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Plant Tissues Chapter 26 Jin Hoe Huh March 28, 2005

Plant tissues

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Page 1: Plant  tissues

Plant Tissues

Chapter 26

Jin Hoe Huh

March 28, 2005

Page 2: Plant  tissues

Angiosperms – flowering plants

• The angiosperms are seed-bearing vascular plants

• In terms of distribution and diversity, they are the most successful plants on Earth

• The structure and function of this plant group help explain its success

Page 3: Plant  tissues

Flowering Plant Life

Cycle Double fertilization Meiosis Meiosis

microspores

Female gametophyte

pollination

Mitosis without cytoplasmic division

Two sperms enter ovule

Diploid

Haploid

Page 4: Plant  tissues

Plant Life Histories

• Annuals complete life cycle in one

growing season

• Biennials live for two seasons; flowers

form in second season

• Perennials grow and produce seeds

year after year

Page 5: Plant  tissues

Shoot System

Root System

Root system

- anchors the plant

- penetrates the soil and absorbs water and minerals

- stores food

Shoot system

- produces sugars by photosynthesis

- carries out reproduction

Shoot and Root Systems

Page 6: Plant  tissues

water & minerals

sugar

SHOOT SYSTEM

ROOT SYSTEM

Shoot and root systems are interdependent

Page 7: Plant  tissues

Plant Tissue Systems

VASCULAR TISSUES

GROUND TISSUES

SHOOT SYSTEM

ROOT SYSTEM

EPIDERMIS

• Ground tissue system

• Vascular tissue system

• Dermal tissue system

Page 8: Plant  tissues

Meristems – Where Tissues Originate

• Regions where cell divisions produce plant growth

• Apical meristems– Lengthen stems and roots– Responsible for primary growth

• Lateral meristems– Increase width of stems– Responsible for secondary growth

Page 9: Plant  tissues

Apical Meristems

activity atmeristems

new cellselongateand start todifferentiateinto primarytissues

procambium primary vascular tissues

protoderm epidermis

Cells that form at apical meristems:

ground meristem ground tissues

Lengthen shoots and roots:SAM and RAM

Page 10: Plant  tissues

Lateral Meristems

vascular cambium secondary vascular tissues

periderm cork cambium

thickening

Increases girth of older roots and stems

Cylindrical arrays of cells

Page 11: Plant  tissues

Simple Tissues

Made up of only one type of cell

Parenchyma

Collenchyma

Sclerenchyma

Page 12: Plant  tissues

collenchymaparenchyma sclerenchyma

Morphology of three simple tissue types

Page 13: Plant  tissues

Parenchyma: A Simple Tissue

• Comprises most of a plant’s soft primary growth

• Cells are pliable, thin walled, many sided

• Cells remain alive at maturity and retain capacity to divide

• Mesophyll is a type of parenchyma that contains chloroplasts

Page 14: Plant  tissues

Collenchyma: A Simple Tissue

• Specialized for support for primary tissues

• Cells are elongated, with walls (especially corners) thickened with pectin

• Makes stems strong but pliable

• Cells are alive at maturity

Page 15: Plant  tissues

Sclerenchyma: A Simple Tissue

• Supports mature plant parts• Protects many seeds• Cells have thick, lignified walls and are dead

at maturity• Two types:

