1 / 11

Plants Part 2: Stems

Plants Part 2: Stems. Text ref 12.3. Functions. Connect vascular tissue of leaves to roots Transport Raise and support leaves and reproductive organs Maximize sunlight Position for pollination Some are specialized for photosynthesis, storage, protection. Structure.

blue
Download Presentation

Plants Part 2: Stems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plants Part 2: Stems Text ref 12.3

  2. Functions • Connect vascular tissue of leaves to roots • Transport • Raise and support leaves and reproductive organs • Maximize sunlight • Position for pollination • Some are specialized for photosynthesis, storage, protection

  3. Structure • Stems can be herbaceous or woody • Herbaceous • Vascular bundles in ground tissue • Contains xylem and phloem • Xylem = closer to centre • Phloem = closer to outside

  4. Woody • More complex structure • Vascular cambium – allows for thicker stem growth • Meristematic cells that divide to form new xylem and phloem each year • Xyleminside, phloemoutside

  5. Sapwood = younger xylem • Transport • Heartwood = older xylem • Support • Bark = everything out- side of vasc. cambium • phloem, cork cambium, cork • Cork cambium – produces cork • Protection

  6. Growth rings • “Spring” wood • Vascular cambium produces xylem rapidly • Thin walls, light colour • “Summer” wood • Vascular cambium produces xylem slowly • Thicker walls, darker colour

  7. Vascular Tissue Cell Types • Xylem Cells • Thick walls • Dead at maturity • Cell walls have lignin (strength) • Tracheids = long, cylindrical, tapered ends • Pits (holes) allow transfer of water/solutes • Vessel elements = shorter, wider, less tapered • Sides have pits, ends have perforated plates

  8. Phloem Cells • Living at maturity • Contain cytoplasm • Three types of cells: • Sieve cells = pores in walls, have nucleus • Sieve tube elements = lack many organelles • Have sieve plates between cells (transport) • Companion cells = direct metabolic process of sieve tube elements

  9. Stem Specializations • Underground stems: • Can form new plant • (tubers, corms, rhizomes) • “On ground” stems • Grow along soil • (spider plants, vines)

  10. Homework: • Page 557 # 15

More Related