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This document discusses the different tissue systems that make up the plant body: ground tissue (parenchyma, collenchyma, sclerenchyma), vascular tissue (xylem and phloem), and dermal tissue. It provides details on the structure and function of key cell and tissue types, including parenchyma, collenchyma, sclerenchyma, tracheids, vessel elements, sieve-tube members, and companion cells. Plant growth occurs through primary growth at the apical meristems of roots and stems, resulting in increases in plant length, and secondary growth in woody plants, resulting in increases in girth through the production of wood and bark tissues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
192 views

Bio 11 LE 2 Reviewer

This document discusses the different tissue systems that make up the plant body: ground tissue (parenchyma, collenchyma, sclerenchyma), vascular tissue (xylem and phloem), and dermal tissue. It provides details on the structure and function of key cell and tissue types, including parenchyma, collenchyma, sclerenchyma, tracheids, vessel elements, sieve-tube members, and companion cells. Plant growth occurs through primary growth at the apical meristems of roots and stems, resulting in increases in plant length, and secondary growth in woody plants, resulting in increases in girth through the production of wood and bark tissues.

Uploaded by

Lara Greyjoy
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 5 - Extremely flexible support tissue

PLANT TISSUES AND THE MULTICELLULAR PLANT  Provides much of the support in soft, nonwoody plant
BODY organs
- Usually elongated
- Alive at maturity
PLANTS EXHIBIT SIMILARITY AND DIVERSITY IN -
o
1 walls – unevenly thickened
STRUCTURE AND LIFE SPAN  Thick in corners
- Often occurs as long strands near stem surfaces and
Types of plants: along leaf veins
- Herbaceous – do not develop persistent woody parts
above ground Sclerenchyma
 Annuals – herbaceous plants that grow, reproduce, - Specialized for structural support
and die in 1 year. -
o o
Have both 1 and 2 walls
 Biennials – take 2 years to complete their life cycles - At fxnl maturity – dead cells
- Woody – develop woody parts above ground - Types of sclerenchyma cells:
 All are perennials - woody/herbaceous plants that  Sclereids – short
live for more than 2 years o More or less cuboidal
o Common in shells of nuts and the pits of
ROOTS, STEMS, LEAVES, FLOWERS AND FRUITS MAKE stone fruits
UP THE PLANT BODY  Fibers – long, tapered cells
- Plant body is organized into: o Often occur in groups/clumps
 Root system – bellow ground portion o Abundant in wood and bark of angiosperms
 Shoot system – vertical stem bearing leaves, flowers,
and fruits that contain seeds. THE VASCULAR TISSUE SYSTEM
- Plants grow in two different environments: - Embedded in the ground tissue
 Soil – dark and moist - Transports materials throughout the plant
 Air – dry and bright - Complex tissues that are continuous throughout plant
body:
THE PLANT BODY IS COMPOSED OF CELLS AND  Xylem – conducts water and dissolved minerals from
TISSUES roots to stems and leaves
- Tissue – group of cells that forms a structural and fxnl unit o Provides structural support
 Simple tissues – one kind of cell o In angiosperms: composed of:
 Complex tissues – two or more kids of cells
 Tracheids
- Three tissue systems of plants:
 Vessel elements
 Ground – consists of three tissues that perform a
 Parenchyma
variety of fxns including photosynthesis, storage,
and support  Perform storage fxns
 Vascular – intricate plumbing system that extends  Fibers
throughout the plant body  Provide support
o Conducts various substances  Phloem - conducts food materials (carbohydrates)
o Fxns in strengthening and supporting the o Provides structural support
plant o In angiosperms: composed of:
 Dermal – provides covering for the plant body  Sieve-tube members
- Organs – roots, stems, and leaves  Companion cells
 Composed of several different tissues  Parenchyma cells
 Fibers
THE GROUND TISSUE SYSTEM  Extensive in herbaceous
- Bulk of herbaceous plant plants
- Composed of:
 Parenchyma XYLEM: Two Kinds of Conducting Cells
 Collenchyma - Specialized for conduction of H2O and minerals
 Sclerenchyma - At maturity – dead and hollow
-
o
Growing cell – secretes a thin 1 wall, which stretches and - Tracheids – chief water-conducting cells in gymnosperms
expands as cell increases in size and seedless vascular plants
-
o
After growth – sometimes secretes a thick, strong 2 wall  long, tapering cells
o
 Deposited inside 1 wall and plasma membrane  water is conducted by passing from one tracheid to
another through pits – thin areas in tracheids’ cell
o
Parenchyma walls where 2 wall did not form
