Pharmaceutical Botany With Taxonomy
Pharmaceutical Botany With Taxonomy
seed germinates
PH-BPS 112 • Protoderm
Ms. Reeva Ann L. Sumulong o Outermost; gives rise to the epidermis
ADAPTED FROM: POWERPOINT/LECTURE o Procambium – interior of protoderm;
cylinder of strands
COURSE OUTLINE: MIDTERMS • Ground meristem
o Produces two tissues composed of
1. Tissues and Primary Growth parenchyma cells; gives rise to the pith and
a. Stems cortex
b. Leaves o Pith – cells that are very large and may
break down shortly after they are formed
UNIT 2.3: TISSUES AND PRIMARY leaving a cylindrical hollow area
▪ Contains lignin
GROWTH ▪ Associated with secretory
structure - stores and secretes
STEMS laticifers which secrete or bleed
latex
OVERVIEW/TERMS o Cortex – parenchyma is used in storing food
• Node – area or region of stem where leaf or leaves or sometimes if chloroplasts are present, in
are attached manufacturing it
• Internodes – stem region between nodes ▪ Chloroplasts has chlorophyll which
• Petiole – stalk that serves as an attachment of the is associated with
leaf to the twig photosynthesis
• Axil – angle between a petiole and stem
• Axillary bud – bud located in the axil
o Starting point only
o may become a vegetative shoot or
reproductive shoot
▪ Vegetative shoot – stem or
branches
▪ Reproductive shoot – flowers
• Bud scales – protects the buds
• Bud scale scar – a remembrance; terminal bud
leaves this after a previous season; may only persist
for a number of years/season
o Terminal scar because it doesn’t turn into
something else, unlike axillary bud
o Indication of age of stem or twig
• Terminal bud – little larger than the axillary bud;
do not become separate branches, stays as a bud
alone
• Stipules – paired; often somewhat leaflike,
appendages that may remain throughout the life of
the leaf
PATTERNS OF TISSUES
• Steles – younger and few older stems and roots
o Central cylinder is made up of primary
xylem, primary phloem, and pith
o Protostele
▪ Cannot see where the pith is
located
▪ Simplest form
▪ Consists of a solid core of
conducting tissues in which the
phloem usually surrounds the
xylem
▪ Common in primitive seed plants –
whisk ferns, club mosses
o Siphonosteles
▪ Looks like a donut
▪ Distinguishable pith
▪ Tubular with pith at center
• Cork cambium/Phellogen ▪ Common in ferns
o Seen when epidermis is at maturity o Eusteles
▪ Present day flowering plants and
o Woody stems – while they age, lenticels
conifers
(aids gas exchange) are seen behind the
▪ Primary xylem and primary
stomata phloem are in discrete vascular
▪ When bumps or protrusion is bundles
seen, lenticels are present ▪ Distinguishable pith
o Arises within the cortex or in some
instances develops from the epidermis or
phloem
o Produces box-like cork cells which are
impregnated with suberin
▪ waxy substance that makes the
cell impervious to moisture
o Cork cambium – may also produce
parenchyma-like phelloderm
VASCULAR TISSUES
• Monocot
o Pith is not seen
o Vascular bundles embedded throughout the
ground tissue
• Most dicots
o Single ring of vascular bundles embedded
in ground tissue
• Many non-flowering plants and few dicots
o Concentric cylinders of xylem and phloem