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Title: The Plant Study Sheet
Description: (13 pages) Easy to understand and simplified notes for both laboratory and lecture classes on botany. Includes notes for plant histology, roots, stems, leaves, and brief discussion on guttation and transpiration. (Recommended readings: Biology 8th Edition by Campbell, Reece, and Mitchell, or any trusted Botany book)
Description: (13 pages) Easy to understand and simplified notes for both laboratory and lecture classes on botany. Includes notes for plant histology, roots, stems, leaves, and brief discussion on guttation and transpiration. (Recommended readings: Biology 8th Edition by Campbell, Reece, and Mitchell, or any trusted Botany book)
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PLANT HISTOLOGY
Meristems:
1) Apical- (at the tip for vertical growth) protoderm, ground meristem, procambium
2) Lateral- (at the sides for increase in width) vascular cambium and cork cambium
3) Intercalary- (base of young leaves and internodes) for lengthening/growth stem and leaves far from the tip
Simple Permanent Tissues (1 type of cell only):
1) Epidermis- outermost tissue (young:uniseriated, old:multiseriated) of all monocots and herbaceous dicots
- has a cuticle which is made up of cutin to lessen water loss
- has out gowths called TRICHOMES (root hairs in roots which protect and lessen H2O loss as well as increase surface area)
Functions: protection from predators and reduce evaporation of water
Types:
a) Glandular- has secretions and alive at maturity
Muntigia calobura
b) Non-glandular- no secretions and dead at matuirty
1-Simple hairs: Theobroma cacao (uni)
2-Bristle: Mucuna pruriens (multi)
3-Stellates: Urena lobata (multi)
4-Branching: Vervascum thapsus (multi)
5-Scale (multi)
2) Parenchyma- uniformly thin cell wall and alive at maturity
- for food storage
3) Collenchyma- non-uniform cell wall thickness and alive at maturity
- for structural support and protection and sometimes for food storage too
4) Sclerenchyma- thick cell wall (contain lignin) and dead at functional maturity
- for structural support and protection
5) Cork- outermost tissue of leaves and roots as well as stem of woody, dicot plants
- for protection
Complex Permanent Tissues (More than 1 type of cell):
1) Phloem- for transport of dissolved food material/nutrients
a) Sieve tubes- no nucleus, arranged end-to-end
b) Companion cells- has nucleus, narrower and vertical elongation
2) Xylem- for H2O transport
a) Vessel elements- perforated ends
b) Tracheids- not perforated
Tracheary elements- with lignin in their cell walls (the two above)
Types:
1-Annular: Zea mays mancerated (ring)
2-Helical: Tilia mancerated (spiral)
3-Reticulated (net-like)
4-Pitted: Cucurbita mancerated (many, non-lignified pits)
5-Bordered pits: Pine mancerated
6-Scalarifom: Cucurbita mancerated
*Stomata: for cellular respiration
a) guard cells (2) flexible anticlinical walls
b) accessory/subsidiary cells- participate in osmotic changes involved in movements of guard cells (variable #)
c) stoma
ROOTS
Root Systems:
1) Tap root- has primary root; mostly for dicots
2) Fibrous root- no primary root/ diffuse; mostly for monocots
*adventitious root: arises from stem/ leaves (e
...
prop roots of zea mays or pandan)
Longitudinal Regions:
1) Root cap- group of cells at the root tip which protect meristematic part
2) Embryonic region- zone of cell division; actively dividing region
3) Region of cell elongation- increase in length of the root
4) Region of cellular maturation/differentiation- root hairs are here, differentiated for specific functions
*youngest root hair near meristem; older farther
Monocot vs
...
