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Introductory Plant Biology Ninth Edition Kingsley Stern Chapter 5 Image Slides* *See PowerPoint Lecture Outline for a complete, ready-made presentation integrating art and lecture notes. 1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Chapter 5 Roots Root function • Anchor plant to soil • absorb water and minerals in solution 3 How roots develop • Embryo- an immature plant • Radicle- first root that grows out of an embryo 4 2 types of mature roots 1. Taproot- large major root - pine trees, carrots 2. Fibrous roots- many branched roots; Adventitious roots- roots that develop from stem, leaf, etc. 5 Fig. 5.1 6 Root development in flowering plants 1. Dicotyledon- have 2 “seed leaves” - have taproots from which secondary roots develop - ex. Peas and carrots 2.Monocotyledon-have 1 “seed leaf” - have fibrous roots - ex. Corn and rice 7 Root structure; 4 regions 1. Root cap- thimble-shaped mass of parenchyma cells - Protects the root from damage as it pushes through the dirt - Dictysomes produce slimy substance to help root move - Functions in the perception of gravity 8 4 root regions cont. 2. Region of cell division- composed of apical meristem in the center of the root tip - produces surrounding root cap 9 3 types of meristem from apical meristem 1. Protoderm- forms epidermis 2. Ground meristem- forms cortex 3. Procambium- forms primary xylem and phloem 10 4 root regions cont. 3. Regions of elongation- 1cm from root tip - cells grow longer and wider - no further increase in cell size takes place above this region 11 4 root regions cont. 4. Region of maturation/differentiation or “root hair zone” 12 Fig. 5.2 13 Cells and Tissues of Region of Maturation • Root hairs - absorb water & minerals - hold tightly to soil - increase surface area - not separate cells; extensions of specialized epidermal cells - up to 250,000/in2 14 Fig. 5.4b 15 Cells/Tissues cont. • Cortex- parenchyma cells that lie between epidermis and inner tissues; stores food 16 Cells/Tissues cont. • Endodermis- separates cortex from vascular tissue - Consists of a single-layer cylinder of cells -Casparian strips- “mortar” of suberin around endodermis cells 17 Cells/Tissues cont. • Endodermis cont. • Casparian strips- force all water and dissolved substances to pass through the plasma membrane or plasmodesmata of the endodermis - this regulates types of minerals absorbed 18 Fig. 5.5 19 Cells/Tissues cont. • Vascular cylinder- inside area of endodermis - pericycle- parenchyma cells that give rise to lateral vascular cambium and lateral roots - primary xylem- central core; usually 4 arms - branch roots grow opposite of arms 20 Cells/Tissues cont. • Phloem- forms between xylem arms • Vascular cambium- develops between xylem and phloem • Cork cambium- woody plants only - arises outside vascular cambium - generally not found in monocots 21 Fig. 5.6 22 Tissue Development Apical Meristem Apical Meristem Protoderm Ground Meristem Epidermis Cortex Pith Procambium Primary Primary Primary Xylem Phloem Vascular Cambium 23 Specialized Roots • Food storage roots- sweet potatoes, carrots • Large number of parenchyma cells form in branch roots • Store carbohydrates 24 Specialized Roots • Water-storage roots- pumpkin family roots - plants store water in roots when water supply in soil is low 25 Specialized Roots • Propagative roots- adventitious buds- buds appearing in places other than the stem - buds develop into aerial stems called suckers, with rootlets at base - found in cherry, apple, pear trees 26 Specialized Roots • Aerial roots- may support plant in high wind; aid in climbing • Contractile roots- pull plant deeper into the soil • Buttress roots- add stability 28 Fig. 5.12 29 Fig. 5.13 30 Fig. 5.14 31 Specialized Roots • Parasitic roots- mistletoe - haustoria-(sing. haustorium) projections that develop along stem in contact with host - penetrate outer tissue and connect with host’s vascular tissue 32 Mycorrhizae • mycorrhizae- fungus roots - fungus grows on roots; can’t grow beyond Casparian strip - absorb phosphorus, water and minerals for the plant - fungus lives on plant’s sugar - ex. of mutualism 33 Fig. 5.16ab 35 Root Nodules • root nodules- small swelling on roots filled with N2 -fixing bacteria - found in Legumes 36 Fig. 5.17 37 Human Relevance of Roots • food; carrots, sugar beets, turnips rutabagas, parsnips, horseradishes, sweet potatoes • spices- sassafras, sarsaparilla, licorice • dyes • drugs • insecticides 38 Soil • several types of sand, rocks, pebbles, clay, silt, small animals, bacteria, fungi • Humus- decomposed organic matter 39 Soil texture and mineral composition • sand and silt- small particles • clay- colloid-suspension of particles that are larger than molecules, but do not settle out of fluid • loam-mixture of sand, clay organic matter - agricultural soil- 40% silt, 40% sand, 20% clay 40 Minerals in soil • include- O2, H2, Si, Al, Fe, K, Ca, Mg, Na 42 Soil pH • Some plants thrive in acidic conditions, others basic • liming- adding Ca or Mg to make soil basic • basic soil can be made more acidic by adding S or N2 45 Fig. 5.4a 47