Chapter 1 - Plant Tissues and Their Function

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Chapter 1

Plant Tissues
and Their
Functions

© Cengage Learning 2016


shoot tip (terminal bud)
lateral bud

flower

node

dermal tissue
leaf

fruit

stem
vascular
tissues
ground tissue
SHOOTS
ROOTS

primary root
lateral root
root hairs

root tip
root cap

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The Plant Body
• Most plants consist of roots and shoots
– Roots are belowground plant parts
• Absorb water and dissolved minerals
• Store food
• Support the plant
– Shoots are aboveground plant parts
• Stems provide structural support
• Leaves are specialized for photosynthesis
• Flowers are specialized for reproduction

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The Plant Body
• All plant parts consist of the same tissues
– Ground tissues: make up most of a plant
– Vascular tissues: distribute water and nutrients
– Dermal tissues: cover and protect plant surfaces

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vascular tissues ground tissues dermal tissue

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Sectioning Plant Tissues

radial tangential transverse

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Monocots and Eudicots
• Differences
– Tissue organization
– Number of cotyledons (seed leaves)
• Monocots have one
• Eudicots have two
• Examples of monocots
– Lilies, orchids, grasses, palms
• Examples of eudicots
– Shrubs and trees, vines, tomatoes, dandelions

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Monocots and Eudicots

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Monocots and Eudicots

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Monocots and Eudicots

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Plant Tissues
• Simple plant tissues
– Consist of one cell type
– Parenchyma, collenchyma, sclerenchyma
• Complex plant tissues
– Consist of two or more cell types
– Dermal and vascular tissues

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Simple Tissues
• Parenchyma tissue
– Comprised of parenchyma cells
– Photosynthesis, storage, secretion, tissue repair
• Collenchyma tissue
– Comprised of collenchyma cells
– Pliable structural support
• Sclerenchyma tissue
– Comprised of fibers or sclereids
– Structural support

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Complex Dermal Tissues
• Epidermis
– Comprised of epidermal cells and their secretions
– Secretion of cuticle, protection, control of gas
exchange and water loss
• Periderm
– Cork cambium, cork cells, and parenchyma cells
– Protective cover on older stems, roots

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Complex Vascular Tissues
• Xylem
– Water-conducting tubes
– Comprised of tracheids, vessel elements,
parenchyma cells, sclerenchyma cells
• Phloem
– Sugar-conducting tubes
– Comprised of sieve elements, parenchyma cells,
sclerenchyma cells

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Plant Tissues

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Vascular tissues
one sieve
cell’s plate
wall of sieve-
tube cell
pit in
wall companion
cell

parenchyma vessel phloem fibers of


of xylem sclerenchyma
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Stems
• Provide support and position leaves for
photosynthesis
• Typically have nodes, which give rise to new
shoots or roots
• Xylem and phloem are organized as vascular
bundles
– Arrangement differs between monocots and
eudicots

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Variations on a Stem
• Stolons • Rhizomes
reproductive runners that underground storage stems that
grow horizontally grow parallel to the surface

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Variations on a Stem
• Bulbs • Stem tubers
underground stems encased in thick, fleshy storage structures that
layers of scales form on stolons or rhizomes

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Variations on a Stem
• Corms • Cladodes
Short, thickened underground Flattened, photosynthetic
storage stems stems that store water

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1.5 Leaves
• Specialized for photosynthesis and gas
exchange
• Vary in size, shape, surface specializations, and
internal structure

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elliptic palmate lobed pinnatisect

acuminate lobed odd elliptic odd


bipinnate pinnate
odd pinnate
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Specialized Leaves

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stem

lateral bud
blade

node
petiole
sheath

blade
node

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Leaf Anatomy
• Mesophyll
– Photosynthetic parenchyma with air spaces
– Composes bulk of the leaf
• Leaf veins
– Vascular bundles of leaves
• Epidermis
– Outermost tissue of a leaf, one cell thick
– Outgrowths can form hairs, scales, spikes, etc.
– Secrete waxy cuticle that slows water loss

