GenBio1 Notes
GenBio1 Notes
NOTES
Template
Specific Topic
↪
↪ description
→ sub-description OR continuation of desc.
Roots
↪ Takes in water and nutrients from the soil.
↪ Main Functions
→ Anchorage
⇨ Keeps plants and soil in place.
→ Absorption
⇨ Through root hairs.
→ Conduction
⇨ Transportation of water and nutrients through the xylem (upward) and
phloem (downward).
→ Storage
⇨ Excess carbohydrates and nutrients
Characteristics of Roots
↪ Are non-green due to lack of chlorophyll
↪ Not divided into nodes and internodes
↪ Absence of leaves and buds
↪ Positive geotropism and hydrotropism
→ Roots grow downwards with gravity and towards water
⇨ Gravitropism // Positive: grows with gravity
⇨ Phototropism // Negative: grows away from light
Root Systems
↪ Taproot System (Dicots)
→ Consists of one prominent main root with smaller lateral roots branching
from it
→ Provide strong anchorage due to its depth
→ Main roots of dicot plants
↪ Fibrous System (Monocots)
→ Consists of several adventitious roots of approximately equal size that
arise from the base of the stem
→ Do not branch profusely, are shallow and spread horizontally hence,
cannot provide strong anchorage
→ The main root system of monocots
Root Cap
↪ A covering of cells over the root tip that protects delicate meristematic tissue
directly behind it
↪ Contains statocytes (cells), involved in gravity perception
Root Hair
↪ Increases absorption through increased surface area of root in contact with
the soil.
↪ An extension of an epidermal cell of a root that increases the absorptive
capacity of the root
Modified Roots
Propagative Roots
↪ Develop adventitious buds that grow into new plants.
Pneumatophores
↪ Specialized aerial roots produced by trees in swampy habitats.
↪ Facilitate gas exchange between the atmosphere and submerged roots.
Aerial Roots
↪ Roots that grow above ground for support, absorption, or respiration.
Photosynthetic/Assimilating Roots
↪ Found in some orchids; capable of photosynthesis.
Contractile Roots
↪ Found in some herbaceous dicots and monocots.
↪ Contracts and pulls the plant to a desirable depth in the soil.
Buttress Roots
↪ Swollen bases that provide structural support, commonly found in tropical
rainforest trees.
→ Aid in the extensive distribution of shallow roots.
Parasitic Roots
↪ Penetrate host plants to absorb nutrients.
Symbiotic Roots
↪ Include mycorrhizae (fungus roots) and nitrogen-fixing nodules in legumes.
↪ Mycorrhizae
→ Fungus-plant mutualism that enhances nutrient absorption
→ Fungal Components
⇨ protect against some types of pathogens
⇨ increase the surface area for absorbing essential nutrients (e.g.,
phosphorous) from the soil.
→ Plant Components
⇨ provides food for the fungus in the form of sugar and amino acids
↪ Root Nodules
→ Small swelling on the root; found in legumes (e.g., peas, beans, peanuts)
→ Where the nitrogen-fixing bacteria, Rhizobium, live
Prop Roots
↪ Adventitious roots from the stem which provide additional support.
Root Crops
↪ Taproots (More Predominant)
→ Carrots, beets, sugar beets, parsnips, turnips, rutabagas, radishes.
↪ Fibrous Roots
→ Sweet potatoes, cassava
Suckers
↪ Above-ground stems that develop from adventitious buds on the roots
↪ Asexual reproduction method of some roots.
Stem Functions
↪ Support // holds leaves and reproductive structures
↪ Conduct // transports water, minerals, and carbohydrates
↪ Production // generation of new tissues at apical and lateral meristems
(secondary growth)
Stems V Roots
↪ Stems
→ Above ground, have nodes, internodes, leaves, and buds
→ Nodes
⇨ 1+ leaves attached
→ Internode
⇨ The area between 2 successive nodes
→ Bud
⇨ Embryonic or undeveloped shoot
↪ Roots
→ Underground, include root caps, hairs, endodermis, and pericycle.
Stem Variation
↪ Aerial
↪ Underground
↪ Sub-Aerial
Stem Classification
↪ Monocots (Herbaceous)
→ Scattered vascular bundles, ground tissue replaces cortex and pith.
→ Circular, with lateral branches bounded with a layer of dermis.
→ Do not exhibit secondary growth.
↪ Dicots
→ Well-defined dermis with cuticle and multicellular hairs
→ Herbaceous Dicots
⇨ Vascular bundles are arranged in a ring, distinct cortex, and pith;
exhibit primary growth only.
→ Woody Dicots
⇨ Exhibit primary and secondary growth.
