Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

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Leaf anatomy

Transcript of Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Page 1: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Leaf anatomy

Page 2: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Leaf anatomy• Leaves start as

outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Page 3: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Leaf anatomy• 3 primary

meristems– protoderm:

becomes __________

– procambium: becomes ___________

– ground meristem: becomes ____________.

Page 4: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Leaf anatomy• Epidermis:

note cuticle, stomata

• Veins with vascular tissues (__________

• __________)• Supply water

& nutrients, remove sugars for transport elsewhere.

Page 5: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Leaf anatomy• Mesophyll

– Parenchyma tissue layers (palisade and spongy: do ____________.

Page 6: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Monocot vs dicot anatomy• Stem: Dicot with bundles __________. Pith

and cortex present. • Monocot: scattered vascular bundles. No

_______________.

Page 7: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Monocot vs dicot anatomy• Root: Dicot, < 6 phloem patches, no pith

Page 8: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Monocot vs dicot anatomy• Root: Monocot, many _____________, pith

present

Page 9: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Monocot vs dicot summary• Note root system type: dicot often with single

major root axis (taproot system), monocot lacking this (fibrous root system)

Page 10: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Plant Growth Phenomena• Hormones: molecules produced in small

amounts that change _________________

• _________

• Can inhibit or stimulate processes to occur

• 5 major types: – auxins– cytokinins– gibberellins– ethylene– abscisic acid

Page 11: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Auxins• Promote stem

elongation and growth

• Example, ___________. Bending of stem toward light

Page 12: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Auxins• Also involved in ______________: suppression

of lateral meristems by apical meristem

Page 13: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Auxins• Can stimulate production of

______________ roots (roots produced on stem or leaf)

• Useful in rooting cuttings (asexual plant reproduction)

Page 14: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Cytokinins• Stimulate cell division where auxin is

also present

• Acts as ____________ hormone (keeps detached leaves green).

Page 15: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Gibberellins• Promote stem elongation

• Mutant plants with low amounts are _________ (internode lengths short)

Page 16: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Ethylene• Promotes fruit ripening

• Stimulates ____________ (dropping) of leaves, flowers

Page 17: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Abscisic acid• Induces formation of

winter buds (bud scales, dormant meristem)

• Involved in opening and closing of _____________

• Can cause seed dormancy

Page 18: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Other plant growth phenomena• Gravitropism:

response of stem/root to gravity

• Stems bend away from gravity (___________ gravitropism)

• Roots bend toward gravity (_________ gravitropism)

Page 19: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Other plant growth phenomena• Mechanism

unclear. May involve ________ ________ called statoliths (in root cap of root, in parenchyma cells of stem)

Page 20: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Other plant growth phenomena• Thigmotropism: response

of plant to __________• Examples: Many tendrils

grow toward stimulus and wrap around object

Page 21: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Turgor movement• Not growth: involves

loss of water pressure (turgor pressure) in some cells

• Can be reversed• May involve rapid

movement (electrical signal)

• Ex, sensitive plant

QuickTime™ and aCinepak decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 22: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Flowering• Some plants use daylength as

flowering cue

• Can measure length of night (photoperiod) by pigment called ______________

Page 23: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Flowering• Long day plants:

flower when night is ________ than some critical time

• Short day plants: flower when night is _______ than some critical time

• Day neutral plants: don’t use photoperiod as flowering cue

Page 24: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Flowering• Use: Can make some plants bloom when we

want them• Ex, poinsettia. A short-day plant that growers

make flower for Christmas holidays.

Page 25: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Plant transport• Phloem: sugars and water (often from leaf to root)

• Xylem: water and minerals from root to shoot

• Movement driven by _____________: measure of tendency of water to move from one place to another

Page 26: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Plant transport• Water potential is affected by:

– solutes (high solutes = ______ tendency to move)– pressure (high pressure = ______ tendency to move)– tension (pull: high tension = ______ tendency to move).

Page 27: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Water transport• Xylem: water and minerals from root to shoot

• How much of water remains in plant? <____%!

Page 28: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Water transport• Transpiration: evaporation of water from leaves

• Driven by _______ from leaves. Water under tension. Water potential high in soil and low in air.

Page 29: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Water transport• Driven by pull

from leaves. Water under tension. Water potential high in soil and low in air.

Page 30: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Water transport• Transpiration greatly controlled by stomata

• Stomata open in ________ but can close if plant lacks sufficient water.

Stomata!

Page 31: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Sugar transport• Phloem: sugars and water

• Flow from ______ to _____

• Pressure flow mechanism

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Sugar transport• Source: lots of sugar

dissolved in water. Generates pressure as water flows in to _______ sugar

• Sink: little sugar dissolved in water. Low pressure as water flows out

• Creates ___________ gradient that moves fluid thru sieve tubes.

