angiosperms vi

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Angiosperms VI. Secondary Growth In Stems. What is secondary growth?. Growth in “girth” of woody plants Tissues derived from cambial layers VASCULAR CAMBIUM produces secondary xylem and secondary phloem CORK CAMBIUM (phellogen) produces cork (phellem) and phelloderm tissues. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Angiosperms VISecondary Growth

In Stems

What is secondary growth?

• Growth in “girth” of woody plants• Tissues derived from cambial layers

–VASCULAR CAMBIUM• produces secondary xylem and secondary

phloem–CORK CAMBIUM (phellogen)

• produces cork (phellem) and phelloderm tissues

Typical Woody Eudicot Stem (overview)

• Periderm or “bark”

• Vascular cambium

• Secondary xylem

• Pith

Woody Eudicot

Stem

Typical Woody Eudicot Stem(detail)

• Secondary xylem• Vascular

cambium• Rays• Secondary

phloem (including phloem fibers)

• Cortex

Secondary Xylem (angiosperms)

• Vessels• Fibers and

tracheids• Wood rays• Growth rings

(annual rings)

Secondary Xylem (“up close and personal”)

• Fibers• Tracheids• Vessels• Ray

parenchyma

“Growth Rings”• Spring (Early) Wood

– first cells produced by the vascular cambium– large cells (good growing conditions)

• Summer (Late) Wood– smaller cells produced toward the end of the

growing season– poor conditions (cooler, drier)

• Radical change in cell size allows for recognition of annual “growth rings”

Bristlecone Pine

(oldest of tree species in

North America)

4900 + years old

Oak Wood in Section

Note: thick, multiseriatewood rays

Other Variations• Heartwood

– darker in color– occupies center of the stem, more dense

(stronger)– deposit of waste products such as resins, gums,

oils, and tannins• Sapwood

– lighter in color– outer layers, less dense (weaker)– contains the sap (dissolved nutrients and water)

Woody Stem and Periderm

sapwood

heartwood

Woody Twigs

• Terminal bud with bud scales

• Axillary buds• Lenticels• Leaf scar

Twig Structures

Lenticels• Pores in the

cork layers which allow for gas exchange in the periderm

Uses of Secondary Growth• Wood Products

– Various uses based on the density of the wood (often in lbs./cubic foot)

– Furniture, baseball bats, plywood, pulp products, musical instruments, particle board, artistic pieces, fuel

• Other Products– rope, cinnamon, dyes, drugs (quinine),

charcoal, cork, maple syrup

CorkHarvesting

Making MapleSyrup

30-50 gallons of sap to make 1

gallon of syrup

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