Transcript Chapter 35

LECTURE PRESENTATIONS
For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION
Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Chapter 35
Plant Structure, Growth, and
Development
Lectures by
Erin Barley
Kathleen Fitzpatrick
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Overview: Are Plants Computers?
• Romanesco grows according to a repetitive
program
• The development of plants depends on the
environment and is highly adaptive
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 35.1
Concept 35.1: Plants have a hierarchical
organization consisting of organs, tissues,
and cells
• Plants have organs composed of different tissues,
which in turn are composed of different cell types
• A tissue is a group of cells consisting of one or
more cell types that together perform a specialized
function
• An organ consists of several types of tissues that
together carry out particular functions
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Three Basic Plant Organs: Roots,
Stems, and Leaves
• Basic morphology of vascular plants reflects their
evolution as organisms that draw nutrients from
below ground and above ground
• Plants take up water and minerals from below
ground
• Plants take up CO2 and light from above ground
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• Three basic organs evolved: roots, stems, and
leaves
• They are organized into a root system and a
shoot system
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Figure 35.2
Reproductive shoot (flower)
Apical bud
Node
Internode
Apical bud
Vegetative shoot
Leaf
Axillary bud
Shoot
system
Blade
Petiole
Stem
Taproot
Lateral (branch)
roots
Root
system
• Roots rely on sugar produced by
photosynthesis in the shoot system, and shoots
rely on water and minerals absorbed by the root
system
• Monocots and eudicots are the two major
groups of angiosperms
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Roots
• A root is an organ with important functions:
– Anchoring the plant
– Absorbing minerals and water
– Storing carbohydrates
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• Most eudicots and gymnosperms have a taproot
system, which consists of:
– A taproot, the main vertical root
– Lateral roots, or branch roots, that arise from the
taproot
• Most monocots have a fibrous root system, which
consists of:
– Adventitious roots that arise from stems or leaves
– Lateral roots that arise from the adventitious roots
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• In most plants, absorption of water and minerals
occurs near the root hairs, where vast numbers of
tiny root hairs increase the surface area
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Figure 35.3
• Many plants have root adaptations with
specialized functions
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Figure 35.4
“Strangling”
aerial roots
Storage
roots
Prop roots
Buttress
roots
Pneumatophores
Figure 35.4a
Prop roots
Figure 35.4b
Storage
roots
Figure 35.4c
“Strangling” aerial roots
Figure 35.4d
Pneumatophores
Figure 35.4e
Buttress roots
Stems
• A stem is an organ consisting of
– An alternating system of nodes, the points at
which leaves are attached
– Internodes, the stem segments between nodes
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• An axillary bud is a structure that has the
potential to form a lateral shoot, or branch
• An apical bud, or terminal bud, is located near the
shoot tip and causes elongation of a young shoot
• Apical dominance helps to maintain dormancy in
most axillary buds
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• Many plants have modified stems (e.g., rhizomes,
bulbs, stolons, tubers)
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Figure 35.5
Rhizomes
Rhizome
Root
Bulbs
Storage leaves
Stem
Stolons
Stolon
Tubers
Figure 35.5a
Rhizome
Root
Rhizomes
Figure 35.5b
Storage leaves
Stem
Bulbs
Figure 35.5c
Stolon
Stolons
Figure 35.5d
Tubers
Leaves
• The leaf is the main photosynthetic organ of most
vascular plants
• Leaves generally consist of a flattened blade and
a stalk called the petiole, which joins the leaf to a
node of the stem
