Plant Anatomy and Physiology
Plant Anatomy and Physiology
Plant Anatomy and Physiology
• Plant Anatomy
– Cells
– Tissues
– Organs
• Plant Physiology
– Water & sugar transport
– Plant hormones
From smallest to largest plants
What is plant anatomy?
• ANATOMY: study of the structure of
organisms… looking at cells, tissues
• (Morphology: Study of form)
Dermal
• Roots Vascular
Ground
Dermal
• Stems Vascular
Ground
Dermal
• Leaves Vascular
Ground
Functions of plant organs:
• ROOTS: Anchorage, water/nutrient absorption
from soil, storage, water/nutrient transport
epidermis
cortex
vascular
Root Epidermis
• Outermost, single layer of cells that:
– Protects (from diseases)
– Absorbs water and nutrients
Root hairs
increase surface
area for better
absorption
Root Cortex
• Stores starch, sugars and other substances
Root Ground tissue
• In roots, ground tissue (a.k.a. cortex)
provides support, and
often stores sugars and starch
(for example: yams, sweet potato, etc.)
You’re not a
yam, you’re a Hey!
sweetpotato! I yam
what I
cortex yam,
man!
Root Cortex: Endodermis
• Endodermis: the innermost layer of the
cortex
Root cortex: Casparian strip
• The Casparian strip is a water-impermeable
strip of waxy material found in the
endodermis (innermost layer of the cortex).
• The Casparian strip helps to control the
uptake of minerals into the xylem: they have
to go through the cytoplasm of the cell!
STEMS
• Above-ground organs (usually)
epidermis cortex
Vascular
pith
bundles
Types of Stems
bark
phloem
Vascular
cambium wood
xylem
Girdling: cutting around a tree
• Damages the phloem and xylem, eventually
killing the tree!
Vascular tissue forms rings in trees
• Annual rings: xylem formed by the
vascular cambium during one growing
season
• One ring = one year
History of the tree: annual rings
Dendrochronology : tree time-keeping
cortex
pith
LEAVES:
• ‘Photosynthetic factories’ of the plant…
• Function: Photosynthesis – food
production for the whole plant
• Blade: Flat expanded area
• Petiole: stalk that connects
leaf blade to stem, and
transports materials
BLADE
Leaf Anatomy
• Leaf anatomy is correlated to photosynthesis:
Carbon dioxide + Water sugars + oxygen
dermal
ground
vascular
dermal
Leaf epidermis
• Is transparent – so that sun light can go through.
• Waxy cuticle protects against drying out
• Lower epidermis: stomata with guard cells –
for gas exchange (CO2, H2O in; O2 out)
Leaf epidermis
• Trichomes (give fuzzy texture)
(“Panda plant”)
Leaf vascular tissue
• VEINS vascular tissue of leaves.
• Veins are composed of xylem (water transport)
phloem (food transport)
and bundle sheaths,
cells surrounding the
xylem/phloem for
strength & support
Leaf Mesophyll
• Middle of the leaf (meso-phyll)
• Composed of photosynthetic ground cells:
• Palisade parenchyma
(long columns below epidermis;
have lots chloroplasts for
photosynthesis)
Spongy parenchyma
(spherical cells)
with air spaces around,
(for gas exchange)
Plant water transport
• How can water move from
the ground
all the way
to the top
of a 100 m
tall redwood
tree?
Water transport in plants:
• The same way we drink soda
from a straw!
• Water’s great
cohesive forces (molecules
sticking to each other)
and adhesive forces
(attaching to walls of xylem cells)
Transpiration-cohesion Theory
for water transport in the xylem
• Evaporation of water in the leaves
(through stomates) generates the ‘sucking
force’ that pulls adjacent water molecules
up the leaf surface
Water transport (cont.)
• Like a long chain, water molecules pull each
other up the column.
• The column goes from roots leaves.
and phototropism
3. Cytokinins
• Promote cell division and
organ differentiation
4. Abscisic Acid
• Promotes seed dormancy
• Causes stomata closing
5. ETHYLENE
• Gaseous hormone,
very simple formula (C2H4)
• Ethylene promotes
fruit ripening!
Air Ethylene
“One rotten apple spoils the barrel”
• Why?
Probably due to ethylene!
Rotten apple producing
lots of ethylene!
• Autocatalytic
• As a response to injury
Avocado ripening…
• Place in a paper bag, with a ripe banana!