1 / 80

Anatomy & Growth of Angiosperms

Anatomy & Growth of Angiosperms. Two plant groups: monocots & eudicots. A. Uniqueness of Plants. I. Introduction. http://www.fugu-sg.org/~elia/cambodia/templesfacesweb/pages/A3_Embracing_Roots.htm. B . Forces for Change. 1. Genetics 2. Environment – two time scales:

jud
Download Presentation

Anatomy & Growth of Angiosperms

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. Anatomy & Growth of Angiosperms

  2. Two plant groups: monocots & eudicots

  3. A. Uniqueness of Plants I. Introduction http://www.fugu-sg.org/~elia/cambodia/templesfacesweb/pages/A3_Embracing_Roots.htm

  4. B. Forces for Change • 1. Genetics • 2. Environment – two time scales: • a. Long-term: accumulation of adaptations that • enhanced survival & reproduction (evolution by • natural selection) • b. Short-term: plasticity = wide range of • phenotypes for each genotype. Allows plants to • adjust to changing environment (ex. Shorter plant in • dry year so that it can still reproduce)

  5. Muscle cell Parenchyma cell Cells Tissues Muscle tissue Dermal tissue Organs Heart Leaves Systems Circulatory system Shoot system

  6. II. Plant Organs: Roots, Stems, Leaves A. Roots 1. Functions a. Collect water & minerals from soil b. Anchor plant c. Store food (carb’s from photosynthesis) to be used for flowering & fruiting d. Covered with root hairs – increases surface area for absorption

  7. Fig. 35.2

  8. Fig. 35.4 2. Types a. Prop root c. Aerial strangler root b. Storage root d. Buttress root e. Pneumatophore

  9. B. Stems/shoots • 1. Functions • a. Support, transport • b. Some photosynthesis • 2. Two types of shoots • a. Vegetative – leaves only • b. Reproductive – produces flowers

  10. 3. Two parts of the stem: • a. Node – point of leaf attachment • b. Inter-node – stem segments between nodes

  11. 4. Buds Apical dominance = the presence of an apical bud inhibits the growth of axillary buds. - remove or depress apical bud, axillary buds begin to grow. a. Terminal bud – contains a shoot apical meristem; shoot growth is concentrated here b. Axillary buds – in angle (axil) between leaf & branch, contain meristem with potential to become a vegetative shoot. Mostly dormant.

  12. Fig. 35.2

  13. 5. Modified Shoots (stems): a. Stolons – above-ground runners b. Rhizomes – below-ground runners Asexual, vegetative propagation c. Bulbs – swollen underground shoots d. Tubers – swollen rhizomes Stores food for later growth

  14. Fig. 35.5

  15. C. Leaves– main photosynthetic organs 1. Parts a. Petiole b. Blade http://www.knotweed.co.uk/japknot_Info.htm

  16. 2. Types Compound, doubly compound – why??

  17. a. Tendrils Fig. 35.7 3. Modified leaves b. Spines c. Succulents

  18. III. Plant Tissue Fig. 35.8

  19. A. Dermal or Epidermis 1. Characteristics a. single layer of tightly packed cells covering the young parts of the plant. b. Functions in protection c. Root hairs are specialized epidermal extensions d. Secretes waxy cuticle of the leaf

  20. B. Ground 1. Characteristics a. Fills the space between dermal and vascular tissue systems. b . Diverse functions: Photosynthesis, storage, & support pith In eudicots stems: cortex

  21. C. Vascular 1. Characteristics a. function in transport between roots & shoots, and structural support of plant 2. Types a. Xylem: H2O & minerals transported up to shoot system b. Phloem: Food transported to roots & non- photosynthetic parts such as the flowers

  22. IV. The Plant Cell Fig. 7.8

  23. A. Generalized Same as animals, except: 1. No lysozomes (digestive organelle) 2. Cell walls: maintains shape, structural support, protects from damage. Made of cellulose, protein, & sometimes lignin 3. Chloroplasts 4. Vacuole – storage, waste breakdown, growth! 5. Plasmodesmata – holes in cell wall, creates channels to connect cytoplasm of adjacent cells