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• Monocots and eudicots differ in the arrangement
of veins, the vascular tissue of leaves
– Most monocots have parallel veins
– Most eudicots have branching veins
• In classifying angiosperms, taxonomists may use
leaf morphology as a criterion
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Figure 35.6
Simple leaf
Axillary
bud
Compound leaf
Leaflet
Petiole
Doubly
compound leaf
Petiole
Axillary
bud
Petiole
Axillary
bud
Leaflet
• Some plant species have evolved modified leaves
that serve various functions
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Figure 35.7
Tendrils
Spines
Storage
leaves
Reproductive
leaves
Bracts
Figure 35.7a
Tendrils
Figure 35.7b
Spines
Figure 35.7c
Storage leaves
Figure 35.7d
Reproductive
leaves
Figure 35.7e
Bracts
Dermal, Vascular, and Ground Tissues
• Each plant organ has dermal, vascular, and
ground tissues
• Each of these three categories forms a tissue
system
• Each tissue system is continuous throughout the
plant
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Figure 35.8
Dermal
tissue
Ground
tissue
Vascular
tissue
• In nonwoody plants, the dermal tissue system
consists of the epidermis
• A waxy coating called the cuticle helps prevent
water loss from the epidermis
• In woody plants, protective tissues called
periderm replace the epidermis in older regions of
stems and roots
• Trichomes are outgrowths of the shoot epidermis
and can help with insect defense
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Figure 35.9
EXPERIMENT
Very hairy pod
(10 trichomes/
mm2)
Slightly hairy pod
(2 trichomes/
mm2)
Bald pod
(no trichomes)
Slightly hairy pod:
25% damage
Bald pod:
40% damage
RESULTS
Very hairy pod:
10% damage
Figure 35.9a
• The vascular tissue system carries out longdistance transport of materials between roots and
shoots
• The two vascular tissues are xylem and phloem
• Xylem conveys water and dissolved minerals
upward from roots into the shoots
• Phloem transports organic nutrients from where
they are made to where they are needed
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• The vascular tissue of a stem or root is collectively
called the stele
• In angiosperms the stele of the root is a solid
central vascular cylinder
• The stele of stems and leaves is divided into
vascular bundles, strands of xylem and phloem
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• Tissues that are neither dermal nor vascular are
the ground tissue system
• Ground tissue internal to the vascular tissue is
pith; ground tissue external to the vascular tissue
is cortex
• Ground tissue includes cells specialized for
storage, photosynthesis, and support
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Common Types of Plant Cells
• Like any multicellular organism, a plant is
characterized by cellular differentiation, the
specialization of cells in structure and function
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• The major types of plant cells are:
–
–
–
–
–
Parenchyma
Collenchyma
Sclerenchyma
Water-conducting cells of the xylem
Sugar-conducting cells of the phloem
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Parenchyma Cells
•
Mature parenchyma cells
–
–
–
–
–
Have thin and flexible primary walls
Lack secondary walls
Are the least specialized
Perform the most metabolic functions
Retain the ability to divide and differentiate
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BioFlix: Tour of a Plant Cell
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Figure 35.10a
Parenchyma cells in Elodea
leaf, with chloroplasts (LM)
60 m
Collenchyma Cells
• Collenchyma cells are grouped in strands and
help support young parts of the plant shoot
• They have thicker and uneven cell walls
• They lack secondary walls
• These cells provide flexible support without
restraining growth
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Figure 35.10b
Collenchyma cells
(in Helianthus stem) (LM)
5 m
Sclerenchyma Cells
• Sclerenchyma cells are rigid because of thick
secondary walls strengthened with lignin
• They are dead at functional maturity
• There are two types:
– Sclereids are short and irregular in shape and