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Eudicot Leaf Anatomy

epidermis

palisade mesophyll

spongy mesophyll
xylem
vascular
tissue phloem
epidermis stomata

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Roots
• Take up water and mineral ions from the soil
• Anchor a plant
• Sometimes used for storage

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Fibrous Root System (Monocots)
• Adventitious and lateral roots
• Vascular cylinder divides cortex and pith

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Taproot System (Eudicots)
• Primary root and lateral branches
• Central vascular cylinder

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Root Anatomy
• Vascular cylinder (stele)
– Column of vascular tissue
– Runs lengthwise through center of root
• Endodermis
– Outer boundary of vascular cylinder
– Help control which solutes are taken into plant’s vascular
system
• Pericycle
– Layer of cells just inside root endodermis
– Can give rise to lateral roots

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Primary Growth
• Lengthening of plant roots and shoots
• Production of leaves
• Originates in apical meristems (regions of
undifferentiated cells)

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Primary Growth in Shoots

apical meristem in
terminal bud

immature leaf

protoderm
procambium
ground meristem

hair

apical meristem
in lateral (axillary) bud

procambium

ground tissue

M. I. Walker/Science
Source

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protoderm

procambium dermal tissue

Cell Enlargement vascular tissue

ground tissue
ground meristem

apical meristem Cell


Differetiationn
in root tip

procambium
root cap
ground meristem

Cell Division protoderm


apical meristem
root cap

A A longitudinal cut through the center of a root tip of onion B Dividing cells of root apical meristem give rise to protoderm, ground
(Allium), a monocot. Labels indicate where procambium meristem, and procambium, which differentiate into dermal tissue, ground
is giving rise to the vascular cylinder; protoderm, to the epidermis; tissue, and vascular tissue. Regions of cell division, differentiation, and
ground meristem, to the root cortex. enlargement are indicated.

(A) © Ed Reschke/Photolibrary/Getty Images; (B) © Cengage Learning; (in text) Michael Clayton/University of Wisconsin, Department of Botany.

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Secondary Growth
• Thickening of shoots and roots
• Production of wood
• Two types of lateral meristems:
– Vascular cambium
– Cork cambium

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Secondary Growth at Vascular Cambium

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Structure of Wood
bark
secondary phloem
sapwood heartwood vascular periderm (includes
new xylem) (old xylem) cambium cork cambium, cork,
some phloem, and
new parenchyma)

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left, © 2016 Cengage Learning; right, Science Photo Library/SuperStock.

pith

endodermis
primary xylem
wood secondary xylem
vascular
phloem
bark
cork cambium
paeriderm parenchyma
collenchima
cork
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Tree Rings and Old Secrets
• Tree rings form from seasonal growth
– Early wood: large-diameter, thin-walled xylem in
spring
– Late wood: small-diameter, thick-walled xylem in
summer
• Each band signifies one year

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Tree Rings
vessel in xylem direction of growth

early late early late early late early late early

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Data from Tree Rings

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Data from Tree Rings

1587–1589 1606–1612

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Reproductive Structures
• Flowers
– Specialized reproductive structures of angiosperms
– Develop at the tips of reproductive shoots
• Flower parts are modified leaves
– Calyx: outer whorl of sepals
– Corolla: inner whorl of petals

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Male vs. Female Flower Parts
• Male
– Stamens: consist of a filament with an anther at the tip
– Anthers: contain pollen sacs in which male
gametophytes are produced

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Male vs. Female Flower Parts
• Female
– Carpels: consist of an ovary, stigma, and often a style
– Ovary: enlarged base of carpel in which one or more
ovules form
– Ovule: structure in which female gametophytes are
produced
– Stigma: upper part of carpel; receives pollen

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Flower Structure

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Flower Anatomy

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Variations in Flower Structure

Solitary, Elongated Composite, with many Incomplete,


irregular blossom inflorescence individual florets with no petals
Lady’s slipper orchid Hyacinth Daisy Eucalyptus
(Paphiopedilum) (Hyacinthus orientalis) (Gerbera jamesonii) (Eucalyptus robusta)

