AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

Bio Ch. 35 Plant Structure, Growth, and Development

Terms : Hide Images
a group of cells with a common function, structure, or both
consists of several types of tissues that together carry out particular
absorbs water and minerals from the soil
consists of stems and leaves; creates sugars and other carbohydrates
a multicellular organ that anchors a vascular plant in the soil, absorbs minerals and water, and often stores carbohydrates
one main vertical root; develops from the embryonic root; givesrise to lateral roots; helps anchor the plant
also called branch roots; stores sugars and starches
plants have a vast number of these, they increase the surface area of the root enormously
an organ consisting of an alternating system of nodes
the point at which leaves are attached
the stem segments between nodes
the upper angle (axil) formed by each leaf and the stem, commonly called a branch
or terminal bud; a young shhot near the tip of the shoot, place where elongation occurs (growth)
the inhibition of axillary buds by an apical bud
is the main photosynthetic organ, vary greatly in form
flat part of the leaf
joins the leaf to the stem at the node
the vascular tissue of leaves
a functional unit connectin all of the plant's organs
is the plant's outer protective covering
a layer of tightly packed cells
a waxy coating on the epidermal surface, helps prevent water loss
replace the epidermis in older regions of stems and roots
carries out long distance transport of materials between the root and shoot system
conducts water and minerals upwards from roots into the shoots
transports sugars, usually from shoots to roots and sites of growth
the name for the vascular tissue of a root or stem
the tissue that are not part of dermal nor vascular are in this system
ground tissue that is internal to the vascular tissue
ground tissue that is external to th vascular tissue
have primary walls that are relatively thin and flexible and lack secondary walls. Performs most of the metabolic activity in the plant
help support young parts of the plant shoot; have thicker primary cell walls; elongate with the stems and leaves which they support
help in support, secondary cell walls have lignin, cannot elongate and are more rigid
are shorter than fibers, are irregular in shape, and have very thick, lignified secondary cell walls; Eg. provide hardness to nutshells and seed coats and the gritty texture to pear fruits
usually arranged in threads, such as hemp fibers for making rope and flax fibers for weaving into linen
are found in the xylem, are long, thin cells with tapered ends; when these disintegrate, they form a nonliving conduit with pits through which water can flow
most angiosperms have these, are generally wide, short, thinner walled, and less tapered than tracheids; when these disintegrate, they form a nonliving conduit with pits through which water can flow
sugars and other organic materials are transported in these long, narrow, sieve cells; lack a nucleus, ribosomes, and distinct vacuole, and cytoskeletal elements
have pores that facilitate the flow of fluid from cell to cell along the sieve tube
connected to the sieve-tube element by plasmodesmata, its nucleus and ribosomes serve both itself and the sieve plates it's attached to
growth occurs throughout the plant's life
growth stops after reaching a certain size
complete their life cycle in a year or less; Eg. many wildflowers and most staple food crops
complete their life cycle in two growing seasons; Eg. radishes and carrots
Live many ears; Eg. trees, shrubs, and some grasses
perpetual embryonic tissues in plants
located at the tips of roots and shoots and in the axillary buds of shoots, allow plants to grow in length
allows roots to extend throughout the soil and shoots to increase their exposure to light
growth in thickness, caused by the activity of lateral meristems
parts of it are the vascular cambium and cork cambium; these cylinders of dividing cells exend along the length of roots and stems
adds layers of vascular tissue called secondary xylem (wood) and secondary phloem
replaces the epidermis with the thicker, tougher periderm
the result of plant growth from apical meristems
protects the delicate apical meristem as the root pushes through the abrasive soil during primary growth; also secretes a polysaccharide slime that lubricates the soil around the tip of the root
the innermost layer of the cortex that forms the boundary with the vascular cylinder; regulates passage of substances from the soil into the vascular cylinder
lateral roots arise from these; the outermost cell layer in the vascular cylinder, which is adjacen to and just inside the endodermis
leaves develop from this point; they are finger-like projections along the sides of the apical meristem
allows gas exchange between the surrounding air and the photosynthetic cells inside the leaf
regulate the opening and closing of the pore
the ground tissue of a leaf that is sandwiched between the upper and lower epidermal layers; consists mainly of parenchyma cells for photosynthesis
consists of the tissues produced by the vascular cambium (adds wood) and cork cambium (adds protective covering for the stem)
dots the periderm, allows cells withing a woody stem or root to exchange gases with the outside air
processes that lead to the development of body form and organization
microtubules in the cytoplasm become concentrated into a ring; this band disappears right before metaphase
the development of specific structures in specific locations
pattern formation is determined by this, in the form of signals that continuously indicate to each cell its location within a developing structure
the condition of having structural or chemical differences at opposite ends of an organism
the morphological changes that arise from transitions in shoot apical meristem activity
protein products of these genes are transcription factors that regulate the genes required for the conversion of the indeterinate vegitative meristems to determine floral meristems
regulat the development of characteristic floral patterns
a model of flower formation that identifies these three classes of genes direct the formation of the four tyoes of floral organ; according to this model, each class of organ identity genes is switched on in two specific whorls of the floral meristem

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!