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The Shoot: Primary Structure and Development

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... forms at the tip of a rhizome. i.e. Potato. Bulb- a shortened underground stem covered by enlarged fleshy storage leaves. i.e. Onion and garlic. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Shoot: Primary Structure and Development


1
The Shoot Primary Structure and Development
  • Chapter 25

2
  • True or False
  • Shoots contain stems and leaves.
  • Shoots are the above ground portion of the plant
    and are anatomically the same as roots.

3
The Shoot
  • Shoot- the above ground portion of the plant,
    consisting of stem and leaves.
  • Stem- the above ground axis of vascular
    plants.
  • Leaf- the principle lateral appendage of the
    stem.
  • Foliage leaf- photosynthetic organ.
  • Node- the part of the stem where one or more
    leaves are attached.
  • Internode- the region of the stem between two
    successive nodes.
  • Bud- an embryonic shoot protected by young
    leaves.

4
Primordium- a leaf or bud in its earliest stage
of differentiation.
5
Pith- the ground tissue occupying the center of a
root or shoot.
6
Pith- the ground tissue occupying the center of a
root or shoot.
Corn
Alfalfa
Basswood
7
Modified Stems
  • Tendrils- modified leaves that spirally coil and
    aid in stem support.
  • Stolons- runners stems that grow horizontally on
    the soil surface, often giving rise to new plants
    at the nodes.
  • Thorns- hard, woody, sharp-pointed modified
    stems, arise from the axils of leaves.
  • Spines- hard, woody, sharp-pointed modified
    leaves or leaf-parts.
  • Prickles- a small non-woody, sharp-pointed
    outgrowth of bark or the epidermis.

8
True or False. This is a tendril.
9
True or False. This is also a tendril.
10
  • Given the following is a hard, woody,
    sharp-pointed modified stem that arises from the
    axils of leaves.
  • True or False.
  • This is a spine.

11
Spines
12
Prickles
13
Underground Stems
  • Rhizome- a horizontal stem that grows at or below
    the soil surface.
  • Tuber- an enlarged, short, fleshy underground
    stem, forms at the tip of a rhizome. i.e. Potato.
  • Bulb- a shortened underground stem covered by
    enlarged fleshy storage leaves. i.e. Onion and
    garlic.
  • Corm- a thickened underground stem with small
    papery leaves. i.e. Gladiolus and Crocus.

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15
Leaf Arrangement
  • Phyllotaxy- the arrangement of leaves on a stem.
  • Basal- leaves are attached to an underground stem
    or rhizome.
  • Opposite- 2 leaves attached at each node, borne
    on opposite sides of the stem.
  • Alternate- 1 leaf attached at each node.
  • Whorled- 3 or more leaves at each node.

Basal
16
Leaf Morphology
  • Blade- lamina.
  • Petiole- stalklike portion.
  • Stipules- scalelike or leaflike appendages at the
    base of leaves.
  • Simple vs. Compound Leaves
  • Simple- blades undivided.
  • Compound- blades divided into leaflets.
  • Pinnately compound- leaflets arising from both
    sides of the axis.
  • Palmately compound- leaflets diverge from the tip
    of the petiole.

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21
Leaf Histology
  • Mesophyll- the ground tissue of the leaf,
    specialized for photosynthesis.
  • Palisade parenchyma- upper cells.
  • Spongy parenchyma- lower cells.

22
Hydrophyte- waterlily.
Xerophyte- oleander.
23
Eudicot- random stomata.
Monocot- parallel stomata.
24
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26
Leaf Abscission
  • Abscission- the normal separation of the leaf
    from the stem.
  • Structural and chemical (ethylene) changes result
    in the formation of an abscission zone
  • Separation layer
  • Protective layer
  • Magnesium ions, sugars, amino acids.
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