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Ch. 35 Warm-Up

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Ch. 35 Warm-Up What effect does pinching back a house plant have on the plant? Most H2O and minerals taken up from the soil by a plant are absorbed by _____. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 35 Warm-Up


1
Ch. 35 Warm-Up
  • What effect does pinching back a house plant
    have on the plant?
  • Most H2O and minerals taken up from the soil by a
    plant are absorbed by _______.
  • What is the largest organelle in a plant cell?

2
Ch. 35 Warm-Up
  • Define meristem. Which are primary?
  • Compare monocots to dicots.
  • From an evolutionary view, why are monocots and
    dicots different?

3
Ch. 35/36 Warm-Up
  • You have a plant that has
  • Fibrous root system
  • No petioles
  • Parallel leaf veins
  • Thick lignified cells
  • Vascular cambium
  • What type of plant do you have?
  • monocot or dicot?
  • woody or herbaceous?
  • How do stomates open?

4
Chapter 35
  • Plant Structure, Growth, and Development

5
What you must know
  • The function of xylem and phloem tissue.
  • The specific functions of tracheids, vessels,
    sieve-tube elements and companion cells.
  • The correlation between primary growth and apical
    meristems versus secondary growth and lateral
    meristems.

6
Introduction to Plants
  • Kingdom Plantae
  • Plants
  • Cell wall
  • Autotroph (photosynthesis)
  • Multi-cellular
  • 12 Divisions (Phylum)
  • Anthophyta Angiosperms (flowering plants)
  • Largest of species (250,000 - 90 plants)
  • Seed plants product seed w/in a fruit
  • Key adaptations flowers fruits
  • Sporophytes are trees, shrubs, herbs that flower
  • 2 groups Monocots Dicots

7
Monocots compared to dicots
8
Monocot Dicot
One cotyledon (seed leaf) Two cotyledon
Parallel veins in leaves Netted veins in leaves
Fibrous root system Taproot
Floral parts in multiples of 3 Floral parts in multiple layers of 4 or 5
Complex vascular arrangement Ring vascular arrangement
Eg. grass, corn, palm, onion, tulip, bamboo Eg. bean, pea, rose, sunflower
9
Concept 35.1 The plant body has a heirarchy of
organs, tissues, and cells
10
I. Plant organs
11
  • Above ground
  • Stems, leaves

Shoot system
  • Underground (usually)
  • Roots

Root system
12
A. Roots
  • Anchors plant, absorbs H2O minerals, stores
    sugars/starches
  • Root hairs tiny extensions of epidermal cells,
    increase surface area for H2O and mineral
    absorption
  • Mycorrhizae symbiosis with fungi

13
Fibrous Roots Taproots
Mat of thin roots spread just below surface One thick, vertical root
Shallow Many lateral (branch) roots
Increased surface area Firmly anchors
Monocots Stores food in root
Dicots
Fibrous Root (scallion)
Taproot (carrot)
14
Modified Roots
15
Mangrove forest in Florida
16
B. Stems
  • Alternating system of nodes (leaf attachment) and
    internodes
  • Function display leaves
  • Terminal bud growth concentrated at apex (tip)
  • Apical dominance terminal bud prevents growth of
    axillary buds growth directed upward, toward
    light
  • Axillary buds located in V between leaf and
    stem forms branches (lateral shoots)
  • Pinching/pruning removing terminal bud

17
Modified Stems
18
Modified stems
  • Runner or stolin
  • Aspen, strawberries, grass
  • Grow on surface
  • For asexual reproduction
  • Rhizome
  • Iris, ginger, potato, onion
  • Grow underground
  • Store food DNA for new plant
  • Tuber end of rhizome
  • Bulb underground shoot
  • Onion
  • storage leaves

19
C. Leaves
  • Main photosynthetic organ
  • Has blade petiole

20
Simple vs. Compounds Leaves
21
Modified leaves
22
II. Plant Tissues
23
Three Tissue Systems
24
3 Types of Tissue (Pg. 717)
  • Ground Tissue System
  • Most extensive, makes up bulk of plant
  • Vascular Tissue System
  • Conducting tissues that distribute water and
    solutes throughout plant
  • Dermal tissue system
  • Covers and protects plant surfaces

25
A. Dermal Tissue
  • Single layer, closely packed cells that cover
    entire plant
  • Protect against water loss invasion by
    pathogens
  • Cuticle waxy layer
  • Epidermis, periderm

26
B. Vascular Tissue
  • Continuous throughout plant
  • Transports materials between roots shoots
  • Xylem transport H2O and minerals up from root
  • Phloem transports food from leaves to other
    parts of plant

stele
27
C. Ground Tissue
  • Anything that isnt dermal or vascular
  • Function storage, photosynthesis, support
  • Pith inside vascular tissue
  • Cortex outside vascular tissue

