Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant...

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Plant Anatomy and Plant Anatomy and Physiology Physiology Ms. Marsh

Transcript of Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant...

Page 1: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Plant Anatomy and Plant Anatomy and PhysiologyPhysiology

Ms. Marsh

Page 2: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Today…• Plant Anatomy

– Cells– Tissues– Organs

• Plant Physiology– Water & sugar transport– Plant hormones

Page 3: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

From smallest to largest plants

Page 4: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

What is plant anatomy?• ANATOMY: study of the structure of

organisms… looking at cells, tissues

• (Morphology: Study of form)

What is plant physiology?• PHYSIOLOGY: study of the function of

cells, tissues, organs of living things;

and the physics/chemistry of these functions…

Page 5: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

“Structure correlates to function”

Always keep in mind that in plant anatomy, morphology & physiology…

Page 6: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

• How can water move from

the ground

all the way

to the top

of a 100 m

tall redwood

tree?

Page 7: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Plant Anatomy: Cells• Plant cells are basic building blocks

• Can specialize in form and function

• By working together, forming tissues, they can support each other and survive

• Levels of organizationatoms > molecules > cells > tissues > organs > whole plant > pop.

Page 8: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Plant Tissues TypesAll plant organs (roots, stems, leaves) are

composed of the same tissue types.

There are three types of tissue:

• 1. Dermal – outermost layer

• 2. Vascular – conducting tissue, transport

• 3. Ground – bulk of inner layers

Page 9: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

1. Dermal tissue• Epidermis is the outermost layer of cells

• Like the “skin” of animals

• In stems and leaves, epidermis has cuticle, a waxy layer that prevents water loss.

• Some have trichomes, hairs.

• Root epidermis has root hairs, for water and nutrient absorption

Page 10: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

2. Vascular tissue• Transports water and organic materials (sugars)

throughout the plant

• Xylem – transports water and

dissolved ions from the root

to the stem and leaves.

• Phloem – carries dissolved sugars

from leaves to rest of the plant

Page 11: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Xylem• Transports water and dissolved minerals

• Tracheids: long, thin tube like structures without perforations at the ends

• Vessel elements: short, wide tubes perforated at the ends (together form a pipe, called vessel).

• Both cells have pits (thin sections) on the walls

Tracheids Vessel elements

Page 12: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Xylem cells

• Xylem cells are dead!

• They are hollow cellsand consist only ofcell wall

Page 13: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Phloem• Cells that transport organic materials (sugars)

• Phloem cells are ALIVE! (unlike xylem)

• However, they lack nucleus and organelles

Page 14: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Phloem: transports sugars• Phloem composed of cells called sieve tube

members (STM)

• Companion cells join sieve tube members, are related, and help to load materials into STM

• End walls of STM have large pores called

sieve plates

Sieve tube member

Companion cells

Sieve plates

Page 15: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

3. Ground tissue• Makes up the bulk of plant organs.

• Functions: Metabolism, storage and support.

Root Stem Leaf

Page 16: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Plant Organs Organs: tissues that act together to serve a

specific function

• Roots

• Stems

• Leaves

DermalVascularGround

DermalVascularGround

DermalVascularGround

Page 17: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Functions of plant organs:• ROOTS: Anchorage, water/nutrient absorption

from soil, storage, water/nutrient transport

• STEMS: Support, water/nutrient transport

• LEAVES: Photosynthesis (food production)

Page 18: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

ROOTS

• ROOTS “the hidden half”

• Functions of roots:

• Ancorage

• Absorption of water & dissolved minerals

• Storage (surplus sugars, starch)

• Conduction water/nutrients

Page 19: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Anatomy of a root

epidermiscortex

vascular

Page 20: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Root Epidermis• Outermost, single layer of cells that:

– Protects (from diseases)– Absorbs water and nutrients

• ROOT HAIRS: tubular extensions

of epidermal cells.

• Increase surface area of root,

for better water/nutrient

absorption

Page 21: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Root Hairs: water and mineral absorption

Root hairs increase surfacearea for betterabsorption

Page 22: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Root Cortex• Stores starch, sugars and other substances

Page 23: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Root Ground tissue• In roots, ground tissue (a.k.a. cortex)

provides support, and

often stores sugars and starch

(for example: yams, sweet potato, etc.)

Hey! I yam what I yam, man!

You’re not a yam, you’re a sweetpotato!

cortex

Page 24: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Root Cortex: Endodermis

• Endodermis: the innermost layer of the cortex

Page 25: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Root cortex: Casparian strip• The Casparian strip is a water-impermeable

strip of waxy material found in the endodermis (innermost layer of the cortex).

• The Casparian strip helps to control the uptake of minerals into the xylem: they have to go through the cytoplasm of the cell!

Page 26: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

STEMS

• Above-ground organs (usually)

• Support leaves and fruits

• Conduct water and sugars

throughout plant (xylem and phloem)

Page 27: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Stem anatomy• Dermal, ground and vascular tissues…

pith

cortexepidermis

Vascularbundles

Page 28: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Types of Stems

Monocot stem Dicot stem Root

Page 29: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Types of stems

• Herbaceous vs. Woody stems

Page 30: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Tissues of stems• Epidermis (Dermal tissue type)

• Provides protection

• Has cuticle (wax) prevents water loss

• Trichomes (hairs) for protection, to release scents, oils, etc.