Page 33: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Sugar transport• Result: sugar flows to

wherever demand is high

Page 34: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth

Page 35: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Two types of growth• Primary growth: up and

down. Generated by apical meristems. Form _________ tissues

• Secondary growth: growth in girth. Generated by lateral (secondary meristems). Form __________ tissues.

• All plants do primary growth• Woody plants do __________

growth

Page 36: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Lateral meristems

– 1) ______________: makes new phloem and xylem

– Called ________ phloem and xylem tissues (vs. primary phloem and xylem made directly from procambium)

– Function: xylem takes water + minerals to leaves, phloem takes sugars to roots

Page 37: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Lateral meristems

– 2) ___________: makes new cell type, cork cell. Cork cells with primary wall impregnated with waxy material (_______). Dead at maturity. Forms waterproof layer on outside of body to replace epidermis.

– _________: Tissue composed of cork cells and made by cork cambium. Also is a secondary tissue.

Page 38: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Stem cross section

Page 39: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Vascular bundles contain __________________

• Located between primary xylem and phloem

• Meristematic: can still do _______________

Page 40: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Residual procambium cells start to divide• Produce new cells ______________

Page 41: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Parenchyma cells between bundles also start to divide• Together form solid ring of cells, all dividing laterally• This is __________________

Page 42: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Vascular cambium makes secondary xylem on

__________, secondary phloem on __________

• Note how cambium moves outward over time

Page 43: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Note arrangement of primary phloem and secondary

phloem, primary xylem and secondary xylem

Page 44: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Secondary xylem may contain:

– 1) Vessel elements

– 2) Tracheids

– 3) ____________

– 4) Fibers

• Secondary phloem may contain:– 1) Sieve tube elements

– 2) Companion cells

– 3) Parenchyma

– 4) ___________

Page 45: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Two

Page 46: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Later secondary growth

Page 47: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• First cork cambium: Forms under ___________

Page 48: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Cork cambium: Makes files of cork cells to

outside. Forms first __________. Epidermis cut off from rest of stem and dies.

Page 49: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Problem: cork cells are

dead at maturity. Cork layer cannot _________ as vascular cambium continues to grow.

• Solution: form new ______ ______ in cortex under old one

• After time, several __________ build up (yellow lines). Newest (inner) one cuts off water to layers beyond it and they _______.

Page 50: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Periderm replaces epidermis. How get _______

into stem?

Page 51: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Lenticels: Loosely packed __________.

Allow oxygen to diffuse into stem to support living cells there.

Page 52: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Note ____ made by

vascular cambium: Form ________ transport system (often parenchyma cells)

• In phloem: phloem ray

• In xylem: xylem ray (wood ray)

Page 53: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• In temperate zone, cambium activity varies

between _____ and ______ in growing season• Spring: big cells (_______ wood). • Summer: small cells (_______ wood).• Form growth ring (tree ring): one season’s growth• Ex, pine (mostly tracheids)

Page 54: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth

• Ex, oak (note vessels, thick-walled _________)

Page 55: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Young tree section: Note rays here (phloem and

xylem)

• Also note growth rings: early and late wood

• How old was this stem when cut?

Page 56: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• In older tree: wood

is secondary xylem

• Heartwood: old non-functional xylem

• ________: younger often functional xylem

Page 57: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Bark: From vascular

cambium outward• ___________: From

current cork cambium outward (all is dead)

• __________: From vascular cambium to current cork cambium. Contains functional secondary phloem

Page 58: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Removing inner bark

is deadly: girdling tree often will kill it

• Why? Roots ______• Why? No ________

from leaves.

Page 59: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth

• Flow chart, showing how primary and secondary tissues develop in stem

Page 60: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• Note that roots of woody plants also do secondary

growth

• Vascular cambium forms from __________

• First cork cambium forms in _____________.

Page 61: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Secondary Growth• So outer cortex and epidermis are sloughed off

and lost

Page 62: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Uses of Growth Rings

• 1) Fire frequency

• Break in bark (_________) allows fire to burn through vascular cambium into wood

• Leaves burned layer

• If tree survives, can have record of fires in wood.

Ponderosa pine, WY

Page 63: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Uses of Growth Rings

• 1) Fire frequency

• Helpful information when trying to determine “natural” frequency of fires for managing forests.

Page 64: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Uses of Growth Rings• 2) Climate patterns (___________________)

• Width of rings can indicate growth conditions for tree (rainfall, etc.)

• Can reconstruct climate information

• Oldest reconstructions go back 8,000 yr B.C.

Page 65: Leaf anatomy. Leaves start as outgrowths from apical meristem: leaf primordia.

Uses of Growth Rings• 2) Climate patterns

• Oldest reconstructions from bristlecone pine wood go back as far as ________ yr B.C.