Lecture 9: Inside Leaves and Transpiration Flashcards
Densely packed, columnar-shaped, elongated cells full of chloroplasts
Palisade mesophyll
Upper surface of a leaf
Upper epidermis with cuticle
Xylem, phloem, bundle sheath along with nearby parenchyma
Vascular Bundle
Loosely packed cells with large air spaces in between which allow movement and exchange of gases, specifically oxygen, carbon dioxide and water vapor.
Spongy mesophyll (also contain chloroplasts)
Regulate the size of the stomata (holes in the leaf surface that allow gas exchange between the atmosphere and internal parts of the leaf)
Lower epidermis and guard cells
Cellular organelles that contain types and colors of pigments other than chloroplasts
Chromoplasts
Why do leaves change color in the fall?
mesophyll cell chloroplasts produce chlorophyll at a slower rate than earlier in the year. As the existing chlorophyll gets to the end of its functional lifespan and eventually degenerates the amount of chlorophyll over time declines. Chlorophyll replacement doesn’t make up for chlorophyll loss and so the green color fades out of the leaves. Meanwhile, the non-green pigments in the chromoplasts are holding their own or increasing in quantity, including the yellow and orange from the carotinoid pigments and the red from the anthocyanin pigments.
Highly adapted for capturing light energy
palisade mesophyll
Highly adapted for the transport of fluid
Vascular bundle
The movement of water in the plant from root to stem to leaf and out through the stomata to the atmosphere
Transpiration (evapotranspiration)
Rate of transpiration depend on
Light Temperature Humidity Wind Soil and water availability Plant type
Water pressure (turgor) in the root cells during the night or during cloudy days can push water and dissolved materials up into the stem. This root pressure is the cause of guttation which is the dew-like drops of water that are forced out of leaves.
Push Explanation
The cohesion between water molecules due to the hydrogen bonds is very strong, and strong enough to hold the column of water together very tightly over long distances, like from root, through the stem and into the leaf. Although an individual bond is weak, there are so many that a column has enormous tensile strength.
Pull Explanation (cohesion-adhesion tension)
Functions of transpiration
provides water for photosynthesis
cools plant
Moves minerals from root to leaf