Botany Lecture - Chapter 7
Botany Lecture - Chapter 7
1. Anchoring the plant firmly to a substrate (soil) 2. Absorbing water and minerals 3. production of hormones
1. Tap root from radicle Anchorage In dicot and gymnosperm Secondary growth
2. Fibrous
a. brace root- arise from main trunk stem b. prop root arise from the lateral branches of the main stem.
Brace roots of corn which arise from the main trunk or stem of Zea mays
Germinating seed showing the emergence of primary root from the radicle.
structure of roots
1. Taproot single prominent root
2. Lateral or branch rootssmaller and arise from the taproot 3. Root hairs arise from epidermis, single celled extension which increase absorptive area, no line of demarcation in the epidermal cells.
Zone of maturation
Zone of elongation
peripheral
columella
Root cap
Slime or mucigel secreted by the dictyosomes of the root cap which helps to lubricate the passage of root through the soil.
Quiescent center is the mitotically inactive region of the root apical meristem, act as reserve of healthy cells, resistant to toxic substances and radiations.
The three zones of root apical meristem: 1. protoderm
2. ground meristem
Root cap
3. procambium
3. primary phloem
4. vascular cambium
C
D E
Cross section of young dicot root Beside is the enlarged view of Vascular cylinder or stele region. b.Pericycle
c.Primary phloem
d. Vascular cambium e. Primary xylem
Triarch
tetrarch
pentarch
polyarch
Siphonostele
a band of vascular tissues surrounding a parenchymatous pith.
b. xylem
c. phloem
d. pith parenchyma
Endodermis
Monocot root
pith
pith
Lateral root
Lateral root is iniatiated by cell divisions in the pericycle. As it pushes outward, it destroys the cells of the cortex and epidermis that lie in its path, ultimately destroying endodermis.
c. secondary xylem
and absorption
Water retention
photosynthesis
5. root nodules associations between nitrogen fixing bacteria and roots of legumes such as makahiya.
6. Parasitism 6. haustorial roots of parasitic flowering plants like mistle toe