BIO203H5 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Cork Cambium, Xylem, Woody Plant

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15 Nov 2017
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Primary growth is from the shoot apex and the root apex. This is a secondary meristem, giving rise to secondary growth and a secondarily thickened stem. By adding bulk and reinforcement to their stems. Thick walled cells within the xylem constitute major proportion of structural reinforcement to their stems. Strong cell types, sclerenchyma with secondary walls composed of lignin: tracheids, fibres and vessel elements (elements of the xylem). Note that vessels do not occur in conifer wood. By the addition of new xylem (and phloem) to the primary stem to make a secondarily thickened. Examples of woody plants (that have secondary growth) Adding meristems to add girth by mostly lateral (periclinal) divisions (lateral meristems). Initial growth is within the vascular bundles, by the procambium (the fascicular cambium). Some ground tissue between the vascular bundles becomes meristematic which is the interfascicular cambium. Cambial cells unit to form a ring of meristematic tissue within the stem.

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