1 / 20

Angiosperms III

Angiosperms III. Plant Cell Types. Plant Cell Types. Most angiosperm plants are composed of 10 fundamental cell types Many more specialized cell types do occur in some plants These 10 cell types are differentiate from the dividing cells found in meristems and cambia (meristematic cells).

finnea
Download Presentation

Angiosperms III

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. Angiosperms III Plant Cell Types

  2. Plant Cell Types • Most angiosperm plants are composed of 10 fundamental cell types • Many more specialized cell types do occur in some plants • These 10 cell types are differentiate from the dividing cells found in meristems and cambia (meristematic cells)

  3. Meristematic cells • Found in meristems (root and shoot), the cambial layers, and buds • Function is cell division (cell cycle) • Small (about 10 m) with a large nucleus (the cells you saw in the squashed root tip in the mitosis lab)

  4. Parenchyma Cells • Large (100m) cells • Thin cellulose cell walls • Usually with a large vacuole • Function as storage or “packing” cells • Common in the pith and cortical layers, the wood rays, petals, etc… • A “generalist” cell type

  5. Chlorenchyma Cells • Large parenchyma cells with chloroplasts • Found in the leaves and in some stems • Major function is photosynthesis

  6. Collenchyma Cells • Cells used for temporary support, primarily in herbaceous stems • Cells walls have extra cellulose thickenings in the corners (strong but flexible) • Often found in bundles as “collenchyma tissue” just under the epidermis • Best experienced in celery (or rhubarb) as the “ribs” that get stuck in your teeth

  7. Sclerenchyma Cell Types • “Sclerenchyma cells” are four cell types which all share these features in common: • all have thick secondary cell walls of LIGNIN (and stain red in prepared slides) • all are DEAD at maturity • include: fibers, sclereids, tracheids, and vessels elements

  8. Fibers • Long, narrow cells with thick walls and a small lumen • Used for support in woody tissues (secondary xylem) or for support in vascular bundles and herbaceous stems • Not found in conifer wood (thus the wood is “soft”)

  9. Fibers(longitudinal section)

  10. Sclereids • Irregular cells with thick walls • Function primarily for protection (surfaces often look like jigsaw puzzles) • Found in dry fruits (nuts etc.), seed coats, some leaves

  11. Sclereids • A special form of a sclereid, the stone cell, gives pears their “gritty” texture

  12. Tracheids • Water conducting cells of the xylem in gymnosperms, ferns, and fern allies • Cells have closed end walls • Found along with vessels in angiosperms • May have complex “pits” through which water moves from cell to cell • Secondary wall may be deposited in rings or spiral shapes

  13. Vessels Elements • Water conducting cells of the xylem in angiosperms; also found in gnetophytes • Have open end walls • May have spiral or ring-like secondary cell wall patterns

  14. Vessel Elements • Are short and squat cells, one on top of another, forming vessel “tubes” for conduction

  15. Sieve Tube Members • Tall, thin cells with only primary cellulose cell walls • Living cells but lack a nucleus at maturity • Similar to sieve cells of gymnosperms

  16. Sieve Tube Members • Part of the phloem tissue which conducts sugars and hormones throughout the plant

  17. Sieve Tube Members • End walls have a “sieve plate”

  18. Companion Cells • Long, thin cells with a nucleus directly adjacent to each sieve tube members • Sieve tube member and its companion cell are derived from the same initial • Responsible for the loading and unloading of substances from the sieve tube members in the phloem • Similar to albuminous cells in gymnosperms

  19. Development of Sieve Tubes and Companion Cells

  20. Meristematic Parenchyma Chlorenchyma Collenchyma Fibers Sclereids Tracheids Vessel Elements Sieve Tube Members Companion Cells Summary of Cell Types

More Related