Basic Tissues - Plants Flashcards
What are the basic plant tissues?
Dermal tissue (epithelial)
Vascular tissue
Ground tissue
Meristematic tissue
What are the functions and locations of dermal tissue?
Functions:
- protect the plant tissues
- prevents water loss
Locations:
- outer layer of stems, roots and leaves
- 1 inner layer in roots
What are the functions and locations of vascular tissue?
Functions:
- xylem transports water
- phloem transports water
Locations:
-stems, leaves, roots
What are the functions and locations of ground tissue?
Functions:
-makes up bulk of plant mass (parenchyma, sclerenchyma, collenchyma)
Locations:
-Stems, roots, leaves
What are the functions and locations of meristematic tissue.
Functions:
-cell division to produce new growth
Locations:
- tips of shoots, roots
- in buds
- around stem of woody plants
What is the importance of the epidermis?
- Thick cell walls tightly pressed together = complete cellular layer
- can give rise to guard cells around stomata trichomes (hair cells)
What is the importance of the cuticle ?
- covers the epidermis
- acts as transpiration barrier a.k.a helps waterproofing
- interacts with microorganisms e.g. soil bac and fungi = important to root water capture
What is the importance of the parenchyma?
Parenchyma – versatile cell type
Thin cell walls
Large vacuoles
Photosynthetic cells in leaves and stems
(chlorenchyma: parenchyma containing chloroplasts)
The only dividing cells (so found in meristems)
+ used in wound repair
Storage cells in roots, stems, seeds (starch)
May be air filled tissue in floating plants
What is the importance of the collenchyma?
Collenchyma:
-structural support, growing shoots & leaves
-Living cells, thickened cell walls – thickness depends on
mechanical stress on the plant – may be doubled
eg tough strands in celery sticks!
-Beneath epidermis of stems & leaves
-4 different types, relating to exactly how cells interact with one
another and how the walls are thickened.
What is the importance of the sclerenchyma?
Sclerenchyma: main structural support for a plant
- Long, slender cells bundled together
- Thick cell walls; cells themselves are dead
- Develop in association with xylem & phloem, from cambium
- commercially important: used for fibres in fabrics e.g. cotton
What is structure of the xylem?
- columns of elongate dead cells thick woody cell walls,
- forming tubes
- tracheids (elongated cells) and vessel elements
What are the functions of the xylem?
- water transport
- transpiration
- root pressure
- capillary action
What is the structure of the phloem?
-made of cells linked end to end: sieve tubes
-Highly specialised, have lost most of their internal structures
that might slow fluid movement.
-Cells linked end to end via specialised plasmodesmata
what are the functions of the phloem?
-transport organic nutrients, mostly sucrose
Describe the importance of the meristem
-Sites of growth
-Undifferentiated parenchymal cells; similar to animal
stem cells in roles
-Generate new cells which can then differentiate into new
cell types as the developing structure matures
-Apical for growth of roots and shoots, modified to form flowers
-Primary: increase in length/height, derived from apical
-Secondary: vascular cambium, makes new xylem & phloem
throughout life - wood formation