Cell Types
Parenchyma - thin-walled cells that store nutrients and perform metabolic functions
Chlorenchyma - elongated cells with thick cell walls; flexible support
Sclerenchyma - cells with thick, rigid cell walls for support
Secondary Growth in Wood
↪ Lateral Meristems
→ Vascular Cambium
⇨ Produces secondary tissues (xylem and phloem).
→ Cork Cambium
⇨ Generates protective layers of cork parenchyma.
↳ Near stem surface, either continuous devising cells or series of
overlapping cells
↪ Lenticels
→ Porous tissues made of vast intercellular gaps for gas exchange.
Variation in Bark
↪ Sapwood
→ Younger, lighter, and softer. The outer layer.
↪ Heartwood
→ Older, darker, provides structural support, and is resistant to decay.
→ Technically dead wood; the inner layer.
↪ Tree-Ring Dating (Dendrochronology)
→ Determines historical growth conditions.
Modified Stems
↪ Rhizomes
→ Underground horizontal stems for storage and sexual reproduction (e.g.,
ginger, turmeric, ferns, bamboo).
↪ Tubers
→ Thickened ends of rhizomes for starch storage (e.g., white potato,
cassava, yams, sweet potato).
⇨ Flashy and enlarged for food storage (starch)
↪ Corms
→ Short, thickened underground stems for food storage and asexual
reproduction (e.g., crocus, taro, saffron).
↪ Bulbs
→ Rounded, fleshy underground buds with flashy leaves storing nutrients
(e.g., onion, garlic, tulips, daffodils).
↪ Stolons
→ Aerial horizontal stems with long internodes often form buds that develop
into separate plants (e.g., strawberries).
↪ Tendrils
→ Slender, threadlike appendages for climbing support.
→ Often grows in a spiral form; found in climbing plants
↪ Cladophylls
→ Flattened stems function in photosynthesis (e.g., cacti).
Secondary Growth in Wood
↪ Lateral meristems - thickens stems
○ Vascular cambium
■ Secondary xylem and phloem.
■ The tissue inside plants is responsible for secondary growth
(branches).
■ P… Tangential division
○ Cork Cambium
■ Cork parenchyma
■ Near stem surface, either continuous devising cells or series of
overlapping cells.
EARLY WOOD???
Leaf Adaptations
↪ Desert Plants (Xerophytes)
→ thick and reduced leaves with a thick waxy layer
→ Stomata opens only at night time
→ Ex. cacti
↪ Floating leaves
→ Stomates only on the upper epidermis
↪ Submerged leaves
→ NO stomates
↪ Conifers
→ have waxy needle leaves with thick waxy
cuticle
→ Evergreen, with sunken stomata
Leaf Morphology
Types of Leaves
↪ Simple Leaves
→ Single blade per petiole
↪ Compound leaves
→ Divided into smaller leaflets but originate from a single axillary bud
→ Pinnately Compound
⇨ Have leaflets in pairs along an extension of the petiole
→ Palmately Compound
⇨ All the leaflets are attached at the same point at the end of the petiole
Leaf Attachment
↪ Blade
→ the flat part of the lamina
↪ Shape or Outline of the leaves
→ Linear-Thin
→ Lanceolate
⇨ spear-like
→ Ovate
⇨ oval shape
→ Cordate
⇨ heart-shaped
Venation
↪ The arrangement of veins
→ Parallel Venation (Monocot)
⇨ Veins running parallel with one another
→ Netted
⇨ Pinnately veined leaves
↳ One Midvein is included within an enlarged midrib
⇨ Palmately veined leaves
↳ Several primary veins fan out from the base of the blade
Phyllotaxy
↪ The leaf arrangement on a stem
→ Alternate
⇨ Leaves are attached alternately in a spiral along a stem
⇨ There is one leaf per node
→ Opposite
⇨ Two leaves arise from the opposite node
→ Whorled
⇨ Three or more leaves occur at a node
→ Basal
⇨ Three or more leaves occur at the base of the plant
Modified Leaves
↪ Cotyledons (Seed Leaves)
→ produced by a germinating seed
⇨ often contains a store of food obtained from
the endosperm to help seedlings become
established
↪ Colored Bracts
→ have brightly colored to attract pollinators
↪ Insect-Trapping Leaves
→ used to capture insects
→ ex. pitcher plants, sundews, venus flytraps, and bladderworts
⇨ all these plants live under nutrient-poor conditions and depend on
insect body dissection
↪ Tendrils
→ used for support, climbing, and attachment
↪ Spines
→ sharp, pointy leaves
→ ex. cacti and euphorbias
⇨ often reduced such that they serve as spines to discourage herbivory
and reduce water loss
⇨ stems serve as the primary organ of photosynthesis
↪ Storage Leaves
→ succulent leaves retain water in large vacuoles
↪ Absorptive Leaves, as in Hydrilla sp.
