and Growth

Leaf Anatomy

• Covering of wax over epidermis. Stomata, tiny pores surrounded by guard cells permit gas exchange

• Mesophyll – parenchyma and ground tissue containing chloroplasts. 2 layers, spongy (air spaces) and palisade (lots of chloroplasts)

• A branch of the vascular bundle continues into petiole and divides in leaf blade, providing support and transport

Page 20: Plant Structure and Growth
Page 21: Plant Structure and Growth
Page 22: Plant Structure and Growth
Page 23: Plant Structure and Growth

Monocot vs Dicot

• See page 242 to review

Page 24: Plant Structure and Growth

Modification of plant organs

Page 25: Plant Structure and Growth

Roots - 2 main types

• Taproot – one main vertical root with branch roots from main root

• Fibrous root – no main root. Roots are thinner and spread throughout soil. Good for preventing erosion

Page 26: Plant Structure and Growth

Root modifications

• Prop root – adventitious root growing from lower part of stem as a brace (corn)

• Storage root – parenchyma cells store carbohydrates and water (beet, carrot)

• Pneumatophore (air root) – extend above soil or water surface. Help with oxygen uptake (mangrove, cypress knee)

• Buttress root – at bottom of tree for stability (fig tree)

Page 27: Plant Structure and Growth

Prop

Pneumatophore Buttress

Storage

Page 28: Plant Structure and Growth

Stem Modifications

• Bulb – vertical underground stem with enlarged base for food storage (onion)

• Tuber – horizontal underground stem for starch storage (potato)

• Rhizome – horizontal stem just below surface for asexual reproduction (ginger)

• Stolon – horizontal above ground stem for asexual reproduction (strawberry)

Page 29: Plant Structure and Growth

Bulb Tuber

Rhizome

Stolon

Page 30: Plant Structure and Growth

Leaf Modifications

• Tendril – coil around objects for support (peas)

• Reproductive leaves – tiny plants form on leaf margins. Fall to ground and take root

• Bracts – AKA floral leaves. Surround flowers to attract pollinators.

• Spines – reduce water loss

Page 31: Plant Structure and Growth

TendrilBract

Reproductive Leaf

Spine

Page 32: Plant Structure and Growth

Meristem – 2 types

• Apical meristem – found at tips of root and shoot. Produces primary tissue (non-woody) and primary growth (growth in length)

• Lateral meristem – produces secondary (woody) growth. 2 types:– Vascular cambium produces secondary xylem

and phloem (see next slide)– Cork cambium produces cork cells of outer

bark

Page 33: Plant Structure and Growth

Apical M

eristem - shoot

Page 34: Plant Structure and Growth

Apical Meristem - Root

Page 35: Plant Structure and Growth

Secondary Growth

• Wood is the accumulation of secondary xylem with lignified walls.

• Growth rings occur due to seasonal cycles of growth (dormant, fast growth, slow growth)

• In secondary growth epidermis splits and is replaced by tissue made by cork cambium which produces cork cells with suberin – impregnated walls. This layer is called periderm.

• Lenticels are splits in periderm through which gas exchange occurs.

Page 36: Plant Structure and Growth

• Bark = phloem + periderm

• In old trees, heartwood is old resin filled wood while sapwood is actively conducting

Page 37: Plant Structure and Growth

Auxins

• Plants have hormones too! • Auxins (a class of hormones) are found in

embryos (seeds), apical meristems and buds. They increase the flexibility of cell walls so shoots can bend toward light

• The auxin indoleacetic acid (IAA) collects on the side of the stem AWAY from the light causing that side to elongate and the plant to bend TOWARD light

Page 38: Plant Structure and Growth
Page 39: Plant Structure and Growth

Tropisms – growth or movement toward or away from a stimulus

• Phototropism – light

• Thigmotropism – touch

• Geotropism – gravity

• Chemotropism – chemicals

• Ex) plant shoots exhibit positive phototropism and roots exhibit negative phototropism


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