STEMS Purpose of Stems Support leaves Transport water and nutrients Store water and food.

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Transcript of STEMS Purpose of Stems Support leaves Transport water and nutrients Store water and food.

STEMS

Purpose of Stems

•Support leaves

•Transport water and nutrients

•Store water and food

WHY?!?•Growth in height only

occurs at tip of roots and branches

Specialized Stems

• Cactus– is a stem that

stores food and water for the plant

– spines are leaves of a cactus

• Rhizomes– underground stem

which grows horizontally through soil

– Ex. Iris

Specialized Stems

• Bulbs– specialized stems

that store food– Ex. onions, tulips,

daffodils

Specialized Stems

• Corms– Short, swollen

underground plant stem used as food storage

– Ex. crocuses, gladiolas

• Stolons– slender stem that

grows above ground

– “touch, root-and-shoot”

– Ex. strawberries

Specialized Stems

Where do Stems Grow?

• Apical Meristems– cell division

occurs at tip of stem

• Lateral Meristems– cell division

occurs – stems grow in

diameter

Structure of stems

• Nodes– region on stem

where 1 or more new leaves form

• Internode– distance between

segments

• Lenticels– pores in surface of

stem– allow gas exchange

• Buds– Terminal - bud at

the end of stem– Lateral - buds on

side of stem– Bud scales-

protective covering over embryonic shoots (present in winter)

Structure of stems

Lateral Bud

Primary Growth in Stems

• Epidermis– outer layer– protection– prevents H20 loss– contains lenticels

• allow for O2 and CO2 exchange

• Cortex– lies inside epidermis– storage of food for stem

Primary Growth in Stems

• Pith– located in center

of stem– stores food

• Vascular Bundles– Xylem : transfers

H2O– Phloem : transfers

food

Type of stems

• Monocot Stem– **V.B. are

scattered**– xylem in center– phloem on outside

Types of Stems

• Dicot Stem– **V.B. make a

circle**– xylem closer to

center– phloem behind

xylem

Secondary Growth in Stems

• Occurs mainly in dicots b/c monocots lack lateral meristems

• Stems increase in diameter due to lateral meristems– 2 types : vascular

cambium, cork cambium

• Vascular cambium– makes new

xylem, phloem through cell division

– this becomes secondary xylem & secondary phloem

Secondary Growth in Stems

• Wood– is secondary

xylem

• Heartwood (pith)– is older primary

xylem– stopped

transporting H20

Secondary Growth in Stems

Secondary Growth in Stems

• Sapwood– new secondary

xylem– lighter in color (still

transports H20)

• Bark– protection for woody

stems– made up of cork,

cork cambium, phloem

Why does bark appear to be rough or crack?

• Cells aren’t living– cork cambium

produces cork, but dies before maturity

– as tree grows, cork ruptures and forms cracks

Annual rings• Springwood

– xylem produced in spring

– rain is plentiful– cells are larger than

summer wood

• Summerwood– xylem still produced– limited amt. of

water– cells are smaller

than springwood

Annual rings

• Annual rings– during hibernation

xylem isn’t produced– difference from 1 year

to the next– can tell app. age of

tree– tell environmental

conditions– lg.= moist– sm. = drought