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Plant Anatomy Quiz 12B

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Plant Anatomy. Quiz 12B. Two important characteristics of plant cells. cell walls plastids. Cell Walls. outer boundary, provide support, made mostly of cellulose Most plants are supported by two related systems: cell walls & turgor pressure. Turgor Pressure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Plant Anatomy

Plant Anatomy

Quiz 12B

Page 2: Plant Anatomy

Two important characteristics of plant cells

• cell walls

• plastids

Page 3: Plant Anatomy

Cell Walls

• outer boundary, provide support, made mostly of cellulose

• Most plants are supported by two related systems: cell walls & turgor pressure.

Page 4: Plant Anatomy

Turgor Pressure

water pressure inside a plant cell’s central vacuole;

causes the stiffness of the plant cells

Page 5: Plant Anatomy

Plastids

storage center in plant cells

•Stores pigments, starch or oil.

•Examples are chloroplasts

Page 6: Plant Anatomy

Chloroplasts

contain the green pigment chlorophyll which is used

in photosynthesis to capture light energy

Page 7: Plant Anatomy

Plant Pigments

Chlorophyll: green

Xanthophyll: yellowish colors

Carotene: yellowish-orange colors

Anthocyanin: red, blue, and purple

Page 8: Plant Anatomy

tissuea group of similar cells

working together to perform a particular function

Page 9: Plant Anatomy

Our bodies have four basic kinds of tissues

• epithelial (skin)

• muscle

• connective

• nerve

Page 10: Plant Anatomy

A typical plant has 3 distinct kinds of tissue

• Structural tissue

• Meristematic tissue

• Vascular tissue

Page 11: Plant Anatomy

Structural Tissue

Most of the body, or structure, of the plant is structural tissue.

Produce food, store food, cover, support, and protect plant

Examples: epidermis, parenchyma, mesophyll, collenchyma, cork, sclerenchyma

Page 12: Plant Anatomy

Structural Tissue

Page 13: Plant Anatomy

Meristematic Tissue

Found in growing areas (buds, tips of roots and stems)

Purpose: the growth and repair of plants and plant parts (where mitosis is occurring)

Examples: apical & lateral meristems; vascular cambium, cork cambium, pericycle

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Meristematic Tissue

Page 15: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

The plant’s sap-conducting tissues

Two types: xylem & phloem

Xylem: transports water and dissolved minerals (one kind of sap) upward (long, thick-walled cells)

Phloem: transports food manufactured in the leaves (the other kind of sap) downward

Page 16: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

Xylem: long, thick-walled hollow cells (like staws)

Phloem: slightly thinner than xylem and not completely hollow tubes

Page 17: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

In leaves and in non-woody plants, the xylem and phloem are usually arranged in vascular bundles (veins). Vascular bundles are often supported by thick-walled cells called fibers.

Fibrovasular bundles: xylem and phloem surrounded by supporting tissues

Page 18: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

Page 19: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

XylemPhloem

Page 20: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

Page 21: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

Page 22: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

SunflowerStem

Page 23: Plant Anatomy

Vascular Tissue

Page 24: Plant Anatomy

Epidermis

The outer most tissue of most leaves, young roots, and young stems is the epidermis. Top and Bottom layer - epidermis (one cell thick) lack chlorophyll and serves as protection. Often epidermal cells secrete a waxy substances that form a cuticle (a noncellular protective covering of leaves) give a leaf a shiny appearance

Page 25: Plant Anatomy

Cross Section of a Leaf

Page 26: Plant Anatomy

Cross Section of a Leaf

Page 27: Plant Anatomy

Cross Section of a Leaf

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Cross Section of a Leaf

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wooda collection of layers of xylem that have built up over several years

The oldest layer of xylem is at the center of the

woody plant part newest layer is the

outermost layer

Page 30: Plant Anatomy

Kinds of Wood

• Heartwood - dead xylem cells that are often darker

• Sapwood - xylem that conduct water and minerals

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Heartwood & Sapwood

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Kinds of Wood

• Springwood - xylem cells that develop early in the growing season

• Summerwood - small, thick-walled xylem cells that develop later in the growing season

Page 33: Plant Anatomy

Springwood & Summerwood

Page 34: Plant Anatomy

Kinds of Wood

• Hardwood - comes primarily from angiosperms (oaks, maples, walnut, cherries)

• Softwood - comes primarily from gymnosperms (firs, pine, cedars, spruce)

Page 35: Plant Anatomy

Hardwood

Softwood

Page 36: Plant Anatomy

Heartwood & Sapwood

Page 37: Plant Anatomy
Page 38: Plant Anatomy

bark

the outer covering of woody plant parts(makes new xylem and phloem cells)

Page 39: Plant Anatomy

cork (the outer layer of bark) tough, thick-walled cells forming the outer layer of bark in woody plant stems; made of dead, thick-cell walls

Page 40: Plant Anatomy

cork

forms a tough, water proof coating that keeps harmful organisms out and moisture

heartwood

sapwood(xylem)

phloem

cork

vascular cambium

Annual growth ring

Page 41: Plant Anatomy

cork cambium

a layer of living cells just

under the dead cork

(produces new cork cells)