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Plant Structure and Tissue

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Title: Plant Structure and Tissue


1
Plant Structure and Tissue
  • http//www.howe.k12.ok.us/jimaskew/

2
I. Plant Tissue
  • Ground Tissues - provides storage,
  • metabolism, and support.

3
  • a. Parenchyma
  • Large, loosely packed, rectangular cells with
    thin cell walls.
  • Responsible for photosynthesis and food storage.
  • Over 80 of the cells in non-woody plants.

4
  • b. Collenchyma
  • Elongated cells with uneven, flexible, thicker
    cell walls.
  • This tissue supports the growth regions of a
    plant.
  • c. Sclerenchyma
  • Cells are short-lived with thick cell walls. Has
    a second cell wall
  • Serves to support the plant.
  • The cells that give a plant its "woody"
    characteristics.

5
  • 2) Dermal Tissues - forms the outside covering of
    plants and provides protection.

6
  • a. Epidermis
  • The outer layer of cells.
  • Protects the plant and reduces water loss
    (cuticle)
  • b. Stomata
  • Regulate gases passing into and out of the plant
  • Usually located on the under side of leaves.
  • Guard cells regulate the opening by changing
    water pressure within the cell to swell or
    shrink.
  • c. Cork closely packed cells protecting a woody
    stem.

7
  • 3) Vascular Tissues - transport water and food
    through the plant.

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  • Phloem straw-like tubes conducting food downward
    in a plant.
  • b. Xylem straw-like tubes conducting water and
    minerals upward in a plant.

10
Water is moved to the tops of very tall trees by
capillary action, the adhesion/cohesion of water,
transpirational pull, and root pressure.PRESSURE-
FLOW HYPOTHESIS
11
Warm-up (3/29 3/30)
  • Turn in plant drawings and pick up a
    transpiration lab
  • What type of plant has vascular tissue and no
    seeds?
  • A flowering plant with 6 petals and parallel leaf
    veins is known as what?
  • What type of tissue protects the plant from
    drying out?
  • Which type of vascular tissue moves water up the
    plant?

12
Objectives
  • Mosses, Ferns, Gymnosperms, Angiosperms
  • Ground, Dermal, and Vascular Tissue
  • Primary vs. Secondary Growth
  • Leaf, Root, Stem, Flower Parts
  • Hormone functions in plants
  • Plants responses to the environment

13
II. Plant Growth
  • Meristems growth regions where cells divide
    rapidly and tissue differentiation occurs.

14
Two patterns of growth in seed plants 1) Primary
growth- elongation of stems and roots Apical
meristem - located at the tips of stems and
roots. Apical meristems produce growth in
length,
15
  • 2) Secondary growth - roots, stems and branches
    of certain seed plants grow wider
  • Two types of lateral meristems
  • Vascular cambium - located between the xylem and
    phloem, producing additional vascular tissues.
    (inside - creates rings)
  • Cork cambium - located outside the phloem,
    producing cork replacing epidermis.

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III. Plant Structure
Plants have three basic parts
18
A. Leaf
  • Function
  • - leaves capture light from the sun
  • - leaves make glucose through photosynthesis
  • - leaves take-in CO2 release oxygen O2

19
  • 2) Structure
  • - top layer is made of a waxy cuticle (prevents
    H2O loss) and epidermis
  • -middle layer is the mesophyll (spongy layer)
  • -bottom layer exchanges gases through the stomata

20
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21
Image of a Stomata
Guard Cells
22
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23
B. Stems
  • Function
  • - stems support the plant
  • - stems hold the leaves toward the sunlight
  • - inside the stem water and nutrients travel
    to other plant parts
  • - stems of some plants store glucose in the form
    of starch

24
  • 2) Types of stems
  • a) Woody stem- found in trees and shrubs
  • b) Herbaceous stem- found in flowers and grasses

25
Stem (Wood)
SAPWOOD - Active xylem
HEARTWOOD - Inactive xylem
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27
Annual Rings
28
C. Roots
  • Function
  • - Roots support and anchor the plant (Similar to
    Rhizoids)
  • - Roots absorb water and minerals from the soil
  • - Roots store glucose (starch)
  • Root cell growth pattern Division, elongation,
    and differentiation

