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Lecture 2

1. Plants have two main organ systems: the shoot system above ground and the root system below ground. 2. Plant tissues are categorized as meristematic (undifferentiated) or permanent (differentiated). Meristematic tissues include apical, intercalary, and lateral meristems responsible for growth. 3. Permanent tissues include dermal tissues like epidermis and periderm, ground tissues like parenchyma, collenchyma, and sclerenchyma, and vascular tissues for transport.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
99 views39 pages

Lecture 2

1. Plants have two main organ systems: the shoot system above ground and the root system below ground. 2. Plant tissues are categorized as meristematic (undifferentiated) or permanent (differentiated). Meristematic tissues include apical, intercalary, and lateral meristems responsible for growth. 3. Permanent tissues include dermal tissues like epidermis and periderm, ground tissues like parenchyma, collenchyma, and sclerenchyma, and vascular tissues for transport.

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Lendie Vill
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ORGANIZATION OF

LIVING SYSTEMS
Instructor: Djamae L. Manzanares, MSc
Plant Organ
Organ systems in Plants:

1. Shoot system
- above ground
- includes leaves, buds, stem, flower and
fruits

2. Root system
- below ground
- includes roots
Monocotyledonae vs Dicotyledonae
Examples:
1. Grasses
2. Lilies
3. Orchids
4. Palms

Examples:
1. Oaks
2. Beans
3. Spinach
4. Rose
Apical
Meristematic Intercalary
(Undifferentiated)
Lateral
Parenchyma
PLANT
TISSUES Simple Ground Collenchyma

Sclerenchyma
Non-meristematic
(Differentiated) Epidermis
Cork
Dermal
Periderm Cork Cambium
Complex Phelloderm

Xylem Tracheids
Vessels
Vascular
Sieve Tubes
Phloem
Companion Cells
Meristematic or Embryonic
• composed of embryonic cells capable of cell division

• localized region for active cell division are the meristems


Types of Meristems:
• Apical meristem

• occur at the tips of roots and shoots


• responsible in length of the plant (primary growth)
• contain initials that form primary meristems that produce root
and stem tissues
Primary Meristems

• Protoderm
• forms the epidermis

• Procambium
• forms phloem and xylem

• Ground Meristem
• forms parenchyma, collenchyma &
sclerenchyma
Types of Meristems:
• Intercalary meristem

• occurs between mature tissues (in the


vicinity of the nodes)
• enables the leaf blade to increase in
length from the leaf base
• helps regenerate parts removed by
grazing herbivores
• common in grasses
Types of Meristems:
• Lateral meristem

• occur in the periphery of the roots and stems


• responsible for lateral growth (secondary growth)/gives increase
in girth
• lateral meristems are called cambia (sing., cambium)
• vascular cambium: cylinder of cells that forms new phloem and
xylem
• cork cambium: cylinder of cells located beneath the bark (woody
plants)
Types of Meristems:
• Lateral meristem

vascular cambium: lies between the wood and the inner bark
cork cambium: lies closer to the surface, and produces the outer bark
Cork Cambium
• also known as, bark cambium, pericambium and phellogen

• responsible for secondary growth that replaces the epidermis in roots &
stems

• foundin woody and many herbaceous dicots, gymnosperms and


some monocots
PermanentTissues

• composed of mature, differentiated cells

• derived from the meristematic tissues but their cells have lost the ability
of division and have attained their different forms
Types of Permanent Tissue:
• Dermal tissue
• outermost layer of the primary plant body covering leaves, floral
parts, fruits, seeds, stems and roots
Primary Dermal Tissue: Epidermis
• generally only one layer thick

• composed of mostly unspecialized cells, either parenchyma and/or


sclerenchyma
• guard cells which form stomata, pores for gas exchange, are present on
one or both surface
Functions of Epidermis
• acts as a buffer between the environment and the internal plant tissues

• absorption of water and minerals primarily in the root region

• on the stem and leaves generally covered with a cutin which prevents
evaporation
• can form a barrier resistant to bacteria and fungi

• can prevent leaching of materials in or out of the surface


Secondary Dermal Tissue: Periderm
• constitutes the outer bark

• secondary epidermis, produced by the cork cambium

• provides protection while permitting gas exchange


Three Different Layers of Periderm:
1. Phellem (cork)
– non-living suberized cells
– produced by phellogen (cork
cambium) to outside of stem
2. Phellogen (cork cambium)
– produces cork to the outside
– produces phelloderm to the inside
3. Phelloderm
– composed of living parenchyma cells
– produced toward the inside of the
stem by the cork cambium (phellogen)
Types of Permanent Tissue:
• Ground tissue
• non-meristematic tissue and occurs throughout the plant
• functions include storage, metabolism and support
• three types are the following:
Types of Ground Tissue:Parenchyma
• most abundant cells in plants
• usually have thin primary walls and no
secondary walls
• spherical and flat cells
• alive at maturity
• have large vacuoles for storage of starch,
fats, and tannins
• metabolic function include photosynthesis,
respiration, and protein synthesis
Types of Parenchyma
• Aerenchyma
• refers to spaces
or air channels in the leaves,
stems and roots of some plants, which allows
exchange of gases between the shoot and
the root

• Chlorenchyma
• contain chloroplasts and forming the basic
green tissue of plant leaves and stems
Types of Ground Tissue:Collenchyma
• structurally
similar to parenchymal cells
except that their walls are irregularly
thickened
• functionsas an important supporting tissue
in young plants, in the stem of non-woody
older plants and leaves
• lacks secondary walls (lignin is absent)thus,
provides flexible support without
restraining growth
Cucurbita stem
cross-section (10x)
Types of Ground Tissue:Sclerenchyma
• most are dead at maturity

• cells have uniformly thick, heavily


lignified secondary walls that contains
lignin, a component of wood thus,
more rigid than collenchyma
• functions in support
Types of Sclerenchyma
• Sclereids
• relatively short; have variable shapes
• occur singly or in small groups
• form hard layers such as the
shells of nuts and seed coats
• produce the gritty texture of pears

• Fibers
• long, slender; occur in strands or
bundles
• used to make coarse rope, linen or
cloth
Types of Permanent Tissue:
• Vascular tissue
• complex mixture of parenchyma, sclerenchyma, fiber cells, all non-
transporting cells and those cells involved in transport
Types of VascularTissue
• Xylem (conducting sclerenchyma)
• chiefconducting tissue throughout all organs for water and minerals
absorbed by the roots
• can act as food storage
• consists of a combination of parenchyma cells, fibers, vessels,
tracheids and ray cells

• Phloem
• conducts
dissolved food materials produced by photosynthesis
throughout the plant
Conducting Elements of Xylem:
• Vessels
• long tubes composed of individual cells
(vessel elements) that have thick
secondary cell walls & are open at each
end
• chiefly for conduction

• Tracheids
• elongated and tapering cells
• dead at maturity
• serve for strength and conduction
Conducting Elements of Phloem:
• Sieve elements
• relatively large, more or less cylindrical
• specialized cells that are important for
the
function of phloem in transporting organic
compounds made during photosynthesis

• Companion cells
• narrower & more tapered
• found alongside each sieve-tube element
which is connected to it by plasmodesmata
• regulates activity of sieve tubes

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