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Specialized Tissues in Plants

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Lateral meristematic tissue called vascular and cork cambium. Secondary growth. Formation ... Expansion of vascular cambium causes oldest tissue to split and fragment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Specialized Tissues in Plants


1
Specialized Tissues in Plants
  • How is the plant kingdom different from other
    kingdoms?
  • 4/13/07

2
Principal Organs
  • Roots? absorb water and dissolved nutrients, hold
    plant upright
  • Stems? support plant body and transport nutrients
  • Leaves? carry out photosynthesis and protect
    against water loss

3
Tissue Systems
  • 3 tissue systems
  • Dermal tissue? outermost layer
  • Vascular tissue? transports nutrients throughout
    plant
  • Ground tissue? everything else
  • Meristematic tissue? tips of shoots and roots
    responsible for growth

4
Dermal Tissue
  • Outermost covering of a plant
  • Single layer of cells
  • Cuticle? thick waxy layer covering outer surface
    of epidermal cells
  • Roots have root hair
  • Leaves contain guard cells

5
Vascular Tissue
  • Transports water and nutrient throughout plant
  • 2 types
  • Xylem
  • Phloem

6
Xylem
  • Water conducting tissue consisting of tracheids
    and vessel
  • Tracheids? long narrow cells with walls that are
    impermeable to waterhave holes in the walls that
    connect neighboring cells
  • Used to get water and minerals up through the
    plant

7
Phloem
  • Food conducting tissue consisting of sieve tube
    elements and companion cells
  • Sieve tube elements? arrange end to end. Have
    small holes at the end and when they die create a
    pipeline for nutrients to travel
  • Companion cells? surround sieve tube
    elementssupport phloem cells and aid in movement
    of substances out of streams
  • Carries food from leaves to roots or stems

8
Ground Tissue
  • Between dermal and vascular tissues
  • Parenchyma? thin cell walls large central
    vacuoles, packed with chloroplasts
  • Collenchyma? strong flexible cell walls that help
    support larger plants
  • Sclerenchyma? Cells have extremely thick, rigid
    cell walls that make ground tissue tough and
    strong

9
Parenchyma
10
Parenchyma
11
Collenchyma
12
Sclerenchyma
13
Meristematic Tissue
  • Plants grow as long as they live
  • Meristematic tissue is the only tissue that
    produces new cells
  • Apical meristem? group of undifferentiated cells
    that divide to produce increased length of stems
    and roots

14
Structure and Growth
15
Roots
  • 2 types
  • Taproots (dicots)
  • One large primary root with small secondary roots
  • Fibrous roots (monocots)
  • Branch off in equal sizes

16
Types of roots
17
Root Structure
  • Three layers of tissue in a root
  • Epidermis outer layer
  • Root hairs increase surface area
  • Vascular tissue central cylinder
  • Ground tissue tissue that lies between the
    others

18
Root Structure cont
  • Root cap protects meristematic tissue
  • Cortex? spongy layer inside epidermis
  • Endodermis? encloses the vascular tissue in the
    center

19
Root Functions
  • Anchor plant to ground
  • Absorb water and nutrients from soil
  • Endodermis surrounded by waterproof strip called
    Casparian strip
  • Once water/minerals in cant get out
  • Puts pressure on water causing it to rise inside
    xylem b/c no place to go.

20
Root function
21
Stems
  • 3 important functions
  • Produce leaves, branches, and flowers
  • Hold leaves up in the sunlight
  • Transport substances between roots and leaves
  • 3 things stems have
  • Nodes? leaf is attached
  • Internodes? regions between nodes
  • Buds? underdeveloped tissue that can produce new
    stems and leaves

22
Stem function
23
Stem structure
24
Monocot vs Dicot Stems
  • Monocot
  • Vascular bundles scattered throughout stem
  • Three tissues
  • Vascular
  • Epidermis
  • Ground tissue
  • Dicot
  • Vascular tissue arranged in a cylinder (ring
    pattern)
  • Parenchyma cells inside vascular bundles called
    Pith
  • Parenchyma cells outside vascular bundle called
    Cortex

25
Stem types
26
Monocot Dicot
27
Dicot Stem
28
Monocot Stem
29
Growth of Stems
  • Primary
  • Growth that occurs at the end of plants (increase
    length)
  • Apical meristem
  • Secondary
  • Increase in width (lateral growth)
  • Lateral meristematic tissue called vascular and
    cork cambium

30
Secondary growth
31
Formation
  • Wood
  • Formation of rings
  • Center of tree is old xylem
  • Heartwood? center and dark b/c no longer filter
    impurities
  • Sapwood? active fluid transport
  • Bark
  • All tissues outside the vascular cambium phloem,
    cork cambium and cork
  • Expansion of vascular cambium causes oldest
    tissue to split and fragment
  • Cork cambium produces the protective layer of
    bark that falls off

32
wood
33
bark
34
Leaves
  • Structure
  • Optimized for absorbing light and carrying out
    photosynthesis
  • Cuticle waterproof outer covering
  • Vascular bundles surrounded by parenchyma and
    sclerenchyma cells
  • Blades? flattened sections that collect sunlight
  • Petiole? thin stalk that attaches the blade to
    the stem

35
Leaves
  • Functions
  • Photosynthesis
  • Transpiration
  • Gas Exchange

36
Leaves
  • Function
  • Photosynthesis
  • Mesophyll? packed with chloroplasts and carries
    out photosynthesis
  • Transports carbohydrates to phloem
  • Palisade mesophyll? absorbs much of the light
  • Spongy mesophyll? air spaces connect to exterior
    through stomata

37
Leaves
  • Functions
  • Photosynthesis cont
  • Stomata? opening allows carbon dioxide and oxygen
    to diffuse in and out of leaf
  • 2 guard cells control opening and closing of
    stomata
  • Open during dayphotosynthesis
  • Closed at night water loss

38
Leaves
  • Functions
  • Transpiration? water loss from a plant through
    its leaves
  • Water is replaced by water drawn into leaf from
    xylem

39
Leaves
  • Functions
  • Gas Exchange
  • Between air spaces in the spongy mesophyll and
    opening stomata
  • Plants keep stomata open just enough to allow
    photosynthesis to take place

40
Transport of Water
  • Capillary Action
  • Transpiration

41
Transport in Plants
  • Capillary Action
  • Tendancy of water to rise in a thin tube
  • Water forms H bonds with one another

42
Transport in Plants
  • Transpiration
  • Major force in water transport
  • Controlled by water moving into and out of spongy
    mesophyll
  • Water enters guard cells open stomata
  • Water lost guard cells close stomata

43
Nutrient Transport
  • Phloem
  • Pump sugars into a plants fruits or into roots
  • Pumps sugars back out in spring to aid in growth

44
Nutrient Transport
  • Source to Sink
  • Source? where sugars are produced
  • Sink? where sugars are stored
  • When nutrients are removed from the phloem system
    the change in concentration causes a mavement of
    fluid in that direction
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