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Lecture 1 Introduction

The document provides an overview of plant anatomy and physiology, detailing the structure and function of plant cells, tissues, and organs. It describes the three main types of plant tissues (dermal, vascular, and ground), their roles in supporting plant functions, and the processes of water and sugar transport within plants. Additionally, it covers the role of plant hormones in growth and development.

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scalje2311
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views52 pages

Lecture 1 Introduction

The document provides an overview of plant anatomy and physiology, detailing the structure and function of plant cells, tissues, and organs. It describes the three main types of plant tissues (dermal, vascular, and ground), their roles in supporting plant functions, and the processes of water and sugar transport within plants. Additionally, it covers the role of plant hormones in growth and development.

Uploaded by

scalje2311
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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What is plant anatomy?

• ANATOMY: study of the structure of


organisms… looking at cells, tissues
• (Morphology: Study of form)

What is plant physiology?


• PHYSIOLOGY: study of the function of
cells, tissues, organs of living things;
and the physics/chemistry of these functions…
Always keep in mind that in plant anatomy,
morphology & physiology…

“Structure correlates to function”


• How can water
move from
the ground
all the way
to the top
of a 100 m
tall redwood
tree?
Plant Anatomy: Cells
• Plant cells are basic building blocks
• Can specialize in form and function
• By working together, forming tissues, they can
support each other and survive
• Levels of organization
atoms > molecules > cells > tissues > organs > whole plant > pop.
Plant Tissues Types
All plant organs (roots, stems, leaves) are
composed of the same tissue types.
There are three types of tissue:

• 1. Dermal – outermost layer

• 2. Vascular – conducting tissue, transport

• 3. Ground – bulk of inner layers


1. Dermal tissue
• Epidermis is the outermost layer of cells
• Like the “skin” of animals
• In stems and leaves,
epidermis has cuticle,
a waxy layer that prevents
water loss.
• Some have trichomes, hairs.
• Root epidermis has root hairs, for
water and nutrient absorption
2. Vascular tissue
• Transports water and organic materials (sugars)
throughout the plant
• Xylem – transports water and
dissolved ions from the root
to the stem and leaves.
• Phloem – carries dissolved sugars
from leaves to rest of the plant
Xylem
• Transports water and dissolved minerals
• Tracheids: long, thin tube like structures
without perforations at the ends
• Vessel elements: short, wide tubes perforated at
the ends (together form a pipe, called vessel).
• Both cells have pits (thin sections) on the walls

Tracheids Vessel elements


Xylem cells
• Xylem cells are dead!
• They are hollow cells
and consist
only of
cell wall
Phloem
• Cells that transport organic materials (sugars)
• Phloem cells are ALIVE! (unlike xylem)
• However, they lack
nucleus and
organelles
Phloem: transports sugars
• Phloem composed of cells called sieve tube
members (STM)
• Companion cells join sieve tube members, are
related, and help to load materials into STM
• End walls of STM have large pores called
sieve plates
Companion cells

Sieve tube member Sieve plates


3. Ground tissue
• Makes up the bulk of plant organs.
• Functions: Metabolism, storage and support.

Root Stem Leaf


Plant Organs
Organs: tissues that act together to serve a
specific function

Dermal
• Roots Vascular
Ground

Dermal
• Stems Vascular
Ground

Dermal
• Leaves Vascular
Ground
Functions of plant organs:
• ROOTS: Anchorage, water/nutrient absorption
from soil, storage, water/nutrient transport

• STEMS: Support, water/nutrient transport

• LEAVES: Photosynthesis (food production)


ROOTS

• ROOTS “the hidden half”


• Functions of roots:
• Ancorage
• Absorption of water & dissolved minerals
• Storage (surplus sugars, starch)
• Conduction water/nutrients
Anatomy of a root

epidermis
cortex

vascular
Root Epidermis
• Outermost, single layer of cells that:
– Protects (from diseases)
– Absorbs water and nutrients

• ROOT HAIRS: tubular extensions


of epidermal cells.
• Increase surface area of root,
for better water/nutrient
absorption
Root Hairs: water and mineral
absorption

Root hairs
increase surface
area for better
absorption
Root Cortex
• Stores starch, sugars and other substances
Root Ground tissue
• In roots, ground tissue (a.k.a. cortex)
provides support, and
often stores sugars and starch
(for example: yams, sweet potato, etc.)

