Title: PLANT ORGANS
1PLANT ORGANS AND TISSUES
2The "Typical" Plant Body
The Shoot System -Above ground (usually)
-Elevates the plant above the soil -Many
functions including ? photosynthesis
? reproduction dispersal ? food and water
conduction -nb. The shoot system includes the
leaves and the reproductive organs The Root
System -Underground (usually) -Anchor the
plant in the soil -Absorb water and nutrients
-Conduct water and nutrients -Food Storage
3 Plant cells are organized together to form
tissues Examples xylem, phloem Tissues are
organized together to form organs (two or more
tissues performing specific functions) Examples
leaves, stamens Organs are organized together
to form organ systems Examples shoots, roots
4- Growth patterns
- ? ?
- DETERMINATE INDETERMIANTE
Organism has growth phases, then stops growing
Organism capable of growth throughout entire life
5MERISTEMS Areas of a plant where growth occurs
APICAL MERISTEMS ? located at the tips of
roots and shoots ? supply cells for the
plant to increase in length (upward in shoots,
downward in roots) ? growth in this
direction is known as primary growth
6MERISTEMS Areas of a plant where growth occurs
LATERAL MERISTEMS ?
located near the periphery of the plant, usually
in a cylinder ? supply cells for the
plant to increase in diameter ? growth
in this direction is known as secondary growth
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8v.c. ?
v.c. ?
9PLANT VASCULAR TISSUES
PHLOEM
XYLEM
10XYLEM tubes conduct water and dissolved minerals
from the roots to all the other parts of the
plant.
11Xylem tube
Xylem tube
12 PHLOEM tubes conduct the products of
photosynthesis - sugars and amino acids - from
the place where they are manufactured (e.g.,
leaves) to the places where they are consumed or
stored
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14ROOTS
functions of roots?
15taproot
fibrous roots
16dicot root x-section
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18STEMS
functions of stems?
19monocot stem x-section
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21herbaceous dicot stem x-section
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23trees are dicots
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25What causes water to move upward in xylem tubes?
What causes solutions to move downward in phloem
tubes?
26 TRANSPIRATION HYPOTHESIS
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27Waters POLARITY is important to transpiration
water is COHESIVE and ADHESIVE because it is so
highly polar
28Water enters the xylem in the roots by osmosis.Â
Once in the xylem the water molecules hydrogen
bond forming a continuous string of water
molecules up to the leaf. Water is
constantly lost by transpiration in the
leaf. When one water molecule is
lost, another is pulled along. Â
Transpiration pull is the main
cause of water movement in plants.
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30 Movement of dissolved sugars through phloem tubes
31LEAVES
LEAVES
functions of leaves?
32structure of a typical leaf
33 internal structure of a dicot leaf
34monocot leaf x-section
? note parallel venation ?
35Leaves must be able to breathe (i.e., exchange
gasses w. their environment)
36a stoma
stomata on lower surface of leaf
37The stoma is the opening (arrow) formed between tw
o GUARD CELLS
?
G.C.
G.C.