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Download Stems and leaves
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Stems and leaves • All part of a dynamic shoot system • Stem Functions: – Support – Produce carbohydrates – Storage – Transport between roots and leaves • Growth – At nodes and internodes – Buds = apical and axillary – Intercalary meristems (base of nodes and leaf sheaths) Rosette plants = plants where the stem does not elongate The Structure of Stems • 3 tissues – (1) Epidermal – (2) Ground – (3) Vascular Epidermal Tissue: – One cell thick, transparent, has trichomes – Covers stems until turns into bark Vascular Tissue: – Arranged relative to leaves – Xylem and phloem occur in Vascular Bundles !! Typical Vascular Bundle • Phloem forms first, on outside • Xylem second, on inside • Enclosed or found with sclerenchyma fibers • Procambium (meristematic) • Monocot vs. Dicot Monocot Stem Cross Section Lack vascular cambium in mature forms. Vascular bundles embedded throughout tissue. Dicot Stem Cross Section Secondary growth, single ring of vascular bundles embedded in ground tissue. Ground Tissue: – Cortex (monocots and dicots) and pith (dicots) Axillary Buds and Branching: – Axils – Meristematic but dormant normally – Apical Dominance Some dicots and nonflowering plants: – Concentric cylinders of xylem and phloem Modified Stems • That grow underground – – – – Bulbs Rhizomes Corms Tubers • That grow above ground – – – – – – Runners Tendrils Searchers Cladodes Thorns Succulents The Leaf How leaves form: • • • • Leaf buttress or leaf primordia (100-300 cells) The apical peg, apical meristem and midrib Adaxial side grows slower than the abaxial Unequal growth causes early leaf to arch over apical meristem, protecting it • Adaxial meristem forms, thickens leaf • Eventually leaf forms upper leaf zone and lower leaf zone • Upper zone contains marginal meristems to broaden the blade and form petiole • • • • Upper leaf zone flattened Lower leaf zone forms leaf base Leaf approximately 6 cells thick Continued leaf growth by cellular expansion and division along margins