Lecture 3 - Plant Tissues
Lecture 3 - Plant Tissues
Lecture 3 - Plant Tissues
Sclerenchyma Phloem
Meristematic Tissues
Meristems are group of cells capable of
producing new cells through repeated cell
divisions
a. Immature , undifferentiated cells
b. Intercellular spaces absent
c. Shape - rounded, oval, or polygonal
d. Thin cellulose cell walls present
e. Vacuoles may be small or absent
f. Abundant cytoplasm
g. Inorganic inclusions absent
h. High rate of metabolic activity
Classification of Meristems
based on their position in plant body
Type of Meristem Location Function
Parenchyma is derived from the Greek para, beside, and en-chein, “to
pour”, a combination of words that expresses the ancient concept of
parenchyma as a semiliquid substance “poured beside” other tissues that
are formed earlier and are more solid.
Parenchyma tissue makes up large parts of
various organs
• Pith, the mesophyll of leaves, the pulp of
fruits, & endosperms of seeds
Palisade
parenchyma
Spongy
parenchyma
Cystolith in leaf of Ficus elastica
b. Calcium oxalate crystals
- Raphides, Idioblasts, Druses,
Styloids, Prismatic crystals,
Silica/Sand Crystals etc.
*Raphides- needle-like, long
and slender, parallel to each other
Prismatic crystals
3. Starch grains
- Amyloplasts
(leucoplasts)
4. Pigments
- carotenoid pigments in “chromoplasts”
– globules or crystals
• no living protoplasts
- uniform thickenings
FIBERS
SCLERIDS
Different Forms (shapes) of Sclereids
Complex Permanent
1. Periderm Tissues
-It is the secondary protective (dermal) tissue that
replaces the epidermis during growth in thickness of
stems and roots of gymnosperms and dicotyledons (i.e.,
secondary growth).
-Consists of 3 layers:
- phellem (cork)
- phelogen (cork cambium)
- pheloderm
• The most important function is to reduce the loss of
water and solutes from interior tissues and to protect a
plant from unfavorable environmental conditions.
Phellem (the cork)
Consists of cells that are dead at maturity, and
their primary walls become covered from the
inside by the secondary wall which consists of
parallel suberin lamellae alternating with wax
layers.
2. Phellogen (cork cambium)
-The lateral meristem and is one cell layer thick
and encircles the stem. It produces periderm
centrifugally. The layer of cork cells formed is
impermeable for water and gases.
3. Phelloderm
-parenchyma cells are produced centripetally
(i.e. to the inside of the stem or root) by the
phellogen as a part of the periderm.
The water
conducting
elements of
xylem are:
- tracheids
- vessel
elements
• Tracheids
– Characteristics
• tapered elongated cells
• connect to each other through pits
• secondary cell walls strengthened with lignin
• dead at functional maturity
– Functions
• transport of water plus dissolved minerals
• support
• Vessel Elements
– Characteristics
• shorter and wider than tracheids
• possess thinner cell walls than tracheids
• Aligned end-to-end to form long micropipes
• dead at functional maturity
– Functions
• transport of water plus dissolved minerals
• support
More xylem is needed for more water
transport: secondary growth
phloem
xylem
Primary
growth in
a stem
Secondary growth:
a vascular meristem
(cambium) forms
between the xylem
and phloem
Secondary growth:
new xylem to the
inside, new phloem to
the outside
primary
xylem
new
secondary
xylem dividing
vascular
cambium
new
secondary primary
phloem phloem
Secondary xylem
(wood) and phloem
(bark)
References
• Evert, R.F. 2006. Esau’s Plant Anatomy. 3rd
ed. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley &
Sons, Inc.
• Kaplan, D.R. 2001. The science of plant
morphology: definition, history, and role in
modern biology. American Journal of Botany,
88(10): 1711–1741.
• Romero, C. 2005. Lectures taken from N.
Campbell and J. Reece, PowerPoint Lectures
for Biology, 7th ed., Pearson Education, Inc.