29
  • 2) Structure
  • Taproot system - the primary root grows much
    larger than the other roots of the plant.
  • Fibrous root system - the primary root does not
    grow large so that many roots of the plant are
    similar in size.
  • Primary root - the first root to grow out of a
    seed.
  • Adventitious roots - specialized roots that grow
    from plant stems or leaves.
  • Root cap - a shield of parenchyma cells covering
    the apical meristem at the root tip.
  • Root hairs - small extensions of a root, these
    greatly increase the surface area of the root for
    absorption.

30
  • 3) Typesof roots
  • - Taproot
  • - Fibrous
  • - Aboveground

31
Label the Roots
Fibrous
Taproot
Aboveground
32
Epiphytes Plants that are not rooted in soil but
instead grow directly on the bodies of other
plants. Most are found in tropical rainforest
biomes and they are NOT parasitic.
Spanish Moss
Orchid
33
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36
IV. Plant HormonesChemical messengers that
affect a plant's ability to respond to its
environment.
  • Auxins - hormones that promote plant-cell
    elongation, apical dominance, and rooting.

37
IV. Plant HormonesChemical messengers that
affect a plant's ability to respond to its
environment.
  • Gibberellins - a group of hormones that primarily
    stimulate elongation growth.

38
IV. Plant HormonesChemical messengers that
affect a plant's ability to respond to its
environment.
  • Ethylene - the hormone responsible for the
    ripening of fruit.

39
IV. Plant HormonesChemical messengers that
affect a plant's ability to respond to its
environment.
  • Cytokinins - a group of hormones that promote
    cell division.
  • Abscisic acid - a hormone that generally inhibits
    other hormones.

40
V. Plant Response
  • 1) Tropisms plant movement toward or away from
    an environmental stimulus.
  • Phototropism - a growth response to light. Solar
    tracking is the phototropism of leaves or flowers
    as they follow the sun's movement across the sky.

41
Phototropism
42
V. Plant Response
  • 1) Tropisms plant movement toward or away from
    an environmental stimulus.
  • Thigmotropism - a growth response to contact with
    a solid object. Thigmotropism allows vines to
    climb. It is thought that an auxin or ethylene
    are involved in this response.

43
V. Plant Response
  • 1) Tropisms plant movement toward or away from
    an environmental stimulus.
  • Gravitropism - a growth response to gravity.
    Roots are positively gravitropic, usually growing
    downward and stems are negatively gravitropic,
    usually growing upward. Auxins are probably
    responsible for this growth.

44
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45
V. Plant Response
  • 1) Tropisms plant movement toward or away from
    an environmental stimulus.
  • Chemotropism - a response to chemicals. The
    growth of a pollen tube is in response to
    chemicals produced produced by the plant ovary.
  • Hydrotropism - a response to water. Most plants
    have a positive response to water.

46
  • 2) Photoperiodism plant response to changes in
    the length of days and nights.
  • Critical length is the length of daylight above
    or below which a species of plant will flower.
  • Long-day plants flower only when exposed to day
    lengths longer than their critical length. These
    are usually late spring and early summer flowers.
  • Short-day plants flower only when exposed to day
    lengths shorter than their critical length. These
    are usually early spring and fall flowers.
  • Day-neutral plants are not affected by the length
    of days and nights.

47
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48
Plant Adaptations Aquatic plants To take in
sufficient oxygen, aquatic plants, have tissues
with large air-filled spaces through which oxygen
can diffuse. Stomata located on top of
leaf! Desert plants Have extensive
roots, reduced leaves, and thick stems that can
store water. Leaves are modified to reduce
evaporative water loss and, often, to deter
herbivores.
49
Nutritional Specialists Plants that have
specialized features for obtaining nutrients
include carnivorous plants and parasites.
50
Chemical Defenses Many plants defend themselves
against insect attack by manufacturing compounds
that have powerful effects on animals.
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