have thick lignified secondary walls
– Fibers are long and slender and arranged in
threads
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Figure 35.10c
5 m
Sclereid cells in pear (LM)
25 m
Cell wall
Fiber cells (cross section from ash tree) (LM)
Figure 35.10ca
5 m
Sclereid cells in pear (LM)
Cell wall
Figure 35.10cb
25 m
Fiber cells (cross section from ash tree) (LM)
Water-Conducting Cells of the Xylem
• The two types of water-conducting cells,
tracheids and vessel elements, are dead at
maturity
• Tracheids are found in the xylem of all vascular
plants
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• Vessel elements are common to most
angiosperms and a few gymnosperms
• Vessel elements align end to end to form long
micropipes called vessels
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Figure 35.10d
Vessel
Tracheids
100 m
Tracheids and vessels
(colorized SEM)
Pits
Perforation
plate
Vessel
element
Vessel elements, with
perforated end walls
Tracheids
Figure 35.10da
Vessel
Tracheids
100 m
Tracheids and vessels
(colorized SEM)
Sugar-Conducting Cells of the Phloem
• Sieve-tube elements are alive at functional
maturity, though they lack organelles
• Sieve plates are the porous end walls that allow
fluid to flow between cells along the sieve tube
• Each sieve-tube element has a companion cell
whose nucleus and ribosomes serve both cells
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Figure 35.10e
3 m
Sieve-tube elements:
longitudinal view (LM)
Sieve plate
Sieve-tube element (left)
Companion
and companion cell:
cells
cross section (TEM)
Sieve-tube
elements
Plasmodesma
Sieve
plate
30 m
Nucleus of
companion
cell
15 m
Sieve-tube elements:
longitudinal view
Sieve plate with pores (LM)
Figure 35.10ea
3 m
Sieve-tube element (left)
and companion cell:
cross section (TEM)
Figure 35.10eb
Sieve-tube elements:
longitudinal view (LM)
Sieve plate
Companion
cells
Sieve-tube
elements
30 m
Figure 35.10ed
Sieve-tube
elements
Plasmodesma
Sieve
plate
Nucleus of
companion
cell
Sieve-tube elements:
longitudinal view
Figure 35.10ec
Sieve
plate
15 m
Sieve plate with pores (LM)
Concept 35.2: Meristems generate cells for
primary and secondary growth
• A plant can grow throughout its life; this is called
indeterminate growth
• Some plant organs cease to grow at a certain size;
this is called determinate growth
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• Meristems are perpetually embryonic tissue and
allow for indeterminate growth
• Apical meristems are located at the tips of roots
and shoots and at the axillary buds of shoots
• Apical meristems elongate shoots and roots, a
process called primary growth
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• Lateral meristems add thickness to woody plants,
a process called secondary growth
• There are two lateral meristems: the vascular
cambium and the cork cambium
• The vascular cambium adds layers of vascular
tissue called secondary xylem (wood) and
secondary phloem
• The cork cambium replaces the epidermis with
periderm, which is thicker and tougher
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 35.11
Primary growth in stems
Epidermis
Cortex
Primary phloem
Shoot tip (shoot
apical meristem
and young leaves)
Axillary bud
meristem
Primary xylem
Pith
Vascular cambium
Secondary growth in stems
Lateral
Cork
meristems
cambium
Cork cambium
Periderm
Cortex
Primary
phloem
Secondary
phloem
Pith
Root apical
meristems
Primary
xylem
Secondary
xylem
Vascular
cambium
• Meristems give rise to:
– Initials, also called stem cells, which remain in the
meristem
– Derivatives, which become specialized in mature
tissues
• In woody plants, primary growth and secondary
growth occur simultaneously but in different
locations
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 35.12
Apical bud
Bud scale
Axillary buds
This year’s growth
(one year old)
Leaf
scar
Bud
scar
Node
Internode
Last year’s growth
(two year old)
Leaf scar
Stem
Bud scar
Growth of two
years ago
(three years old)
Leaf scar
One-year-old side
branch formed
from axillary bud
near shoot tip
• Flowering plants can be categorized based on the
length of their life cycle