- Most common type of cell and tissue - Vessel elements – cell diameters usually greater than
- Found in soft parts of the plant tracheids
- Fxns:  Hollow
 Photosynthesis  Have perforations – holes in their end walls
o Contain chloroplasts  Vessels – VE stacked one on top of the other
 Storage  Also have pits – permit lateral transport of H2O from
o Incl. starch grains, oil droplets, water, salts one vessel to another
 Secretion
- Living, metabolizing cells PHLOEM: Conducting Cells
- Sieve-tube members – conduct food materials in sol’n
Collenchyma (dissolved in H2O)
 Among the most specialized cells in nature
 Long, thin cells that are stacked end-on-end to form  Animals: all parts
extended sieve tubes  Plants: in meristems – composed of cells that do not
 Sieve plates – cell’s end walls differentiate
o Pierced by a series of holes through wc o Retain ability to divide
cytoplasm extends from one STM to the
next - Two kinds of growth in plants:
 Alive at maturity  Primary growth – increase in the length of a plant
o Many organelles disintegrate as they mature o All plants
 Can fxn without nuclei o Tissues produced – entire plant body in
- Companion cell – assists in the fxning of the STM. herbaceous plants, and young, soft shoot
 living cell tips and root tips in woody plants
o with nucleus and organelles  Secondary growth – increase in girth of a plant.
 numerous tiny openings in cell walls bet. CC and STM o Only gymnosperms and woody dicots
allow cytoplasm to extend from one cell to the other o Tissues produced – wood and bark
 does not conduct
 moves food mat into STM for transport Primary Growth
- Apical meristem – site of primary growth
THE DERMAL TISSUE SYSTEM  Tips of roots and buds of stems
- provides protective covering over plant parts - Root tip – covered by root cap
- herbaceous: single layer of cells called the epidermis - Root apical meristem – behind the root cap
- woody: initially produce epidermis, but splits apart as the  Composed of meristematic cells
plant increases in diameter o Remain small bec they are continuously
 Periderm – several to many layers thick dividing
o forms under epidermis – new protective - Area of cell elongation – root tip is pushed deeper into the
tissue soil
o replaces epidermis  Some differentiation occurs
o composes outer bark  Immature tissues become evident
o Continue to develop and differentiate into he
Epidermis mature tissues of the adult plant
- complex tissue comprising mostly parenchyma cells with - Area of differentiation – cells have completely
scattered guard cells differentiated and are fully mature
- cells - somewhat thicker toward outside the plant to  Root hairs are evident
provide protection. - Stem bud – different in structure from the root tip
- Epidermal parenchyma cells: generally contain no  Within every bud – stem apical meristem
chloroplasts  What emerges from embryonic stem tip:
 Transparent o leaf primordia – embryonic leaves
o Allows light to penetrate into interior tissues  tend to cover and protect SAM
of stems and leaves o bud primordia – embryonic buds
o Photosynthetic tissues – lie beneath  tip of stem – immature cells enlarge and differentiagte
epidermis into the three tissue systems
- Stems and leaves: secrete cuticle over surfaces of walls
 Restricts loss of water from plant surfaces Secondary Growth
 Prevents CO2 from diffusing - due to cell divisions in the lateral meristem
o Stomata – facilitate diffusion of CO2  extend the entire lengths of stems and roots except at
 Tiny pores between two cells called the tips
o
guard cells. - Two LM responsible for 2 growth:
 Generally open during the day  Vascular cambium – layer of meristematic cells
except during drought o Forms a thin cylinder around the stem and
- May contain trichomes – special outgrowths or hairs root trunk, bet wood and bark of a woody
 Root hairs – simple, unbranched trichomes that plant
increase the surface area of the rot epidermis o Divide

o
 Presence in aerial parts of desert plants – increase wood (2 xylem)

o
the reflection of light off plants bark (2 phloem)
 Others have a protective fxn  Cork cambium – thin cylinder or irregular arrangement
of meristematic cells in outer bark region
Periderm o Divide
- Composed of:  Cork cells
 Cork cells – dead at maturity  Cork parenchyma cells
o Walls are heavily coated with suberin
 Helps reduce H2O loss
 Cork parenchyma (phelloderm) cells – fxn primarily
in storage

PLANTS EXHIBIT LOCALIZED GROWTH AT MERISTEMS


- Three processes of growth:
 Cell division – increase in number of cells
 Cell elongation – increase in size of plant
 Cell differentiation – specialization of cells
- Difference between plants and animals: location of growth

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