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Monocots Eudicots One cotyledon Two cotyledons Veins usually parallel Veins usually netlike Vascular tissue scattered Vascular tissue usually arranged in ring Root system usually fibrous (no main root) Taproot (main root) usually present Pollen grain with one opening Pollen grain with three openings Floral organs usually in multiples of three Floral organs usually in multiples of four or five Embryos Leaf venation Stems Roots Pollen Flowers © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 Reproductive shoot (flower) Apical bud Node Internode Apical bud Vegetative shoot Shoot system Blade Petiole Axillary bud Leaf Stem Taproot Lateral (branch) roots © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Root system 2 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 3 Storage roots Pneumatophores “Strangling” aerial roots © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 4 Stolon Rhizome Root Rhizomes Stolons Tubers © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 5 Spines Tendrils Storage leaves Stem Reproductive leaves © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Storage leaves 6 Dermal tissue Ground tissue © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Vascular tissue 7 Parenchyma cells with chloroplasts (in Elodea leaf) (LM) © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 60 m 8 Collenchyma cells (in Helianthus stem) (LM) © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 5 m 9 5 m Sclereid cells (in pear) (LM) 25 m Cell wall Fiber cells (cross section from ash tree) (LM) © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 10 Vessel Tracheids 100 m Pits Tracheids and vessels (colorized SEM) Perforation plate Vessel element Vessel elements, with perforated end walls © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Tracheids 11 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 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Sieve plate with pores (LM) 12 Primary growth in stems Epidermis Cortex Primary phloem Primary xylem Shoot tip (shoot apical meristem and young leaves) Pith Vascular cambium Cork cambium Axillary bud meristem Secondary growth in stems Lateral meristems Cork cambium Periderm Pith Cortex Primary phloem Root apical meristems © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Primary xylem Secondary xylem Secondary phloem Vascular cambium 13 Apical bud Bud scale Axillary buds This year’s growth (one year old) Leaf scar Bud scar Last year’s growth (two years old) Node One-year-old branch formed Internode from axillary bud near shoot tip Leaf scar Stem Bud scar Growth of two years ago (three years old) © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Leaf scar 14 Cortical cells GLABRA-2 is expressed, and the cell remains hairless. 20 m GLABRA-2 is not expressed, and the cell will develop a root hair. The root cap cells will be sloughed off before root hairs emerge. © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 15 Cortex Vascular cylinder Epidermis Root hair Dermal Ground Vascular Zone of differentiation Zone of elongation Zone of cell division (including root apical meristem) Root cap © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Mitotic cells 100 m 16 Epidermis Cortex Endodermis Vascular cylinder Pericycle Core of parenchyma cells 100 m (a) Root with xylem and phloem in the center (typical of eudicots) Xylem Phloem 100 m (b) Root with parenchyma in the center (typical of monocots) Endodermis Pericycle Xylem Phloem Dermal Ground Vascular 70 m © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 17 Emerging lateral root Epidermis 100 m Lateral root Cortex Vascular cylinder © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Pericycle 18 Shoot apical meristem Leaf primordia Young leaf Developing vascular strand Axillary bud meristems 0.25 mm © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 19 Guard cells Dermal Ground Vascular Cuticle Sclerenchyma fibers Stoma 50 m Stomatal pore Epidermal cell (b) Surface view of a spiderwort (Tradescantia) leaf (LM) Upper epidermis Palisade mesophyll Bundlesheath cell 100 m Spongy mesophyll Lower epidermis Cuticle Xylem Phloem (a) Cutaway drawing of leaf tissues © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Vein Guard cells Vein Air spaces Guard cells (c) Cross section of a lilac (Syringa) leaf (LM) 20 Sclerenchyma (fiber cells) Phloem Xylem Ground tissue connecting pith to cortex Pith Ground tissue Epidermis Dermal Cortex Epidermis Vascular bundle Vascular 1 mm (a) Cross section of stem with vascular bundles forming a ring (typical of eudicots) © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Ground Vascular bundles 1 mm (b) Cross section of stem with scattered vascular bundles (typical of monocots) 21 Pith Primary xylem Vascular cambium (a) Primary and secondary growth in a two-year-old woody stem Primary phloem Cortex Epidermis Epidermis Cortex Primary phloem Vascular cambium Vascular ray Periderm Secondary Cork phloem cambium Vascular Cork cambium Bark Secondary Late wood xylem Early wood Primary xylem Pith Cork 1 mm Secondary xylem Secondary phloem First cork cambium Periderm (mainly cork cambia and cork) Vascular Growth ray ring 1.4 mm (b) Cross section of a three-yearold Tilia (linden) stem (LM) Secondary phloem Most recent cork cambium Secondary xylem © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Cork Layers of periderm Bark 22 Vascular cambium Growth Vascular cambium Secondary xylem After one year of growth © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Secondary phloem After two years of growth 23 Growth ring Vascular ray Heartwood Secondary xylem Sapwood Vascular cambium Secondary phloem Bark Layers of periderm © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 24