– Fibers: Long, tapered cells– Sclereids: Stubbier cells

Page 16: Plant  tissues

Complex Tissues

Composed of a mix of cell types

Xylem

Phloem

Epidermis

Page 17: Plant  tissues

Xylem

• Conducts water and dissolved minerals

• Conducting cells are dead and hollow at maturity

vessel membertracheids

Page 18: Plant  tissues

Phloem: A Complex Vascular Tissue

• Transports sugars

• Main conducting cells are sieve-tube members

• Companion cells assist in the loading of sugars

sieve plate

sieve-tubemember

companioncell

Page 19: Plant  tissues

Epidermis: A Complex Plant Tissue

- Covers and protects plant

surfaces

- Secretes a waxy,

waterproof cuticle

- In plants with secondary

growth, periderm replaces

epidermis

Page 20: Plant  tissues

Monocots and Dicots – same tissues, different features

Parallel veinsNetlike veins

3 pores1 pore

4 or 5 floral parts

3 floral parts

1 cotyledon 2 cotyledons

Vascular bundles dispersed

Vascular bundles in ring

Page 21: Plant  tissues

Shoot Development

ground meristem

primary xylempithprocambriumcortex

procambriumprotoderm

shoot apicalmeristem

primary phloem

Page 22: Plant  tissues

Bud = undeveloped shoot of meristematic tissue

Internode

Leaves

Axillary bud at node

Longitudinal section of terminal bud

Page 23: Plant  tissues

Roots also have meristems

Page 24: Plant  tissues

Internal Structure of a Dicot Stem

- Outermost layer is epidermis

- Cortex lies beneath epidermis

- Ring of vascular bundles separates the cortex from the pith

- The pith lies in the center of the stem

Page 25: Plant  tissues

Internal Structure

of a Monocot

Stem

• The vascular bundles

are distributed

throughout the ground

tissue

• No division of ground

tissue into cortex and

pith

Page 26: Plant  tissues

Dicots

Dicots and Monocots have different stem and root anatomies

Ground tissuesystem

Vascular tissue system

Dermal tissuesystem

Monocots

Page 27: Plant  tissues

Leaf Gross Structure

petiole

blade

axillarybud

node

blade

sheath

node

DICOT MONOCOT

Page 28: Plant  tissues

Adapted for Photosynthesis

• Leaves are usually thin – High surface area-to-volume ratio

– Promotes diffusion of carbon dioxide in, oxygen out

• Leaves are arranged to capture sunlight– Are held perpendicular to rays of sun

– Arrange so they don’t shade one another

Page 29: Plant  tissues

Leaf StructureUPPER

EPIDERMIS

PALISADEMESOPHYLL

SPONGYMESOPHYLL

LOWEREPIDERMIS

one stoma

cuticle

O2CO2

xylem

phloem

Page 30: Plant  tissues

Mesophyll:Photosynthetic Tissue

• A type of parenchyma tissue

• Cells have chloroplasts

• Two layers in dicots

– Palisade mesophyll

– Spongy mesophyll

Page 31: Plant  tissues

Parenchyma

Collenchyma

Page 32: Plant  tissues

Leaf Veins: Vascular Bundles

• Xylem and phloem –

often strengthened with fibers

• In dicots, veins are netlike

• In monocots, they are parallel

Page 33: Plant  tissues

Root Systems

Page 34: Plant  tissues

Root Structure

• Root cap covers tip

• Apical meristem produces the cap

• Cell divisions at the apical meristem cause the root to lengthen

• Farther up, cells differentiate and mature

root apical meristem

root cap

Page 35: Plant  tissues

Internal Structure of a Root

• Outermost layer is epidermis

• Root cortex is beneath the epidermis

• Endodermis, then pericycle surround

the vascular cylinder

• In some plants, there is a central pith

Page 36: Plant  tissues

pericycle

phloem

xylem

root hair

endodermis

epidermis

cortex

Page 37: Plant  tissues

Root Hairs and Lateral Roots

• Both increase the surface area

of a root system

• Root hairs are tiny extensions

of epidermal cells

• Lateral roots arise from the

pericycle and must push

through the cortex and

epidermis to reach the soil

newlateralroot

Page 38: Plant  tissues

Secondary Growth

• Occurs in perennials

• A ring of vascular cambium produces

secondary xylem and phloem

• Wood is the accumulation of these

secondary tissues, especially xylem

Page 39: Plant  tissues

Secondary Growth

Page 40: Plant  tissues

Woody Stem

periderm (consists ofcork, cork cambium,and secondary cortex)

secondaryphloem

BARK

HEARTWOOD SAPWOOD

vascular cambium

Page 41: Plant  tissues

Annual Rings

• Concentric rings of secondary xylem

• Alternating bands of early and late wood

• Early wood– Xylem cells with large diameter, thin walls

• Late wood– Xylem cells with smaller diameter, thicker

walls

Page 42: Plant  tissues

Types of Wood

• Hardwood (oak, hickory)– Dicot wood– Xylem composed of vessels, tracheids,

and fibers

• Softwood (pine, redwood)– Gymnosperm wood– Xylem composed mostly of tracheids– Grows more quickly