1 / 13

Leaf Anatomy

Leaf Anatomy. Cross Section of a Leaf. Leaf Tissues. A leaf is considered a plant organ and typically consists of the following tissues: An epidermis that covers the upper and lower surfaces An interior parenchyma called the mesophyll

garret
Télécharger la présentation

Leaf Anatomy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Leaf Anatomy

  2. CrossSectionof a Leaf

  3. Leaf Tissues A leaf is considered a plant organ and typically consists of the following tissues: • An epidermis that covers the upper and lower surfaces • An interior parenchyma called the mesophyll • An arrangement of veins (the vascular tissue).

  4. Epidermis The epidermis is the outer one- or multi-layered group of cells covering the leaf. The epidermis hasseveral functions: - protection against water loss (a vaxy cuticle)‏- regulation of gas and water vapor exchange (stomata)‏- secretion of metabolic compounds- absorption of water (in some species) . A multi-layered epidermis

  5. Mesophyll means "middle of the leaf", i.e. the tissues of a leaf that are located in between the layers of epidermis and carry on photosynthesis. The mesophyll of the leaf consists of parenchyma tissue. Since the mesophyll cells contain chloroplasts the tissue is also referred to as chlorenchyma . Chlorenchyma cell

  6. Functions of the Mesophyll In most dicot leaves the mesophyll is differentiated into palisade parenchyma (A) and spongy parenchyma (B). The palisade cells are responsible for photosynthesis because they contain chloroplasts. The spongy mesophyll, together with the intercellular air spaces, allow for the interchange of gases

  7. Vascular Tissue Vascular tissue is a complex tissue. The primary components of vascular tissue are the xylem and phloem. These two tissues transport fluid and nutrients. Vascular tissue is organized into discrete strands called vascular bundles.

  8. Cross Section of Papyrus Leaf e epidermis bb bulliform cells (they cause the leaf to roll up in response to low water availability ) sklsclerenchyma cs vascular bundle

  9. Clivia leaf cross section silná kutikula, ztlustlá epidermis  The epidermis has a thick cuticle.

  10. European Yew (Taxusbaccata)Cross Section of a Needle X – xylem f - phloem skl – sclerenchyma e – epidermis ku – cuticle ka – cambium pp – palisade parenchyma hp – spongy parenchyma

  11. Rubber fig (Ficuselastica)Cross Section of a Leaf pp - palisade parenchyma hp - spongy parenchyma e- epidermis ku- cuticlecs- vascular bundle st - stoma

  12. Resources Internet: http://www.ueb.cas.cz/laboratory_of_pollen_biology/pdf_subor/anatomie_list.pdf http://cs.wikipedia.org/wiki/List#Anatomick.C3.A1_stavba_listu http://botany.upol.cz/atlasy/anatomie/anatomieCR28.pdf commons.wikimedia.org http://www.uri.edu/cels/bio/plant_anatomy/ www.­sci.­muni.­cz/­~anatomy/­leaves/­html/­papyrus_1.­htm

  13. Thanksfor yourattention LenkaRydvalova

More Related