Chapter 35: Plant Structure, Growth, and Development (Test 3) Flashcards

1
Q

The Three Basic Plant Organs:___

A

Roots, Stems, and Leaves

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2
Q
  • Three basic organs evolved: roots, stems, and leaves
  • They are organized into a ___ system and a ___ system
  • Roots rely on sugar produced by photosynthesis in the shoot system, and shoots rely on water and minerals absorbed by the root system. Inderdependent!
A

root

shoot

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3
Q

•Roots are multicellular organs with important functions:

–Anchoring the plant

–Absorbing minerals and water

–Storing organic nutrients

A
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4
Q
  • A ___ system consists of one main vertical root that gives rise to lateral roots, or branch roots
  • In most plants, absorption of water and minerals occurs near the ___, where vast numbers of tiny root hairs increase the surface area
A

taproot

root hairs

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5
Q

•A stem is an organ consisting of

–An alternating system of nodes, the points at which leaves are attached

–Internodes, the stem segments between nodes

A
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6
Q
  • An ___ is a structure that has the potential to form a lateral shoot, or branch
  • An ___, or ___, is located near the shoot tip and causes elongation of a young shoot
  • ___ - Inhibition of axillary bud by a apical bud.
A

axillary bud

apical bud (terminal bud)

Apical dominance

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7
Q
  • The leaf is the main ___ organ of most vascular plants
  • Leaves generally consist of a flattened blade and a stalk called the ___, which joins the leaf to a node of the stem
  • ___, the vascular tissue of leaves
A

photosynthetic

petiole

veins

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8
Q

plant tissues

  • Each plant organ has dermal, vascular, and ground tissues
  • Each of these three categories forms a tissue system
A
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9
Q

THE DERMAL TISSUE SYSTEM

  • In nonwoody plants, the dermal tissue system consists of the ___
  • A waxy coating called the ___ helps prevent water loss from the epidermis
  • In woody plants, protective tissues called ___ replace the epidermis in older regions of stems and roots
A

epidermis

cuticle

periderm

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10
Q

Vascular tissue system

carries out long-distance transport of materials between roots and shoots

  • Xylem conveys water and dissolved minerals upward from roots into the shoots
  • Phloem transports organic nutrients from where they are made to where they are needed
  • The vascular tissue of a stem or root is collectively called the ___
A

stele

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11
Q

Tissues that are neither dermal nor vascular are the ground tissue system

  • Ground tissue internal to the vascular tissue is ___; ground tissue external to the vascular tissue is___
  • Ground tissue includes cells specialized for___
A

pith

cortex

storage, photosynthesis, and support

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12
Q

Plant Cells make up plant tissues

  • Parenchyma cells
  • Collenchyma cells
  • Sclerenchyma cells
  • Water-conducting cells of the xylem
  • Sugar-conducting cells of the phloem

A
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13
Q

Parenchyma Cells

•Mature parenchyma cella ___

A

–Have thin and flexible primary walls

–Lack secondary walls

–Are the least specialized

–Perform the most metabolic functions

–Retain the ability to divide and differentiate

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14
Q

Collenchyma Cells

___

A
  • Collenchyma cells are grouped in strands and help support young parts of the plant shoot
  • They have thicker and uneven cell walls
  • They lack secondary walls
  • These cells provide flexible support without restraining growth
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15
Q

Sclerenchyma Cells

___

A
  • Sclerenchyma cells are rigid because of thick secondary walls strengthened with lignin (thickened woody fiber)
  • They are dead at functional maturity
  • There are two types:

–Sclereids are short and irregular in shape and have thick lignified secondary walls

–Fibers are long and slender and arranged in threads

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16
Q

Water-Conducting Cells of the Xylem

  • The two types of water-conducting cells, ___ and ___, are dead at maturity
  • Tracheids are long, thin cells with tapered ends. They provide support under the tension of water transport.
  • Vessel elements are wider and thinner-walled than tracheids. They are aligned end-to-end forming long micropipes.

A

tracheids, vessel elements

17
Q

Sugar-Conducting Cells of the Phloem

  • ___ are alive at functional maturity, though they lack organelles
  • Each sieve-tube element has a companion cell whose nucleus and ribosomes serve both cells
A

Sieve-tube elements

18
Q

Meristems generate cells for new organs

  • A plant can grow throughout its life; this is called ___
  • Some plant organs cease to grow at a certain size; this is called ___
  • Annuals complete their life cycle in a year or less
  • Biennials require two growing seasons
  • Perennials live for many years
A

indeterminate growth

determinate growth

19
Q
  • ___ are perpetually embryonic tissue and allow for indeterminate growth
  • ___ are located at the tips of roots and shoots and at the axillary buds of shoots
  • Apical meristems elongate shoots and roots, a process called ___
A

Meristems

Apical meristems

primary growth

20
Q
  • ___ add thickness to woody plants, a process called secondary growth
  • The ___ adds layers of vascular tissue called secondary xylem (wood) and secondary phloem
  • The ___ produces a tough, thick covering that protects from water loss and invasion by insects and microbes.
A

Lateral meristems

vascular cambium

cork cambium

21
Q

Tissue Organization of Leaves

  • The epidermis in leaves is interrupted by ___, which allow CO2 exchange between the air and the photosynthetic cells in a leaf
  • Each stomatal pore is flanked by two guard cells, which regulate its opening and closing
  • The ground tissue in a leaf, called ___, is sandwiched between the upper and lower epidermis
  • Transpiration-Evaporative loss of water from plant
A

stomata

mesophyll

22
Q
  • Below the palisade mesophyll in the upper part of the leaf is loosely arranged spongy mesophyll, where gas exchange occurs
  • The vascular tissue of each leaf is continuous with the vascular tissue of the stem
  • Veins are the leaf’s vascular bundles and function as the leaf’s skeleton
  • Each vein in a leaf is enclosed by a protective bundle sheath
A