You‟re not a
yam, you‟re a Hey!
sweetpotato! I yam
what I
cortex yam,
man!
Root Cortex: Endodermis
• Endodermis: the innermost layer of the
cortex
Root cortex: Casparian strip
• The Casparian strip is a water-impermeable
strip of waxy material found in the
endodermis (innermost layer of the cortex).
• The Casparian strip helps to control the
uptake of minerals into the xylem: they have
to go through the cytoplasm of the cell!
STEMS
• Above-ground organs (usually)

• Support leaves and fruits

• Conduct water and sugars


throughout plant (xylem and phloem)
Stem anatomy
• Dermal, ground and vascular tissues…

epidermis
cortex

Vascular
pith
bundles
Types of Stems

Monocot stem Dicot stem Root


Types of stems
• Herbaceous vs. Woody stems
Tissues of stems
• Epidermis (Dermal tissue type)
• Provides protection
• Has cuticle (wax) prevents water loss
• Trichomes (hairs) for protection, to release
scents, oils, etc.
Stem Vascular tissue
• Vascular bundles – composed of both
xylem and phloem
• Xylem
– Conducts water
– Support
• Phloem
– Conducts food Vascular
– Support cambium
Vascular cambium
• Occurs in woody stems
• Vascular cambium located in the middle
of the vascular bundle, between xylem and
phloem
Vascular tissue: Trees
• Vascular tissue is located on the outer layers
of the tree.

bark

phloem
Vascular
cambium wood

xylem
Girdling: cutting around a tree
• Damages the phloem and xylem, eventually
killing the tree!
Vascular tissue forms rings in trees
• Annual rings: xylem formed by the
vascular cambium during one growing
season
• One ring = one year
History of the tree: annual rings
Dendrochronology : tree time-keeping

1917 & 1945: Tree


Survives two World
1776: Declaration Wars 1969: Man
of US independence lands on Moon
1492: Columbus lands in
the Americas

1620: Pilgrims land 1861: Start of


in Plymouth, Mass. Civil War
1489: Tree is planted 1971: Birth Year
by Native American
of the IDIOT
who cut down
this tree!!!
Ground tissue: Cortex & pith
• Stores food (e.g. potato)
• Site of Photosynthesis (when green)
• Support cells

cortex

pith
LEAVES:
• „Photosynthetic factories‟ of the plant…
• Function: Photosynthesis – food
production for the whole plant
• Blade: Flat expanded area
• Petiole: stalk that connects
leaf blade to stem, and
transports materials
BLADE
Leaf Anatomy
• Leaf anatomy is correlated to photosynthesis:
Carbon dioxide + Water  sugars + oxygen

dermal

ground

vascular

dermal
Leaf epidermis
• Is transparent – so that sun light can go through.
• Waxy cuticle protects against drying out
• Lower epidermis: stomata with guard cells –
for gas exchange (CO2, H2O in; O2 out)
Leaf epidermis
• Trichomes (give fuzzy texture)

(“Panda plant”)
Leaf vascular tissue
• VEINS  vascular tissue of leaves.
• Veins are composed of xylem (water transport)
phloem (food transport)
and bundle sheaths,
cells surrounding the
xylem/phloem for
strength & support
Leaf Mesophyll
• Middle of the leaf (meso-phyll)
• Composed of photosynthetic ground cells:
• Palisade parenchyma
(long columns below epidermis;
have lots chloroplasts for
photosynthesis)
Spongy parenchyma
(spherical cells)
with air spaces around,
(for gas exchange)
Plant water transport
• How can water move from
the ground
all the way
to the top
of a 100 m
tall redwood
tree?
Water transport in plants:
• The same way we drink soda
from a straw!

• Water‟s great
cohesive forces (molecules
sticking to each other)
and adhesive forces
(attaching to walls of xylem cells)
Transpiration-cohesion Theory
for water transport in the xylem
• Evaporation of water in the leaves
(through stomates) generates the „sucking
force‟ that pulls adjacent water molecules
up the leaf surface
Water transport (cont.)
• Like a long chain, water molecules pull each
other up the column.
• The column goes from roots  leaves.

• What‟s amazing is that the


water moves up by using the sun‟s
evaporative energy…
• Plants control transpiration by opening/closing
stomata
Sugar translocation
• 1. Sugars made in leaf mesophyll cells (source)
diffuse to phloem cells in the vascular bundles.
• 2. Companion cells load dissolved sugars into
the phloem STM using energy (ATP).
• 3. Water moves into cells with high sugar
concentration.
• 4. Osmotic water flow generates a high
hydraulic pressure that moves dissolved sugars
through the phloem to the rest of the plant
(sink).
Pressure flow in phloem
• Sugars made in the
leaves are loaded into
companion cells and
into phloem STM.

• Water (from xylem)


moves in by osmosis,
creating pressure flow
down the phloem.
Plant Hormones
• Chemical compounds produced by plants
• Effective at very low concentrations
• Five major hormone groups are:
1. Auxins
2. Gibberellins
3. Cytokinins
4. Abscisic Acid
5. Ethylene
1. AUXINS
• Promote cell growth
• Involved in
gravitropism

and phototropism

• Control fruit development


2. Gibberellins
• Promote stem elongation

3. Cytokinins
• Promote cell division and
organ differentiation

4. Abscisic Acid
• Promotes seed dormancy
• Causes stomata closing
5. ETHYLENE
• Gaseous hormone,
very simple formula (C2H4)

• Ethylene promotes
fruit ripening!

Air Ethylene
“One rotten apple spoils the barrel”

• Why?
Probably due to ethylene!
Rotten apple producing
lots of ethylene!
• Autocatalytic
• As a response to injury
Avocado ripening…
• Place in a paper bag, with a ripe banana!

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