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PLANTS • basic Evolution & Classification • Anatomy & Physiology of Roots, Stems & Leaves Plants Overview • Evolution of plants and plant classification • Plant anatomy: – Tissues, Roots, Stems, Leaves • Transport in plants • Plant growth (primary & secondary) • The role of Hormones in coordinating growth & response to stimuli For another time… • Plant Sexual Reproduction – Alternation of Generations What is a plant? • Plants are multicellular, eukaryotic photoautotrophs • Plants have a waxy cuticle covering that helps them retain water • Gas exchange occurs through holes, or stomata, in the leaf surfaces • They have organs such as roots, stems and leaves • A vascular system carries water and minerals up and nutrients down (and sometimes up again!) • Reproductive structures, called gametangia, contain gamete-producing cells What is a plant? Plant Evolution from water to land: major adaptations & plant groups Plant Kingdom Byrophytes Vascular Plants (aka non-vascular or non-tracheophytes) (tracheophytes) Mosses Seedless Vascular Plants Angiosperms Ferns, etc Flowering plants (“vessel seed”) Monocots (“one cotyledon”) Grasses, orchids, bamboo, palms, lilies, grains Dicots Gymnosperms (“naked seed”) Conifers, etc (“two cotyledons”) Most shrubs & trees, many food crops Angiosperms are broken into 2 groups: Monocots and Dicots Monocots & Dicots • Cotyledons are the embryonic seed leaves • Monocots: orchids, bamboos, palms, and lilies AND the grasses, including wheat, corn and rice (these are WAY important, for obvious reasons!) • Dicots: all the rest…(oak, maple. roses, cabbage, beans, potatoes, most fruit trees, etc). So if you’re asked which is more common, choose this one Seed germination begins the life of a new plant The plant: root system & shoot system Modifications of roots and stems • Many roots are adapted for storing food • Rhizomes are actually modified stems that store food • Modified stems can also act as “runners”, allowing a plant to reproduce asexually Three tissue systems make up a plant: Epidermal tissue = outer layer of r, s, l Vascular tissue = conducts water & food (xylem & phloem) Ground tissue = the bulk of a young plant, fills in space between epidermis and vascular tissue How do things move around inside plants? • XYLEM tissue = Water-conducting: made of tracheids and vessel elements – are both dead, hollow tubes when mature • PHLOEM tissue = Food-conducting: made of sieve-tube members (dead when mature) & companion cells (alive when mature) • Ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms have these vascular tissues and are called vascular plants or tracheophytes. • Bryophytes (mosses) do not have xylem and phloem and so they are non-vascular (lack specialized transport system). ROOTS anchor the plant and allow for absorption of water & nutrients from soil Dissolved nutrients move into root by active transport … water follows by osmosis! Beautiful. Plasmodesmata are openings in the walls and plasma membranes between plant cells that allow free flow of liquids and dissolved molecules. From root hairs into xylem – then up!! The endodermis acts as the gate-keeper Tissues of the leaf • Guard cells regulate opening and closing of stomata (openings for gas exchange: O2, CO2, H2O vapor) • Mesophyll cells (palisade & spongy mesophyll), the ground tissue of leaves, contain chloroplasts and perform photosynthesis Guard Cell Action: Bringing K+ into guard cells causes water to follow by osmosis; cells become turgid and stoma opens. Magic! (Flaccid guard cells = closed stoma … not a bad idea if you’re not photosynthesizing and trying to conserve H2O ...Like at night!) How does water get to the top of trees? Combo of root pressure, capillary action & transpiration pull! Plant growth is “indeterminate” growth - never ceasing (at root & shoot tips at least) • Plants grow in length (primary growth) and in thickness (secondary growth) • Meristem tissue: unspecialized cells that divide to generate all kinds of new plant tissue – Apical meristem: meristem at the tips of roots and shoots, allow them to grow in length – Vascular cambium & Cork cambium: meristem that allows stems & roots to thicken and branch out Roots & stems exhibit both primary and secondary growth Root Crosssection Stem Crosssection Vascular cambium makes xylem & phloem while cork cambium makes… cork! Why do trees in temperate climates have annual rings? Plant hormones coordinate growth, development & responses to stimuli • Auxin: directs stem & root growth, responsible for phototropism (growth towards light) and geotropism (growth up away from gravity). • Gibberellins: stimulate seed & bud germination, stem elongation, flowering & development of fruit; found in meristems of apical buds, roots, young leaves, embryo. • Cytokinins: promote cell division, germination & leaf expansion; determine timing of cellular differentiation (esp. in roots) • Ethylene: stimulates the ripening of fruit and the abscission (dropping) of leaves, flowers, and fruits. The effect of gibberellin treatment on seedless grapes (treated grapes on right). Plant Tropisms Plant responses to external stimuli Can you guess what these are? • Phototropism: • Gravitropism: • Thigmotropism: Classic Light/Growth Experiments with Grass Seedlings MORE Classic Growth Experiments with Grass Seedlings In 1926, F.W. Went extracted the chemical messenger for phototropism, naming it auxin. Plant Growth vocabulary •Annuals: complete their life cycle in one year •Biennials: complete their life cycle in two years, usually flowering during the 2nd year •Perennials: plants that live many years