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This chapter focuses on the plant body of Angiosperms • Plants must harvest energy from sunlight and collect sparse water and mineral nutrients from the soil. • Stems, leaves, and roots enable plants anchored in one spot to capture scarce resources effectively. • They can grow throughout their lifetimes, and can redirect growth to respond to environmental cues. Angiosperms first appeared about 140 Mya, and radiated explosively to became the dominant plant life. Angiosperms have three types of vegetative organs organized into root systems and shoot systems: • Roots, • stems, • leaves • Root system: Anchors plant, absorbs water and minerals, stores products of photosynthesis • Extreme branching of roots provides large surface area for absorption of water and mineral nutrients • Shoot system: Stems, leaves, flowers. • Leaves are the main organs of photosynthesis. • Stems hold and display leaves in the sun; connection between roots and leaves. Most (not all) angiosperms are in two major clades. • Monocots • narrow-leaved plants such as grasses, lilies, orchids, and palms. • Eudicots • broad-leaved plants such as soybeans, roses, sunflowers, and maples. Water and minerals enter through the root system in most plants. The root system originates in an embryonic root called the radicle. Types of roots: • Taproot • Single, large, deep-growing root and small side roots. The root may also function as food storage. • Fibrous roots • Monocots have a fibrous root system: Many thin roots of equal diameter originate from the stem at ground level or below. Have large surface area; cling to soil well • Prop roots • Help support stem of some monocots Stems elevate and support flowers and leaves • Leaves are attached to stem at node • have buds – undeveloped shoots • Axillary buds • At angle where leaf meets stem, can form new branches • Terminal buds • At tips, upward growth • Flowers can also develop there Stems can be modified: • Potato tuber is an underground stem. The “eyes” are axillary buds. • Many desert plants have enlarged stems that store water. • Runners are horizontal stems, roots grow at intervals and independent plants can arise from them. Most photosynthesis occurs in the leaves. The blade is a thin, flat structure; attached to stem by the petiole. Angle may be perpendicular to sun’s rays to provide maximum area for light gathering. Some leaves change position during the day to track the sun. Leaves can be highly modified. Some function as food storage, (e.g., onion bulbs). Leaves of succulents store water. Cacti spines are modified leaves. Climbing plants have modified leaves called tendrils that wrap around other structures. Plant cells have: Chloroplasts or other plastids A central vacuole The single central vacuole may account for 90 percent of the cell volume. It contains a high concentration of solutes, including enzymes, amino acids, and sugars. As the vacuole expands, it exerts turgor pressure on the cell wall. Turgor pressure keeps plants upright, and is essential for plant growth. Rigid cell walls with cellulose Plant cells can communicate via plasmodesmata—cytoplasm-filled canals that are traversed by a strand of ER; proteins and RNA can to move from cell to cell. Tobacco mosaic virus encodes a movement protein that complexes with its RNA. The complex can move easily via the plasmodesmata. Apical Meristems • Clusters of undifferentiated cells form at the tips of the embryonic root and shoot. • orchestrate development and allow the plant to form organs throughout its lifetime. • Contribute to primary growth Lateral Meristems • Only plants with secondary growth have these Tissue: Organized group of cells that work together as a structural and functional unit. Tissues are grouped into tissue systems. • Dermal • Vascular • Ground Dermal tissue system: Forms the epidermis, usually a single layer of cells. Stems and roots of woody plants have a dermal tissue called periderm. Epidermal cells can differentiate: Stomatal guard cells form stomata (pores) for gas exchange Trichomes, or leaf hairs, provide protection against insects and damaging solar radiation Root hairs greatly increase root surface area, for uptake of water and mineral nutrients The ground tissue system makes up most of the plant body. Functions in storage, support, and photosynthesis. Has three cell types: Collenchyma, parenchyma, and schlerenchyma. Parenchyma cells: Thin walls (only primary), large central vacuoles. They are sites of photosynthesis (in leaves) and storage, e.g., protein in fruits and starch in roots. Many retain the capacity to divide and can give rise to new cells, as when a wound results in cell proliferation. Collenchyma cells: Primary cell walls thickened by pectins, usually elongate shape. Provide support in leaf petioles, nonwoody stems, and growing organs. Tissue with collenchyma cells is flexible, it can bend without snapping. Celery “strings” are collenchyma cells. Sclerenchyma cells: Thickened secondary walls. Many undergo apoptosis after secondary wall is laid down. Fibers: Elongated cells provide rigid support; often in bundles. Sclereids may be densely packed as in nut shells, or in clumps as in stone cells in pears. The vascular tissue system: