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 H 2 0 loss –contains lenticels allow for O 2 and CO 2 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 H 2 O –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 H 2 0 Secondary Growth in Stems
Sapwood –new secondary xylem –lighter in color (still transports H 2 0) 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 –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