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Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth
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Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Plant Structure, Growth, and Development

Introduction

The Angiosperm Body

Plant Growth

Page 2: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Introduction to Modern Plant Biology

• Molecular biology is identifying crucial genes (flower development); giving a better understanding of processes such as water flow, disease resistance, shoot and root control

• Structure and function is a key theme

Page 3: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

The Angiosperm Body

• Problems to be solved: gravity, light, water transport, reproduction, and desiccation

• Root and shoot systems

Page 4: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 5: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

The Root System

• Functions: anchor, store food, absorb and conduct water and minerals

• two types: taproot and fibrous root systems

• role of root hairs

• mycorrhizae

• adventitious roots: form above ground from stem or leaf

Page 6: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

The Shoot System

• Stems, leaves and flowers

• growth occurs at apex

• apical dominance has evolutionary importance

• underground stems:bulbs and rhizomes(potatoes)-store food

• leaves: main photosynthetic organ

Page 7: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 8: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Types of Plant Cells

• Function determined by protoplast and cell wall adaptations

• five types of plant cells:

1. Parenchyma-synthesis and storage

2. Collenchyma-support in young plants

3. Sclernchyma-thick secondary walls, lack

protoplast in mature cells?, supportive

4. Xylem-water conduction, two types:

tracheids and vessel elements

5. Phloem-food conduction

Page 9: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 10: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Tissue Systems

• Three tissue systems: dermal, vascular and ground tissues

• Dermal-single outside layer

• Vascular-xylem and phloem, transport and support

• Ground-between dermal and vascular, storage, synthesis, and support

Page 11: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 12: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Plant Growth

• Meristems generate cells; two types: apical and lateral

• genetically determined life spans (most)

• annuals and perennials

• plants exhibit indeterminate growth

• two types of growth: primary and secondary

Page 13: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 14: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Root Growth

• Primary growth divided into three zones: 1. Cell division: apical meristem, this

differentiates into: protoderm, procambium, and ground meristem (primary tissues)2. Cell elongation: elongate at least 10X, pushes tip through the soil 3. Maturation: cells complete their differentiation

Page 15: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 16: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Primary Tissues in the Root

• Protoderm: outermost layer of primary meristem, give rise to epidermis, many with root hairs

• Procambium: forms stele (central cylinder) containing xylem and phloem,

• Ground meristem: cortex between stele and epidermis, parechyma cells, stores food, endodermis single cell layer boundary between cortex and stele, pericycle inside endodermis

Page 17: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Primary Growth of Stems

• Apical meristem forms primary meristems (protoderm, ground meristem, and procambium)

• Procambium forms vascular tissue in bundles

• Ground meristem forms pith and cortex

• Protoderm forms epidermal tissues

Page 18: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Leaf Growth

• Ground tissues form the mesophyll

• procambium forms the veins

• Protoderm forms the upper and lower epidermis, guard cells waxy cuticle

Page 19: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 20: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Secondary Growth

• Produced by growth in diameter

• results from vascular and cork cambium

• vascular produces xylem and phloem

• cork cambium produces covering of roots and stems that replace epidermis

• occurs in all gymnosperms and most angiosperms, rare in monocots

Page 21: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.
Page 22: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Stages of Differentiation

• Apical meristem• differentiates into: protoderm, ground meristem,

and procambium• protoderm differentiations into epidermal

structures• procambium differentiates into the vascular tissues• ground meristem produces tissues that fill in

between the epidermis and vascular tissues

Page 23: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Secondary Growth in Stems

• Vascular cambium produces secondary vascular tissues: xylem--forms wood; phloem--contributes to the formation of bark and sloughs off

• cork cambium produces the periderm (protective coat of plant, combination of cork cambium, layers of cork, and phelloderm,)

• bark-all tissues external to the vascular cambium

Page 24: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Introduction The Angiosperm Body Plant Growth.

Secondary Growth in Roots

• Vascular cambium produces secondary xylem to the inside and secondary phloem to the outside

• cortex and epidermis split and are shed as the stele increases in diameter

• very similar to stems, produces annual rings