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Plant Structure and Growth

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Plant Structure and Growth Chapter 35 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Structure and Growth


1
Plant Structure and Growth
  • Chapter 35

2
Monocots vs. dicots
3
Monocot or Dicot?
4
Monocot or Dicot?
5
Monocot or Dicot?
6
Monocot or Dicot?
7
Roots
  • Fibrous Root systems
  • Monocots
  • Anchor plants tenaciously
  • Prevent erosion
  • Increases surface area for absorption of water
    and nutrients

8
Taproot Systems
  • Dicots
  • Anchor plants firmly
  • Stores food
  • Carrots, turnips, sugar beets
  • Can go far below ground
  • Desert plants

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11
Root Hairs
  • Epidermal extensions
  • Increase surface area

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13
Symbiosis with fungi
  • Most plants have mutualistic partnership with
    fungi forming a root/fungus structure called
    mycorrhizae
  • Fungi absorb water and select minerals for host
    plant (HUGE surface area)
  • Host plant nourishes fungus

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15
Stems
  • Axillary Bud usually dormant bud, can form
    branch
  • Terminal bud bud at shoot tip that has
    developmental leaves

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18
What is apical domiance?
  • Concentration of growth at the tip of a plant
    shoot, where a terminal bud inhibits axillary bud
    growth
  • Hormonally regulated (auxin produced from
    terminal bud)
  • Adaptation allows for plant to get taller in
    shaded woods

19
Why do owners of houseplants pinch them back?
  • To remove the terminal bud, thereby removing
    inhibition of the axillary buds, causing branching

20
Modified stems
  • Stolons

21
Modified Stems
  • Rhizomes

22
Modified Stems
  • Bulbs

23
Leaves
  • Flattened blades
  • Petioles join leaf to the stem node
  • Not present in many monocots
  • Monocots have parallel leaf veins
  • Dicots have net-like leaf veins

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25
Cell Types
  • Parenchyma
  • Most abundant type
  • typical plant cell
  • Relatively unspecialized
  • Thin primary cell walls
  • Most ground tissue, sieve tube members, fruit
    tissue

26
Cell types
  • Collenchyma
  • Thick primary cell walls
  • Lack secondary walls
  • Provides support for young shoot, petioloes
  • Living, flexible, capable of elongating

27
Cell types
  • Sclerenchyma
  • Supports
  • Thick secondary cell walls
  • Not capable of elongating (cant grow)
  • May be dead at maturity (tracheids of xylem)
  • Hemp, flax

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29
Tissue Systems
  • Dermal tissue
  • Protects
  • Secretes waxy cuticle
  • Root hairs
  • Guard Cells, stomata

30
  • Vascular Tissue

31
Xylem
  • Transports water and nutrients up from the roots
  • Tracheids and vessel elements (functional cells)
  • All vascular have tracheids
  • Angiosperms and few others have vessel elements
  • Dead at maturity
  • Pits connect tracheids
  • Has thick secondary walls (often hardened with
    lignin), supports the plant

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33
Phloem
  • Transports food from leaves to other parts of the
    plant
  • Sieve tube members and companion cells
    (functional cells)
  • Sieve tube members lack nuclei, ribosomes
  • Alive at maturity
  • Sieve plates connect sieve tube members

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35
Ground Tissue
  • Photosynthetic
  • Storage

36
Vascular tissue organization
  • Dicot root xylem forms a cross in the center

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39
Vascular tissue organization
  • Monocot Root xylem and phloem alternate in a
    ring

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42
Vascular tissue organization
  • Monocot Stem vascular bundles (combo of xylem
    and phloem) scattered
  • Dicot stem vascular bundles arranged in a ring
    around the periphery

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44
Plant Growth
  • Meristems
  • def perpetually embryonic tissues
  • Indeterminate growth
  • Primary growth lengthens roots and shoots
  • Secondary growth thickens roots and shoots

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46
Primary Growth
  • Tip covered by root cap
  • Protection
  • Polysaccharide slime secretion
  • Zone of cell division
  • Zone of cell elongation
  • Zone of cell maturation
  • Quiescent center

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49
Secondary Growth
  • Growth in girth
  • Two lateral meristems (dicots)
  • Vascular cambium
  • Forms secondary xylem and phloem
  • Secondary xylem accumulates (wood) while
    secondary phloem is sloughed off
  • Cork cambium
  • Forms cork
  • Barkcork, cork cambium, and secondary phloem

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52
Leaves
  • What is the ground tissue of the leaf?
  • Mesophyll
  • How is the mesophyll arranged?
  • Spongy and palisade regions
  • Spongy region has spaces for gas circulation

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