Ch. 26 Woody Stems Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the difference between annual, biennial, and perennial

A

Annual plants complete their life cycle within one year. They germinate, grow, flower, produce seeds, and die in a single growing season. Examples include marigolds and zinnias.

Biennial: Biennial plants have a two-year life cycle. In the first year, they typically grow vegetatively, producing leaves and stems. In the second year, they flower, set seeds, and then die. Common biennials include carrots and parsley.

Perennial: Perennial plants live for multiple years, often regrowing from the same roots or stems each year. They can continue to produce flowers and seeds over several seasons. Trees, shrubs, and many herbaceous plants like roses and daisies are perennials.

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2
Q

Describe the difference between primary growth and secondary growth.

A

Primary Growth: Primary growth is vertical growth of a plant, occurring at the tips of roots and stems. lengthening of plant parts of apical meristems, which are primarily responsible for cell division and elongation. Primary growth produces primary tissues like primary xylem and phloem.

Secondary growth is the lateral or radial growth of a plant, increasing its girth or width. It occurs in woody plants and is driven by lateral meristems, primarily the vascular cambium and cork cambium. Secondary growth results in the formation of secondary tissues like secondary xylem and phloem, cork, and secondary cortex.

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3
Q

Compare and contrast the two lateral meristems: Where are they found? What do they produce?

A

Vascular Cambium:

Location: The vascular cambium is found between the primary xylem and phloem in the stem and roots of woody plants.
Products: Vascular cambium produces secondary xylem (wood) toward the inside and secondary phloem toward the outside.
Cork Cambium (Phellogen):

Location: Cork cambium is located in the outer bark of woody stems and roots.
Products: Cork cambium produces cork cells (phellem) to the outside and phelloderm to the inside, which together form the periderm.

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4
Q

Define Bark .

A

The protective outer covering of a woody stem or branch.

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5
Q

define outer bark

A

The protective, dead cork (phellem) and cork cambium (phellogen).

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6
Q

define lenticel

A

Small, corky pores in the bark that allow for gas exchange.

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7
Q

define cork

A

The outermost layer of the periderm, formed by the cork cambium.

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8
Q

define wood

A

: The secondary xylem produced during secondary growth.

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9
Q

define heartwood

A

The older, non-functional core of wood in a tree trunk.

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10
Q

define sapwood

A

The younger, functional outer portion of wood that transports water and nutrients.

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11
Q

define inner bark

A

The living layer of phloem and associated tissues.

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12
Q

define rays,

A

: Radial bands of parenchyma cells that extend from the center to the bark in wood.

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13
Q

define girdling

A

: Removing a ring of bark around a tree, which can kill it by interrupting nutrient flow.

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14
Q

define dendrochronology

A

The study of tree rings to determine age, growth patterns, and environmental history.

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15
Q

define dendroclimatology

A

Using tree rings to study past climate conditions.

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16
Q

Identify the parts of a cross-section of a woody stem

A

A cross-section of a woody stem includes the pith, primary xylem, secondary xylem, vascular cambium, secondary phloem, primary phloem, and bark (cork cambium, cork, and phelloderm).