– Annuals complete their life cycle in a year or less
– Biennials require two growing seasons
– Perennials live for many years
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Concept 35.3: Primary growth lengthens
roots and shoots
• Primary growth produces the parts of the root and
shoot systems produced by apical meristems
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Primary Growth of Roots
• The root tip is covered by a root cap, which
protects the apical meristem as the root pushes
through soil
• Growth occurs just behind the root tip, in three
zones of cells:
– Zone of cell division
– Zone of elongation
– Zone of differentiation, or maturation
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Video: Root Growth in a Radish Seed (Time Lapse)
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Figure 35.13
Cortex
Vascular cylinder
Epidermis
Root hair
Zone of
differentiation
Key
to labels
Dermal
Ground
Vascular
Zone of
elongation
Zone of cell
division
(including
apical
meristem)
Root cap
Mitotic
cells
100 m
Figure 35.13a
Mitotic
cells
100 m
• The primary growth of roots produces the
epidermis, ground tissue, and vascular tissue
• In angiosperm roots, the stele is a vascular
cylinder
• In most eudicots, the xylem is starlike in
appearance with phloem between the “arms”
• In many monocots, a core of parenchyma cells is
surrounded by rings of xylem then phloem
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Figure 35.14
Epidermis
Cortex
Endodermis
Vascular
cylinder
100 m
(a) Root with xylem and
phloem in the center
(typical of eudicots)
50 m
Pericycle
Core of
parenchyma
cells
Xylem
Phloem
Endodermis
Pericycle
Xylem
Phloem
100 m
(b) Root with parenchyma in the
center (typical of monocots)
Key
to labels
Dermal
Ground
Vascular
Figure 35.14aa
Epidermis
Cortex
Endodermis
Vascular
cylinder
Key
to labels
Dermal
Ground
Vascular
Pericycle
Xylem
Phloem
100 m
(a) Root with xylem and phloem in the center
(typical of eudicots)
Figure 35.14ab
50 m
Endodermis
Pericycle
Xylem
Phloem
Key
to labels
Dermal
Ground
Vascular
Figure 35.14b
Epidermis
Key
to labels
Cortex
Dermal
Endodermis
Ground
Vascular
Vascular
cylinder
Pericycle
Core of
parenchyma
cells
Xylem
Phloem
100 m
(b) Root with parenchyma in the center
(typical of monocots)
• The ground tissue, mostly parenchyma cells, fills
the cortex, the region between the vascular
cylinder and epidermis
• The innermost layer of the cortex is called the
endodermis
• The endodermis regulates passage of
substances from the soil into the vascular
cylinder
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• Lateral roots arise from within the pericycle, the
outermost cell layer in the vascular cylinder
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Figure 35.15-1
Emerging
lateral
root
100 m
Cortex
Vascular
cylinder
1
Pericycle
Figure 35.15-2
Emerging
lateral
root
100 m
Epidermis
Lateral root
Cortex
Vascular
cylinder
1
Pericycle
2
Figure 35.15-3
Emerging
lateral
root
100 m
Epidermis
Lateral root
Cortex
Vascular
cylinder
1
Pericycle
2
3
Figure 35.15a
Emerging
lateral
root
100 m
Cortex
Vascular
cylinder
Pericycle
1
Figure 35.15b
100 m
Epidermis
Lateral root
2
Figure 35.15c
Epidermis
Lateral root
3
100 m
Primary Growth of Shoots
• A shoot apical meristem is a dome-shaped mass
of dividing cells at the shoot tip
• Leaves develop from leaf primordia along the
sides of the apical meristem
• Axillary buds develop from meristematic cells left
at the bases of leaf primordia
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Figure 35.16
Shoot apical meristem
Leaf primordia
Young
leaf
Developing
vascular
strand
Axillary bud
meristems
0.25 mm
Tissue Organization of Stems
• Lateral shoots develop from axillary buds on the
stem’s surface
• In most eudicots, the vascular tissue consists of
vascular bundles arranged in a ring
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Figure 35.17
Phloem
Xylem
Sclerenchyma
(fiber cells)
Pith
Epidermis
Cortex
Vascular
bundle
Ground
tissue
Ground tissue
connecting
pith to cortex
1 mm
(a) Cross section of stem with
vascular bundles forming a
ring (typical of eudicots)
Epidermis
Key
to labels
Vascular