↪ Reproductive Leaves
→ Kalanchoe plantlets arise on the margins of leaves
↪ Window Leaves
→ plant is buried in soil with a transparent part exposed to light
→ being buried reduces the loss of water in arid environments
↪ Flower Pot Leaves
→ structure to catch water and debris for nutrient collection
→ ex. Elephant’s foot
Leaf Abscission
↪ in temperate climates, most woody plants with broad leaves shed leaves in fall
→ helps them survive low temperatures of winter
↪ involves physiological and anatomical changes
↪ PROCESSES OF ABSCISSION
→ as autumn falls, plant reabsorbs sugar
⇨ essential minerals are transported out of leaves
→ chlorophyll is broken down
⇨ red water-soluble pigments are synthesized and stored in vacuoles of
leaf cells (in some species)
→ a protective layer of cork cells develops on the stem side of the
abscission zone
⇨ area where leaf petiole detaches from the stem, composed primarily
of thin-walled parenchyma cell
→ enzymes dissolve middle lamella in the abscission zone
⇨ cement that holds primary cell walls of adjacent cells together
→ after the leaf detaches, a protective layer of cork seals off the area,
forming a leaf scar
Gynoecial Fusion
↪ Apocarpous
→ Multiple carpels are distinct
⇨ 3 carpels, 1 locule per carpel
→ Ancestral condition of angiosperms
→ Ex. rosa
↪ Syncarpous
→ Single locule of carpels; loner
→ Most common type in flower plants
⇨ E.g., tomatoes
Floral Variations
↪ Floral Whorls
→ Complete Flower
⇨ Sepals
⇨ Petals
⇨ Stamens
⇨ Pistil
→ Incomplete Flower
⇨ Lacking one or more of the whorls
↪ Essential parts
→ Perfect Flower
⇨ Male
⇨ Female
→ Imperfect Flower
⇨ Lacking one part
Floral Symmetry
↪ Radial (actinomorphic)
→ It can be halved and will be symmetrical
↪ Bilateral (zygomorphic)
→ Divided into two equal halves only by medal cut through central axis
⇨ Orchidaceous
⇨ Papilionaceous
Nature of Corolla
↪ Attracts pollinators through scents and colors.
→ Polypetalous
⇨ free
→ Gamopetalous
⇨ fused together
→ Apetalous
Nature of Corolla
↪ Perigynous
↪ Epigynous
↪ Hypogynous
Insertion of Parts
→ Ovary superior, flower hypogynous, no hypanthium…
→ Ovary superior, flower hypogynous, with hypanthium…
→ Ovary inferior, flower epigynous, with hypanthium
↪ Placentation Types
→ Marginal
→ Axile
→ Paretal
→ Free-Central
→ Basal
→ Apical
Inflorescence
↪ Collection of flowers, with boundaries defined by vegetative leaves.
→ Peduncle // stalk of inflorescence
→ Inflorescence axes // branches of inflorescence
→ Bract
⇨ Flower bract
⇨ Inflorescence bract
⇨ Involucre
⇨ Spathe
→ Positions
⇨ Axillart
⇨ Terminal
→ Development
⇨ Determinate - terminal flower first
↳ Dichasium
↳ Clematis
⇨ Indeterminate - basal flower first
↳ Racemes
↳ Panicles
↳ Spikes
↳ Catkins/Aments
↳ Corymbs
↳ Heads
→ Special
⇨ Spadix
⇨ Hypanthodium
⇨ Cyanthium
⇨ Spikelet (grass)
Selfing
↪ Around 10-15% of flowers are predominantly selfers
↪ Requires self-compatibility
↪ Often accompanied by structurally enforced mechanisms
→ cleistogamous flowers
Heterostyly FUCK
↪
Pollination
↪ In seed plants, the transfer of pollen grains from the anther to the stigma
→ After pollination, fertilization occurs.
↪ Fertilization
→ Fusion of male and female gametes
⇨ After fertilization, flowering plants produce seeds inside fruits
↪ Flowers rely on biotic and abiotic pollinating agents
→ 80% of pollinators are biotic
⇨ ex. Bees and butterflies
→ among abiotic pollinators, 98% rely on wind, 2% rely on water
↪ Coevolution
→ Occurs when two different organisms form such an interdependent
relationship that they affect the course of each other’s evolution
→ While plants were coevolving specialized features to attract pollinators,
animal pollinators coevolved specialized body parts and behaviors that
enabled them to aid pollination and obtain nectar and pollen grains as a
reward
Agents of Pollination