The transport system. Xylem distributes water and minerals taken up by roots to all parts of the plant. Xylem can also function in storage and support. Cells called tracheary elements that die before assuming function Tracheids line up like hollow straws one on top of another Phloem transports carbohydrates from site of production (sources) to sites of utilization or storage (sinks). Made up of transport cells called seive tube elements that are living Plants grow in two directions: Toward sunlight, and toward water and dissolved minerals in the soil. In most animals, growth is determinate— growth of the individual and all its parts stops in adult stage. Shoots and roots have indeterminate growth— continuous throughout life. Primary growth – Apical Meristems Lengthening of shoots and roots, and branching. It results in the primary plant body: All non-woody parts of the plant. Growth lengthens the plant body. Herbaceous plants and monocots consist entirely of primary plant body. Secondary growth – Lateral Meristems (vascular cambium and cork cambium) Increases diameter. Trees and shrubs have a secondary plant body consisting of wood and bark. Tissues are laid down as stems and roots thicken. Grows throughout life of plant. The primary meristems: protoderm, ground meristem, procambium. Root apical meristem: Some daughter cells become the root cap— protects root tip as it grows through the soil. They secrete a muco-polysaccharide (slime) as a lubricant. The root cap detects gravity and controls downward growth of roots. 3 zones Zone of cell division Zone of elongation Zone of maturation Figure 34.12 Products of the Root’s Primary Meristems Figure 34.13 Root Anatomy (A) Figure 34.13 Root Anatomy (B) Stem tissues: Shoots are composed of repeating modules called phytomers; shoots grow by adding new phytomers. New phytomers originate from cells in shoot apical meristems at stem tips and axillary buds. In young stems, vascular tissue is arranged in vascular bundles of both xylem and phloem. Eudicots: Vascular bundles form a cylinder. Monocots: Bundles are scattered. • Leaves are produced from apical meristems called vegetative meristems. • Growth of a leaf is determinate. • Leaf anatomy is adapted to carry out photosynthesis, and the exchange of O2 and CO2 with the environment, while limiting water losses. Two zones of photosynthetic parenchyma cells make up the mesophyll (part of ground tissue): Palisade mesophyll Spongy mesophyll Also includes air space for diffusion of gases for photosynthesis Pores called stomata allow gas exchange. They are opened and closed by guard cells. • Secondary growth (wood and bark) arises from two lateral meristems in eudicots. • Vascular cambium: Elongated cells that divide often. Supplies cells of the secondary xylem and secondary phloem. • Cork cambium produces waxy-walled protective cells. Some become part of the bark. Woody twigs illustrate both primary and secondary growth. Apical meristems are enclosed in buds protected by bud scales. Vascular cambium is initially a single layer of cells between primary xylem and phloem. Division of these cells produces secondary phloem cells toward the outside, and secondary xylem cells toward the inside. • As secondary growth continues, the epidermis and outer cortex are stretched and flake away. • Cells near the surface of the secondary phloem begin to divide, forming a cork cambium. • Cork is composed of thick-walled cells, waterproofed with suberin. Cork becomes the outermost tissue of the stem or root. The cork, cork cambium, and phelloderm form a tissue called periderm. • The periderm and secondary phloem— all the tissues external to the vascular cambium—constitute the bark. • Tree trunks from temperate regions show annual rings that result from seasonal conditions. Spring—water is plentiful, tracheids or vessel elements produced have large diameter Summer—less water, smaller diameter cells with thicker walls are produced • Some monocots have thickened stems, such as palms, but they don’t have vascular or cork cambiums. • Not true wood • • Palms have a wide apical meristem that produces a wide stem. Dead leaf bases also contribute to the stem diameter. Members of the same plant species can be remarkably diverse in form. Seed banks maintain collections from both cultivated crops and their wild relatives. Crops and their wild relatives are members of the same species and can be crossbred. The progeny will carry new combinations of the parents’ traits. A single species, Brassica oleracea (wild mustard), is the ancestor of many morphologically diverse crops: Kale, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage. Humans selected seed from morphological variants in the wild population with the trait they found desirable. • The genomes of plants are still priceless resources today. • Genetic variation in crop plants and their wild relatives can be used to improve our crop plants or adapt them to changing conditions. • This is especially important as human activities change the planet and lead to extinction of plant species. • The Doomsday Vault on the Arctic island of Spitsbergen and other seed banks are an insurance policy against the loss of our most valuable resource, the genetic diversity underlying plant form and growth.