bundles
Dermal
1 mm
Ground
Vascular (b) Cross section of stem with
scattered vascular bundles
(typical of monocots)
Figure 35.17a
Sclerenchyma
(fiber cells)
Phloem
Xylem
Ground tissue
connecting
pith to cortex
Pith
Key
to labels
Epidermis
Cortex
Vascular
bundle
1 mm
(a) Cross section of stem with vascular bundles
forming a ring (typical of eudicots)
Dermal
Ground
Vascular
• In most monocot stems, the vascular bundles are
scattered throughout the ground tissue, rather
than forming a ring
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Figure 35.17b
Ground
tissue
Key
to labels
Dermal
Ground
Vascular
Epidermis
Vascular
bundles
1 mm
(b) Cross section of stem with scattered vascular
bundles (typical of monocots)
Tissue Organization of Leaves
• The epidermis in leaves is interrupted by
stomata, which allow CO2 and O2 exchange
between the air and the photosynthetic cells in a
leaf
• Each stomatal pore is flanked by two guard
cells, which regulate its opening and closing
• The ground tissue in a leaf, called mesophyll, is
sandwiched between the upper and lower
epidermis
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• The mesophyll of eudicots has two layers:
– The palisade mesophyll in the upper part of the
leaf
– The spongy mesophyll in the lower part of the
leaf; the loose arrangement allows for gas
exchange
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• The vascular tissue of each leaf is continuous with
the vascular tissue of the stem
• Veins are the leaf’s vascular bundles and function
as the leaf’s skeleton
• Each vein in a leaf is enclosed by a protective
bundle sheath
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Figure 35.18
Dermal
Stomatal
pore
Ground
Epidermal
cell
Vascular
Sclerenchyma
fibers
Cuticle
Stoma
Upper
epidermis
Palisade
mesophyll
50 m
Guard
cells
Key
to labels
(b) Surface view of
a spiderwort
(Tradescantia)
leaf (LM)
100 m
Spongy
mesophyll
Lower
epidermis
Xylem
Vein Cuticle
Guard cells
Phloem
Guard
Vein Air spaces
cells
(c) Cross section of a lilac
(a) Cutaway drawing of leaf tissues
(Syringa) leaf (LM)
Bundlesheath
cell
Figure 35.18a
Key
to labels
Sclerenchyma
fibers
Cuticle
Dermal
Stoma
Ground
Vascular
Upper
epidermis
Palisade
mesophyll
Spongy
mesophyll
Bundlesheath
cell
Lower
epidermis
Xylem
Vein
Phloem
(a) Cutaway drawing of leaf tissues
Guard
cells
Cuticle
Figure 35.18b
Stomatal
pore
Epidermal
cell
50 m
Guard
cells
(b) Surface view of
a spiderwort
(Tradescantia)
leaf (LM)
Figure 35.18c
Spongy
mesophyll
Lower
epidermis
100 m
Upper
epidermis
Palisade
mesophyll
Guard cells
Vein Air spaces
(c) Cross section of a lilac
(Syringa) leaf (LM)
Concept 35.4: Secondary growth increases
the diameter of stems and roots in woody
plants
• Secondary growth occurs in stems and roots of
woody plants but rarely in leaves
• The secondary plant body consists of the tissues
produced by the vascular cambium and cork
cambium
• Secondary growth is characteristic of
gymnosperms and many eudicots, but not
monocots
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 35.19
(a) Primary and secondary growth
in a two-year-old woody stem
Epidermis
Cortex
Primary
phloem
Vascular
cambium
Primary
xylem
Pith
Pith
Primary xylem
Epidermis
Vascular cambium
Primary phloem Cortex
Vascular
ray
Primary
xylem
Secondary xylem
Vascular cambium
Secondary phloem
Primary phloem
First cork cambium
Cork
Periderm
(mainly cork
cambia
and cork)
Secondary phloem
Vascular cambium
Secondary xylem Late wood
Early wood
Primary
phloem
Vascular
cambium
Secondary
xylem
Primary
xylem
Pith
Cork
cambium Periderm
Cork
Secondary
xylem (two
years of
production)
Vascular cambium
Secondary phloem
Most recent
cork cambium
0.5 mm
Secondary
phloem
Bark
Bark
Cork
Vascular ray
Layers of
periderm
0.5 mm
Growth ring
(b) Cross section of a three-yearold Tilia (linden) stem (LM)
Figure 35.19a-1
(a) Primary and secondary growth
in a two-year-old woody stem
Epidermis
Cortex
Primary phloem
Vascular cambium
Primary xylem
Pith
Periderm (mainly
cork cambia
and cork)
Secondary
phloem
Secondary
xylem
Pith
Primary xylem
Vascular cambium
Primary phloem
Cortex
Epidermis
Figure 35.19a-2
(a) Primary and secondary growth
