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Plant Anatomy Part 2 Begins Mr. PlantCell is back to review the two angiosperm clades Mono cot and dicots Study the diagram so you know the differences. For example monocot leaves have parallel veins while dicots are networked Did you say Monocots and Kocots? I’m a lookin’ fur those guys. Fibrous roots usual Pollen grain one opening Tap root usual Pollen grain three openings Err young lady, who are you? Don’t you know anything Doc? That is Mary Mary Quite Contrary. She’s famous for gardening you know. Actually Bugs, I’ve changed my name to help biology students remember where plants grow. My name is now Marystem or properly Meristem. In a plant growth always occurs at the meristems. Mary, Mary quite contrary how does your garden grow? With silver bells and cockle shells and pretty maids all in a row In Greek Meristos means divisible. So wherever a plant grows, there’s a MERISTEM? Where’s the meristem on this twig? If-fen I was to carve my initials in this tree, years later would they be high up in the tree? How do the branches reaching to the sides grow? That’s right. This is an apical meristem located in the terminal bud. It causes growth at the tip and an increase in plant height. This is described as PRIMARY GROWTH. It’s how the tree gets taller. No Sam. The initials would still be at the same level because the tree only grows at the apical meristems on the tips of the branches. Those are axillary buds and they have apical meristems too. They also use apical meristems and grow at the tips. It’s still called PRIMARY GROWTH. How’s about tree roots. How do they grow? Heh. What’ s the big deal with digging up my burrow? A rabbit’s got to have a home you know. Say Sam, I think your lateral meristem is showing. APICAL MERISTEMS - tips of roots and shoots -primary growth – stem and root elongation -both woody and herbaceous(non woody) plants What’s this lateral meristem? Woody plants grow wider due to lateral meristems. This is called SECONDARY GROWTH. So a tree trunk grows fatter (wider) due to this. That’s right doc and plants grow wider using the CAMBIUM to produce the new cells. VASCULAR CAMBIUM- secondary xylem and phloem CORK CAMBIUM- periderm Hold still while I give Cork cambium (innermost layer of the bark) makes the PERIDERM --BARK Peri mean circle, around. It covers stem you a periderm I mean perm. I was told that a monster’s BARK is worse than it’s bite. I think Monsters are the most innteresting people. You never meet more innteresting people in my job than monsters. Your initial is in the meristem called the cork cambium. I carved it there for ya. See I’m a learning somethin’. Carvin’ it on the bark makes it a derivative Here is a meristem. It remains embryonic and always continues to divide and make new cells. Cells that remain dividing in the meristem are called INITIALS, while those that separate and become specialized are called DERIVATIVES How`s about leaves. How do they grow? Year 2 terminal bud scar Year 1 terminal bud scar Two bud scars and the current terminal bud means this is 3 years old. Leaves grow from the apical meristem of the shoot apex(terminal bud). This is also the region where the stem elongates to make the branches longer. Nodes are the locations on the stem where new leaves sprout. Lateral buds also produce leaves. Be careful. Lateral buds are not lateral meristems. I do not grow from lateral meristems!! I’ve got a question. There’s this Bill guy who said somethin’ about determinate and indeterminate growth. He said it so fast and with so many distractions I never understood what he meant. Maybe you can help me understand . INDETERMINATE GROWTH means the tissues continue to grow. Ex. Tree trunks continue to grow taller and wider throughout their lives. DETERMINATE GROWTH means the tissues stop growing. Example –Leaves grow to a certain size and stop. A leaf trace is the vascular bundle that extends into the leaf. Bundle sheaths surround the vascular bundles in leaves The trunk of a tree is the tree’s version of a stem ROOT CROSS SECTION – DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MONOCOT AND DICOT The Stele is a fancy name for the vascular cylinder in the middle of the root. In the dicot you can see it in the center There’s a Stele in this monocot root here too. It’s inside the dark inner circle. ROOTS Let’s take a closer look at the stele I’m gonna think of it like a steel pipe. Water and sugar water flow inside the pipe in the xylem and phloem. endodermis xylem Stele Dicots roots have a cross pattern of Xylem Gymnosperms also Jesus Di ed on the CROSS for us. Connect DICOT TO CROSS pattern in dicot roots. Monocots have a pattern of large xylem tubes in a broken ring The dark layer is the ENDODERMISimportant in regulation of mineral and water uptake by the root. Casparian strip blocks passage of minerals/water so they must pass through endodermal plasma membrane to enter vascular system ROOTS The phloem occurs in between the xylem in both the monocot and dicot systems I also noticed a PERICYCLE thing inside the stele. What it that? The pericycle is the outermost vascular cylinder layer that can form into lateral root outgrowths and connect that new root to the existing plumbing (vascular system) ROOTS Now don’t you get the periderm and pericycle confused or I’ll be putting bicycles in your hair. PERIDERM = BARK PERICYCLE =ROOT And root hairs are epidermal cells that stretch out and absorb most water Apical meristem This is my root tip apical meristem. It is a region of dividing cells in various stages of mitosis. It makes the new cells for root growth. Maturation zone Elongation zone The root grows primarily from the elongation of cells and pushes into the soil The root cap is at the tip and it acts like a helmet as it pushes into the soil. It also adds polysaccharide slime lubrication to the soil. STEMS Let`s talk about stems in more detail now. The pictures below show the pattern of vascular tissue for a dicot and a monocot. The dicot forms a ring of vascular tissue, while the monocot has scattered vascular tissue This is my primary growth. With secondary growth stems get woody. cortex Cortex always mean outer layer pith Dicot+ Gynmosperms Monocot Wood is formed as the vascular cambium produces new phloem on the outer side facing the bark and new xylem facing the pith in the middle Eventually the inner secondary xylem dies and turns into wood. The growth rate can be seen in the annual rings. The dark band represents dormancy in winter. The ray or ray initials produce vascular rays movin` waternutrients usin` parenchyma The cork cambium is a meristem making the bark protection Count the annual rings to determine the age of the trunk. Between rings it is spring then summer xylem Lenticels provide a mechanism of gas exchange for air to penetrate into the tree trunk The phloem is always just underneath the periderm The heartwood is the gummed up xylem So what happens to our tree when vermin like our rabbit friend eat all the bark around the stem of some fruit trees I planted I hate to say it Sam, but your little fruit trees are going to die. Since the phloem has been eaten, it cannot transport any sugar nutrition down to the roots. Cells in the roots need energy, there is no photosynthesis in the ground, and they burn sugars just like we do in metabolism. If there is no sugar, metabolism stops and they die. That`s different Sam, because the phloem is still intact on the sides of the tree. Most of the inner xylem , wood, is dead anyway. Back to your fruit trees, once the roots die, the water does not conduct to the leaves and the entire plant is doomed. But I seen holes in trees in Yosemite National Park that you could drive cars through. They`re doin`just fine Plant Anatomy I hates rabbits. Ends I think Sam and Mary like each other. Imagine, meeting on a power-point like that. It`s worse than E-harmony