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Imperfect Flowers

Begonias

Female blossom Male blossom


(no stamens) (no carpels)
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Flowers and Their Pollinators
• Pollination
– The arrival of pollen on a receptive stigma
• Pollination vector
– Environmental agent that transfers pollen grains
from one plant to another
• Pollinator
– Animal pollination vectors such as insects or birds
• Nectar
– Sweet fluid that rewards pollinators

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UV-Reflecting Patterns

What we see

What bees see

Evening primrose
(Oenothera biennis)
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Pollination Syndromes

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Examples of Pollinators

Birds Mammals Insects

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Flower-Pollinator Coevolution

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A New Generation Begins
• Life cycle of flowering plants is dominated by the
sporophyte
– Sporophyte
• Diploid, spore-producing plant body
– Gametophyte
• Haploid, gamete-producing structure
– Megaspore
• Haploid spore that gives rise to an egg-producing
gametophyte
– Microspore
• Haploid spore that gives rise to a pollen grain
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Flowering Plant Life Cycle

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Double Fertilization
• Flowering plants undergo double fertilization
– Pollen tube that reaches and penetrates female
gametophyte releases two sperm cells
• One sperm cell fuses with the egg and forms diploid
zygote
• Second sperm cell fuses with endosperm mother cell and
forms a triploid cell
• This triploid cell gives rise to endosperm (nutritive tissue
in seeds of flowering plants)

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pollen sac an ovule

anther ovary
(cutaway view) wall

ovary
Sporophyte (2n )

seedling
a cell in the pollen sac

seed
Meiosis in Diploid Diploid Meiosis in
anther Haploid Haploid ovary

pollen
microspores (n) tube

megaspores (n)
endosper m
mother cell
(n + n)

egg (n)
sperm (n)

Double
fertilization
stigma

style
pollen tube
sperm cells

male female
gametophyte gametophyte

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Flower Sex

• Species-specific
molecular signals
stimulate pollen
germination and
guide pollen tube
growth to the egg

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Pollen Tube Growth

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Seed Formation
• After double fertilization
– The zygote develops into an embryo
– The endosperm becomes enriched with nutrients
• Seed
– a mature ovule that consists of an embryo
sporophyte, its food reserves, and a seed coat

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Seed Formation

many ovules
inside ovary
wall

embryo

endosperm integuments
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Seed Formation

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Embryonic Development
• As an embryo is developing, the parent plant
transfers nutrients to the ovule
– Monocots use nutrients in endosperm
– Eudicots use nutrients in cotyledons, transferred from
the endosperm
• Humans also get nutrition from seeds (grains)
– Embryo (germ) contains protein and vitamins
– Endosperm contains mostly starch

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Fruits
• Mature ovary of a flowering plant, often with
accessory parts; encloses a seed or seeds
• Adapted for specific dispersal vectors such as
wind, water, or animals
• Categorized by tissue of origin, composition,
and whether it is dry or fleshy

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Fruit Development

tissue
derived from
ovary wall
carpel wall
seed

enlarged
receptacle

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Ways to Classify Fruits

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True Fruits

• Consist only of the ovary wall and its contents

These images (cherry and


pea pod) need to be
replaced without the gray
background (embedded
images from pg 492).

Cherry Pea pod


– True fruit – True fruit
– Simple fruit – Simple fruit
– Fleshy drupe – Dehiscent dry fruit

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Accessory Fruits
• Floral parts, such as petals, sepals, stamens, or
receptacle, expand with developing ovary

Strawberry Blackberry Pineapple


– Accessory fruit – Accessory fruit – Accessory fruit
– Aggregate of many – Aggregate of many – Multiple fruit formed
individual dry small, fleshy drupes by fusion of many
indehiscent fruits small, fleshy berries
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Wind-Dispersed Fruits

© Cengage Learning 2016


Water-Dispersed Fruits

© Cengage Learning 2016


Animal-Dispersed Fruits

© Cengage Learning 2016


Dry, Dehiscent Fruits

© Cengage Learning 2016

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