  24. B. Plant Cell Categories 1. Parenchyma 4. Water-conducting cells of the xylem 3. Sclerenchyma 5. Sugar-conducting cells of the phloem 2. Collenchyma

  25. 1. Parenchyma • a. Characteristics • i. Least specialized cell. Can differentiate into • other cell types • ii. Primary cell walls only - thin and flexible • iii. Lack secondary plant cell walls • iv. Most metabolically active – lots of chloroplasts • for PSN (PhotoSyNthesis) • v. Starch, carbohydrate production & storage in • stems

  26. 2. Collenchyma a. Characteristics i. Primary walls are unevenly thickened ii. Usually lack secondary walls. iii. Usually grouped in strands to support young parts of plants without restraining growth iv. Flexible, elongate with growing shoots

  27. 3. Sclerenchyma a. Characteristics i. Function in mechanical support ii. Have rigid and thick secondary walls strengthened with lignin. iii. May be dead at functional maturity iv. Cell walls left behind as skeleton

  28. Lignin:

  29. 3. Sclerenchyma b. Two types, both function in support: i. Fibers - long, slender, tapered cells occurring in bundles. ii. Sclereids - short, irregularly-shaped. Ex. hard seed coats

  30. Fig.35.9

  31. 4. Water/Mineral conducting cells of the xylem: a. 2 types: tracheids & vessel elements

  32. i.Tracheids are long, thin tapered cells having lignin-hardened secondary walls with pits. Dead at maturity Water flows from cell to cell (laterally) through pits in cell wall (1o wall only) Support function ii. Vessel Elements are wider, shorter Arranged end-to-end to form tubes End walls are perforated for free flow of water More efficient as water conductors than tracheids

  33. Fig. 35.9

  34. 5. Sugar-conducting cells of the phloem • a. 2 types • i. Sieve-tube members: • Chains of cells arranged end-to-end, Alive at functional • maturity, Lack a nucleus, ribosomes, & vacuole, and • Cells separated by perforated sieveplates – allow sugar • movement. • ii. Companion cells: • Load sugars into the sieve tube member, Nucleus and • ribosomes also serve the sieve-tube member.

  35. Fig. 35.9

  36. V. Growth & Development http://www.cneccc.edu.hk/subjects/bio/album/Chapter20/PLANT_GROWTH.html

  37. A. Definitions 1. Development is the sum of all the changes 2. Cell Division 3. Morphogenesis

  38. B. Processes of plant cellular development: 1. Cell Growth a. Cell division (Mitosis) in itself does not mean an increase in growth. b. Cell division yields no expansion of size. • c. Cell elongation increases growth.

  39. Fig. 35.22

  40. 2. Cell elongation a. due to water uptake b. Direction of expansion = perpendicular to alignment of cellulose microfibrils in cell wall c. Enzymes weaken cross-link between microfibrils, allowing cell to expand.

  41. Fig. 35.24

  42. Fig. 39.8

  43. 3. Morphogenesis a. The coordinated arrangement of cells into tissues & organs b. Pattern formation – development of specific structures in specific places (e.g. Flowers born on the terminus of branches as opposed to leaf axils. c. Depends on: i. Positional information – chemical signals from surrounding cells indicate the cell’s position on plant ii. Polarity of the plant, asymmetrical cell divisions iii. Both affect the transcription of homeotic genes

  44. 4. Cellular Differentiation • a. Transformation of genetically identical cells into cells with • diverse biochemical and structural features. How? • i. Selective transcription of appropriate genes • ii. How? Chapters 18 & 39 • iii. Flow of Info

  45. DNA Replication Transcription RNA Energy Amino Acids Translation Polypeptide Additional Materials Energy Modification Functional Protein The Flow of Information

  46. b. Regulation i. at transcriptional level ii. Regulation at translational level iii. Regulation at post translational level iv. Hormonal controls v. Regulation at substrate level vi. Regulation by environmental signals: light, gravity,…..

More Related