in a two-year-old woody stem
Epidermis
Cortex
Primary phloem
Vascular cambium
Primary xylem
Pith
Pith
Primary xylem
Vascular cambium
Primary phloem
Cortex
Epidermis
Vascular ray
Secondary xylem
Secondary phloem
First cork cambium
Cork
Periderm (mainly
cork cambia
and cork)
Secondary
phloem
Secondary
xylem
Figure 35.19a-3
(a) Primary and secondary growth
in a two-year-old woody stem
Epidermis
Cortex
Primary phloem
Vascular cambium
Primary xylem
Pith
Pith
Primary xylem
Vascular cambium
Primary phloem
Cortex
Epidermis
Vascular ray
Secondary xylem
Secondary phloem
First cork cambium
Cork
Periderm (mainly
cork cambia
and cork)
Secondary
phloem
Secondary
xylem
Most recent cork cambium
Cork
Bark
Layers of
periderm
Figure 35.19b
Secondary xylem
Secondary phloem
Vascular cambium
Late wood
Early wood
Bark
Cork
cambium
0.5 mm
Cork
Vascular ray
0.5 mm
Growth ring
(b) Cross section of a three-yearold Tilia (linden) stem (LM)
Periderm
The Vascular Cambium and Secondary
Vascular Tissue
• The vascular cambium is a cylinder of
meristematic cells one cell layer thick
• It develops from undifferentiated parenchyma cells
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• In cross section, the vascular cambium appears as
a ring of initials (stem cells)
• The initials increase the vascular cambium’s
circumference and add secondary xylem to the
inside and secondary phloem to the outside
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Figure 35.20
Vascular
cambium
Growth
Secondary
xylem
After one year
of growth
Vascular
cambium
Secondary
phloem
After two years
of growth
• Elongated initials produce tracheids, vessel
elements, fibers of xylem, sieve-tube elements,
companion cells, axially oriented parenchyma, and
fibers of the phloem
• Shorter initials produce vascular rays, radial files
of parenchyma cells that connect secondary xylem
and phloem
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• Secondary xylem accumulates as wood and
consists of tracheids, vessel elements (only in
angiosperms), and fibers
• Early wood, formed in the spring, has thin cell
walls to maximize water delivery
• Late wood, formed in late summer, has thickwalled cells and contributes more to stem support
• In temperate regions, the vascular cambium of
perennials is inactive through the winter
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• Tree rings are visible where late and early wood
meet, and can be used to estimate a tree’s age
• Dendrochronology is the analysis of tree ring
growth patterns and can be used to study past
climate change
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Figure 35.21
Ring-width indexes
RESULTS
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
1600
1700
1800
Year
1900
2000
• As a tree or woody shrub ages, the older layers of
secondary xylem, the heartwood, no longer
transport water and minerals
• The outer layers, known as sapwood, still
transport materials through the xylem
• Older secondary phloem sloughs off and does not
accumulate
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 35.22
Growth
ring
Vascular
ray
Heartwood
Secondary
xylem
Sapwood
Vascular cambium
Secondary phloem
Bark
Layers of periderm
Figure 35.23
The Cork Cambium and the Production of
Periderm
• Cork cambium gives rise to two tissues:
– Phelloderm is a thin layer of parenchyma cells
that forms to the interior of the cork cambium
– Cork cells accumulate to the exterior of the cork
cambium
• Cork cells deposit waxy suberin in their walls, then
die
• Periderm consists of the cork cambium,
phelloderm, and cork cells it produces
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• Lenticels in the periderm allow for gas exchange
between living stem or root cells and the outside
air
• Bark consists of all the tissues external to the
vascular cambium, including secondary phloem
and periderm
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Evolution of Secondary Growth
• In the herbaceous plant Arabidopsis, the addition
of weights to the plants triggered secondary
growth
• This suggests that stem weight is the cue for wood
formation
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