bamboo)
*differentiated tissues on lowermost internode
*ENDARCHY- centrifugal xylem differentiation; prtoxylem in
MONOCOT
-scattered vascular bundles
-outercovering: epidermis only
DICOT
-in a ring/ circular arrangement
-can be epidermis; (woody) periderm
-no secondary growth (no vascular cambium)
-has secondary growth (has vascualr cambium)
-no cork cambium
-may have cork cambium
WOODY DICOT
-seondary xylem is bulk of stem
PINE (GYMNOSPERM)
-primary xylem
-w/ companion cells and vessels
-no companion cells and veseels
-no secretory cells and resin ducts
-with resin ducts and secretory cells
-isodiametric cells
-cubical cells
LEAVES
Important Terms:
1) Phyllotaxy- arrangement of leaves
a) Alternate/ spiral- 1 leaf per node can be distichous (180 degrees separation)
b) Opposite- 2 leaves per node (decussate (90 deg) or distichous)
c) whorled- 3 or more leaves per node
2) Blade/lamina- thin, flat structure (usually green)
3) Leaf Stalk/Petiole
*sesille- without petiole (most monocots)
4) Stipules- outgrowths of some dicot leaves at base
5) Petiolule- stalk of leaflet
6) Stipels- secondary stipule in pairs at base of petiolule
7) Rachis- extension of petiole
8) Nature of Leaf blade:
simple- one piece
compound- separate segments called leaflets or pinnae
9) Venation
parallel- most monocots, no network (dicot: plantain and Nerium oleander- adelfa)
reticulated/netted- most dicots, network (monocot: Diffenbachia-dumb cane and Colocasia esculenta-taro)
Internal Structure of Leaves:
1) Epidermis- outermost
-covered by cuticle on both sides
-more stomata on abaxial side than adaxial side
2) Mesophyll- photosynthetic, parenchymatous region
a) pallisade- collumnar and closely arranged
b) spongy- iregular shape, loosely arranged for gas exchange
3) Vascular tissues
a) border parenchyma- thin cell wall
b) bundle sheath- thick cell wall
*Bulliform cells- large and thinly walled for rolling of leaves
Anatomical Features:
Feature
Dicot
Monocot
Gymnosperm
Epidermis
P (1 layer)
P (1 layer)
P (1 layer)
Stomata
A
P (in line)
P (suken stomata)
Mesophyll
P both
P (spongy)
P (lobed mesophyll)
Vascular tissue
P (scattered)
P (arranged)
P (tracheids)
Blade
P
P
P (scale like)
Midrib
P
P
P
bundle sheath and
resin ducts and secretory cells
bulliform cells
transfusion tissue
(pallisade and spongy)
Others
hypodermis
Leaf Forms: linear, elliptical, lanceolate, oblanceolate, ovate, obovate
Leaf Margins: entire, sinuate, crenate, serrate, cleft
Leaf Apex: rounded, acute, acuminate, obcordate (emarginate)
Leaf Base: rounded, cordate, peltate, sagittate, auricled, acute
GUTTATION AND TRANSPIRATION
Guttation
-occurs in the hydathode which secretes the water
-modified stomata: epithem (parencymatous) and H2O pore
-happens at night and the dews are observed in the morning
-relieve of pressure due to the huge uptake of water at night
-observed along leaf margin
Transpiration
-evaporation of H2O from plant leaves
Factors affecting:
1) Atmospheric humidity- dry air increases transpiration (occurs as long as H2O potential of atmosphere is less than water
potential of the leaf); humid air slows it down
2) Internal CO2 concentration- reduce in supply for photosynthesis opens up the stomata, increasing transpiration
3) Wind- *'boundary layer' [thin, moist air adjacent to transpiring leaf]
- Thick boundary decreases diffusion gradient, decreasing transpiration
-WIND replaces boundary layer wuth drier air, increasing transpiration
4) Air Temperature- high temp increases H2O vapor pressure, increasing water potential, ergo faster transpiration
5) Soil- absorb water from soil as long as water potential is less than the soil
6) Light intensity- causes stomata to open, increasing transpiration
Title: The Plant Study Sheet
Description: (13 pages) Easy to understand and simplified notes for both laboratory and lecture classes on botany. Includes notes for plant histology, roots, stems, leaves, and brief discussion on guttation and transpiration. (Recommended readings: Biology 8th Edition by Campbell, Reece, and Mitchell, or any trusted Botany book)
Description: (13 pages) Easy to understand and simplified notes for both laboratory and lecture classes on botany. Includes notes for plant histology, roots, stems, leaves, and brief discussion on guttation and transpiration. (Recommended readings: Biology 8th Edition by Campbell, Reece, and Mitchell, or any trusted Botany book)