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The Plant Body – Tissues and Organs. Cooksonia – 408 MYA. Plant Tissues. Meristematic tissue - site of growth in plant; origin of the other tissue types: apical meristems - site of primary growth; lateral meristems - site of secondary growth
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Plant Tissues • Meristematic tissue - site of growth in plant; origin of the other tissue types: apical meristems - site of primary growth; lateral meristems - site of secondary growth • Dermal tissue system - the outer protective covering of the plant • Vascular tissue system - comprises the xylem and phloem - it is embedded within the ground tissue system • Ground tissue system - the inner supportive tissues of the plant - pith
Plant Meristems and Growth • Primary growth is an increase in length – it occurs at apical meristems • Secondary growth is an increase in plant diameter – it occurs at lateral meristems – in particular the vascular cambium and cork cambium
Dermal Tissues • Make up outermost tissue layer of plants • In young plants, it consists of a single layer of cells – the epidermis – that may secrete cutin to make protective wax layer of cuticle • May have hairs or trichomes
Stomata • Scattered through the leaf epidermis are openings called stomata that allow the plant to breathe • The opening (pore) is surrounded by two guard cells
Periderm • In woody plants the epidermis cracks and splits and is replaced by periderm which is formed by the cork cambium • the periderm consists of cork cambium, cork cells and some other cells – it is the bark of mature trees - • cork is mostly dead cells with cell walls containing much suberin
Ground Tissues • Ground tissue makes up most of the tissues in herbaceous plants • There are several ground cell types which perform a variety of functions • Parenchyma cells – very diverse – often loosely arranged, main location of photosynthesis and storage in leaves • Collenchyma cells – main support tissue in young plant stems – found in leaves, stems and petals – usually with thickened corners of cell walls • Sclerenchyma cells – can be either fibers or sclerids – fibers provide support but are dead at maturity – thick secondary cell walls; sclerids provide support as well
Mesophyll cells are parenchyma
Vascular Tissues • Vascular tissues are responsible for transporting material through the plant body • Xylem cells move water and nutrients from roots to rest of plant • Phloem cells move carbohydrates and other photosynthetic products from leaves to rest of plant
Xylem • Xylem is dead at maturity and transports water essentially through a hollow tube - angiosperms have tracheary cells are called vessels which tend to have flattened ends, angiosperms also have tracheids • in gymnosperms the tracheary cells are called tracheids and are usually sharply tapered • eventually the xylem becomes full of sap and is no longer used for water transport, then functions in support and forms heartwood
Xylem – Vessels and Tracheids
Phloem • Phloem cells are called sieve tube elements because of the sieve like plates at the end of the cells - they are alive at maturity but are crushed as the plant grows in diameter and must be continually replaced • Some sieve cells have companion cells which govern transport of material through the sieve
The Roots • Roots make up most of the underground portion of the plant • Roots anchor plant in soil • Roots absorb water and nutrients • Roots serve as storage organs – especially storage of starch
Fibrous Tap
Size of Root Systems • The most well studied root system was for a 4 month old rye plant - its roots occupied a volume of 6 liters • When measured the total surface area of the root system, including root hairs was 639 m2, or 130 times the surface of the shoot • It had approximately 14 billion root hairs with an absorbing surface of 401 m2 - if laid end to end, they would extend over 10,000 km
Size of Root Systems • Deepest known roots – desert mesquite shrub roots down to 53.3 m • Tamarisk and Acacia trees – roots to 30 m deep • Herbaceous Alfalfa – roots to 6 m deep
Root Growth • The growth of most roots is continuous process that only stops under adverse conditions such as drought or low temperature • During their growth through the soil, roots follow the path of least resistance and frequently follow spaces left by earlier roots which have died and decayed
More Root Growth • The tip of the root is covered by a root cap - a mass of cells which protects the apical meristem as it pushes through the soil • As the root pushes through the soil, cells of the root cap are sloughed off from the margins - they are replaced by new growth of cells at the center of the root cap • The sloughed off cells and growing root tip are covered by a slimy sheath called the mucigel which lubricates the root as it passes through the soil
Rhizosphere and Mucigel • The mucigel provides an environment favorable for growth of beneficial bacteria • The rhizosphere is formed of the mucigel, root hairs, sloughed off root cap cells and various microorganisms
Root Absorption • Epidermis in young roots absorbs water and minerals and this is facilitated by root hairs - tubular extensions of the epidermal cells • Some roots have a thin cuticle covering the epidermis; other roots have epidermal cells containing suberin - even so, the epidermal cells offer little resistence to the entrance of water and nutrients • The innermost layer of the cortex is compact and lacks air spaces - this is the endodermis - it has Casparian strips which are bands of suberin between cells that prevent the passage of water and air - thus in endodermis, all substances must pass through cells