Page 31: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Stem Vascular tissue

• Vascular bundles – composed of both xylem and phloem

• Xylem– Conducts water– Support

• Phloem– Conducts food– Support

Vascularcambium

Page 32: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Vascular cambium

• Occurs in woody stems

• Vascular cambium located in the middle of the vascular bundle, between xylem and phloem

Page 33: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Vascular tissue: Trees

• Vascular tissue is located on the outer layers of the tree.

wood

phloem

xylem

bark

Vascular cambium

Page 34: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Girdling: cutting around a tree

• Damages the phloem and xylem, eventually killing the tree!

Page 35: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Vascular tissue forms rings in trees• Annual rings: xylem formed by the

vascular cambium during one growing season

• One ring = one year

Page 36: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

History of the tree: annual rings

1489: Tree is plantedby Native American

1492: Columbus lands in the Americas

1620: Pilgrims land in Plymouth, Mass.

1776: Declarationof US independence

1861: Start ofCivil War

1969: Manlands on Moon

1917 & 1945: TreeSurvives two WorldWars

1971: Birth Year of the IDIOTwho cut downthis tree!!!

Dendrochronology : tree time-keeping

Page 37: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Ground tissue: Cortex & pith• Stores food (e.g. potato)

• Site of Photosynthesis (when green)

• Support cells

pith

cortex

Page 38: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

LEAVES: • ‘Photosynthetic factories’ of the plant…

• Function: Photosynthesis – food

production for the whole plant

• Blade: Flat expanded area

• Petiole: stalk that connects

leaf blade to stem, and

transports materialsBLADE

Page 39: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Leaf Anatomy

• Leaf anatomy is correlated to photosynthesis:Carbon dioxide + Water sugars + oxygen

dermal

ground

vascular

dermal

Page 40: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Leaf epidermis• Is transparent – so that sun light can go through.

• Waxy cuticle protects against drying out

• Lower epidermis: stomata with guard cells – for gas exchange (CO2, H2O in; O2 out)

Page 41: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Leaf epidermis

• Trichomes (give fuzzy texture)

(“Panda plant”)

Page 42: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Leaf vascular tissue• VEINS vascular tissue of leaves.

• Veins are composed of xylem (water transport) phloem (food transport)

and bundle sheaths,

cells surrounding the

xylem/phloem for

strength & support

Page 43: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Leaf Mesophyll• Middle of the leaf (meso-phyll)• Composed of photosynthetic ground cells:• Palisade parenchyma

(long columns below epidermis;have lots chloroplasts for photosynthesis)

Spongy parenchyma(spherical cells)with air spaces around, (for gas exchange)

Page 44: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Plant water transport• How can water move from

the ground

all the way

to the top

of a 100 m

tall redwood

tree?

Page 45: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Water transport in plants:• The same way we drink soda

from a straw!

• Water’s great

cohesive forces (molecules

sticking to each other)

and adhesive forces

(attaching to walls of xylem cells)

Page 46: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Transpiration-cohesion Theoryfor water transport in the xylem

• Evaporation of water in the leaves (through stomates) generates the ‘sucking force’ that pulls adjacent water molecules up the leaf surface

Page 47: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Water transport (cont.)• Like a long chain, water molecules pull each

other up the column.

• The column goes from roots leaves.

• What’s amazing is that the

water moves up by using the sun’s

evaporative energy…

• Plants control transpiration by opening/closing stomata

Page 48: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Sugar translocation

• 1. Sugars made in leaf mesophyll cells (source) diffuse to phloem cells in the vascular bundles.

• 2. Companion cells load dissolved sugars into the phloem STM using energy (ATP).

• 3. Water moves into cells with high sugar concentration.

• 4. Osmotic water flow generates a high hydraulic pressure that moves dissolved sugars through the phloem to the rest of the plant (sink).

Page 49: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Pressure flow in phloem• Sugars made in the

leaves are loaded into companion cells and into phloem STM.

• Water (from xylem) moves in by osmosis, creating pressure flow down the phloem.

Page 50: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Plant Hormones

• Chemical compounds produced by plants

• Effective at very low concentrations

• Five major hormone groups are:

1. Auxins

2. Gibberellins

3.3. CytokininsCytokinins

4. Abscisic Acid

5. Ethylene

Page 51: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

1. AUXINS• Promote cell growth• Involved in

gravitropism

and phototropism

• Control fruit development

Page 52: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

2. Gibberellins• Promote stem elongation

3. Cytokinins3. Cytokinins• Promote cell division and

organ differentiation

4. Abscisic Acid• Promotes seed dormancy

• Causes stomata closing

Page 53: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

5. ETHYLENE5. ETHYLENE• Gaseous hormone,

very simple formula (C2H4)

• Ethylene promotes

fruit ripening!

Air Ethylene

Page 54: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

“One rotten apple spoils the barrel”

• Why?

Probably due to ethylene!

Rotten apple producing

lots of ethylene!

• Autocatalytic

• As a response to injury

Page 55: Plant Anatomy and Physiology Ms. Marsh. Today… Plant Anatomy –Cells –Tissues –Organs Plant Physiology –Water & sugar transport –Plant hormones.

Avocado ripening…

• Place in a paper bag, with a ripe banana!