Transcript BIOLOGY

BIOLOGY
MERISTEMS
 Unlike animals, plants have permanent regions of cell
division

Meristems
MERISTEMS
 Apical Meristems

Cell division at tips of roots and stems

Produce primary tissue
MERISTEMS
 Lateral Meristems

Cell division that increases girth of
roots and stems

Secondary growth
LATERAL MERISTEMS
 Vascular cambium

Conduction

“Plumbing”
COMPLEX TISSUE
Xylem

Conducts water and minerals from the
roots

Transports upward
COMPLEX TISSUE
Xylem
 Openings along cell walls connect side by side
cells

Lateral flow in trees

Rays
COMPLEX TISSUE
Phloem

Conduct water and food in both directions

Primarily down
LATERAL MERISTEMS
 Cork cambium

Layer of cells outside phloem layer of
vascular cambium

Inside the outer bark
DICOTS
 Dicotyledonous

Dicot
 Two leaves emerge from seed

Cotyledons

Not true leaves
DICOTS
 Herbaceous dicots

Soft tissue

Primary xylem/phloem only

Annual dicots


Germinate and die in one season
Perennial dicots

Regrow new tissue from roots
DICOTS
 Woody dicots

Hard tissue

Secondary xylem and phloem

Perennial woody dicots only

Live multiple seasons
SECONDARY XYLEM
 Secondary xylem cells produced
inside cambium

Toward center of stem

Transports water and nutrients
up the plant
SECONDARY XYLEM
 Secondary xylem eventually becomes
wood
 As cells become inactive, they become
structural
SPRING WOOD
 Active growth produces large xylem
cells

Lighter colored band
SUMMER WOOD
 Smaller and fewer XYLEM cells

Darker band
GROWTH RINGS
 The alternation of spring and
summer growth bands
 Fire, drought, and other events
 Increment borer to read rings
HEARTWOOD VERSUS SAPWOOD
 Heartwood

Inactive xylem cells

Accumulation of resins, gums, and tannins

Darker color of wood
 Sapwood

active xylem (near cambium)

Lighter color wood
HEARTWOOD VERSUS SAPWOOD
 Heartwood can rot but tree can still
function
 Portion of heartwood and sapwood can
be removed
GIRDLING PHLOEM
 Phloem nearest cambium transport the most
sugars
 Cambium stripped from grapevines to trap sugars
CORK CAMBIUM
 Outer bark of woody plants
 Developed from epidermis

Cork cells

Also called phellogen
 Impregnated with suberin

Waxy substance
MONOCOTS
 Vascular bundles throughout stem

Xylem facing center

Phloem facing out
MONOCOTS
 No tree rings

Palm trees
 Do not seal wounds
XYLEM, PHLOEM, AND TRANSPIRATION
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGCnuXxbZGk