Anatomy of Flowering Plants
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One-way
flow
Water and
minerals
No end walls
between cells
Stiffened with
lignin
Two-way
flow
Water and
food
End walls
with
perforations
Xylem
Phloem
A. Xylem
It functions as a conducting tissue for water and minerals from roots to
the stem and leaves.
It also provides mechanical strength to the plant parts.
It is composed of 4 kinds of elements: tracheid’s, vessels, xylem fibres
and xylem parenchyma.
These are elongated tube-like dead cells with thick and
lignified walls and tapering ends. Protoplasm absent.
The inner layers of cell walls have thickenings which vary
in form. In flowering plants, tracheid’s & vessels are the
main water transporting elements. Cells are dead.
TRACHEIDS
It is a long cylindrical tube-like structure made up of
many cells (vessel members), each with lignified walls
and a large central cavity. Protoplasm absent, therefore
dead. Vessel members are inter-connected through
perforations in their common walls. The vessels are a
characteristic feature of angiosperms. Gymnosperms
lack vessels.
VESSEL