28
III. Cell Types
  • Parenchyma most abundant
  • Perform metabolism, synthesizes stores organic
    products
  • Collenchyma grouped in cylinders, support
    growing parts of plant
  • Sclerenchyma rigid support cell
  • Xylem water conduction
  • Tracheids, vessel elements dead, tubular,
    elongated cells
  • Phloem sugar, organic cmpd. conduction
  • Sieve tubes, plates, companion cells alive
    cells which aid movement of sugar

29
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30
PARENCHYMA CELLS
WATER-CONDUCTING CELLS OF THE XYLEM
100 µm
Tracheids
Vessel
Parenchyma cells in Elodea leaf, with
chloroplasts (LM)
60 µm
Pits
COLLENCHYMA CELLS
Cortical parenchyma cells
Tracheids and vessels (colorized SEM)
80 µm
Vessel element
Vessel elements with perforated end walls
Tracheids
SUGAR-CONDUCTING CELLS OF THE PHLOEM
Collenchyma cells (in cortex of Sambucus,
elderberry cell walls stained red) (LM)
Sieve-tube members longitudinal view (LM)
SCLERENCHYMA CELLS
5 µm
Companion cell
Sclereid cells in pear (LM)
Sieve-tube member
25 µm
Plasmodesma
Sieve plate
Cell wall
Nucleus
Cytoplasm
Companion cell
30 µm
15 µm
Fiber cells (transverse section from ash tree)
(LM)
Sieve-tube members longitudinal view
Sieve plate with pores (LM)
31
Plant Growth Development
  • Growth irreversible increase in mass from cell
    division and expansion
  • Development sum of all changes that elaborate an
    organisms body (make it more complex)

Plant Animal
Faster Slower
Mostly H2O Makes new cytoplasm
Indeterminate ? meristems Determinate
Annual (1 year) Biennials (2 years) Perennials (many)
32
Concept 35.2 Meristems generate cells for growth
  • Meristem perpetually embryonic tissues
  • Indeterminate growth (throughout plants life)
  • Cell division to make new cells
  • Apical meristem growth areas at tips of roots
    buds cause primary growth (increase in length)
  • Lateral meristem growth thickens shoots and
    roots secondary growth

33
Primary and Secondary Growth
34
Concept 35.3 Primary growth lengthens roots and
shoots
Root Hairs
Zone of Maturation growth differentiation
complete fully mature cells
Zone of Elongation cells elongate push root tip
ahead
Zone of Cell Division apical meristem new cells
produced
Root cap protects meristem as it pushes through
soil also secretes polysaccharide lubricant
35
Primary Growth of a Root
Cortex
Vascular cylinder
Epidermis
Key
Zone of maturation
Root hair
Dermal
Ground
Vascular
Zone of elongation
Apical meristem
Zone of cell division
Root cap
100 µm
36
Primary Growth of Shoots
  • Shoot apical meristem dome of dividing cells at
    tip of terminal bud divide and elongate

37
Leaf Organization
  • epidermis of underside interrupted by stomata
    (pores)
  • Mesophyll ground tissue between upper/lower
    epidermis
  • Parenchyma sites of photosynthesis

38
Concept 35.4 Secondary growth adds girth to stems
and roots in woody plants
  • Involves lateral meristems
  • Vascular cambium produces secondary xylem (wood)
  • Cork cambium produces tough covering that
    replaces epidermis
  • Bark all tissues outside vascular cambium

39
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40
Primary and Secondary Growth of a Stem
Primary and secondary growth in a two-year-old
stem
Secondary phloem
Vascular cambium
Cork cambium
Late wood
Secondary xylem
Periderm
Early wood
Cork
Epidermis
Pith
Cortex
Primary xylem
Primary phloem
Transverse section of a three-year- old Tilia
(linden) stem (LM)
Vascular cambium
Primary phloem
Vascular cambium
Cortex
Xylem ray
Epidermis
Bark
Primary xylem
Phloem ray
Growth
Pith
0.5 mm
0.5 mm
Xylem ray
Primary xylem
Secondary xylem
Vascular cambium
Secondary phloem
Primary phloem
Cork
First cork cambium
Periderm (mainly cork cambia and cork)
Growth
Primary phloem
Secondary phloem
Secondary xylem (two years of production)
Vascular cambium
Secondary xylem
Vascular cambium
Secondary phloem
Bark
Primary xylem
Most recent cork cambium
Layers of periderm
Pith
Cork
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