Stem Functions
Plant Structures
Let it Grow
Big Water Keep on Movin'
Modified Stems
Sugar Transport
100

This is what stems do to help leaves catch the most sunlight possible

What is hold leaves in the most efficient position to collect sunlight?

100

This tissue makes up the core of a dicot stem and stores carbohydrates

What is pith?

100

This type of growth makes plants taller and longer

What is primary growth?

100

Water moves from this type of water potential to this type of water potential.

What are less-negative and more-negative water potentials?

100

This underground stem spreads horizontally and sends up new shoots like a snake plant or hosta

What is a rhizome?

100

The place where sugars are made in a leaf.

What is a source (leaves)?

200

Name three things that stems transport throughout the plant

What are water, minerals, and manufactured food?

200

The location where a leaf attaches to the stem.

What is a node?

200

The specialized areas where growth takes place and cells divide

What are meristems?

200
This theory explains water movement using surface tension in tube-like structures.
What is capillarity?
200

This modified stem looks like a leaf but is actually flattened stem tissue

What is a cladophyll?

200

The places where sugars are used or stored in a plant.

What are sinks (roots, stems, flowers, fruits, seeds, meristems)?

300

Besides support and transport, stems can do this process if they're green in color

What is photosynthesis?


300

This single layer of tissue between xylem and phloem produces new vascular tissues that become wood and inner bark

What is the vascular cambium?

300

This type of meristem is found only in woody plants and makes them wider

What is a lateral meristem?

300

This process explains how water gets forced up into the vascular tissues of the stem when the ground is saturated. (There's no where else for the water to go but up when this happens)

What is the root pressure?

300

The difference between a bulb and a corm

What is a bulb has fleshy leaves attached to a short stem, while a corm is just a round stem without fleshy leave?

300

This tissue transports sugars and is made up of sieve-tube elements

What is the phloem?

400

This function involves stems creating new living tissues that result in making plants taller or wider

What is produce new living tissues for primary or secondary growth?

400
These are continuous lines of cells running from secondary xylem to secondary phloem

What are rays?

400

The difference between apical and lateral meristems in terms of what type of growth they produce (what type of growth does each meristem produce?)

What is apical produces primary growth and lateral produces secondary growth?

400

This process occurs when water molecules stick to themselves through hydrogen bonds and also stick to xylem walls.

What is cohesion and adhesion?

400

This type of modified stem has a swollen tip for food storage like potatoes

What is a tuber?

400

These act like "on and off ramps" for sugar movement in the phloem

What are companion cells?

500

List all six key functions that stems perform for plants

What are support leaves/fruits/flowers, position leaves for sunlight, transport materials, photosynthesize if green, store food, and produce new tissues for growth?

500

This secondary tissue consists of cork-producing tissue, cork cells, and remnants of primary tissues that become outer bark

What is the periderm?

500

Explain why most monocots don't have secondary growth but woody dicots do.

What is because monocots only have apical meristems for primary growth and woody dicots have both apical and lateral meristems?

500

Explain the complete pathway of how water potential changes help move water from roots to the leaves.

What is water potential becomes more negative higher up the plant due to more concentrates in the structures and cells, so water moves upward from the soil (less-negative potential) through roots, stem, and to leaves (most-negative) where transpiration occurs creating a pull on the water column?

500

This type of above-ground modified stem sends out runners where new plants form, like strawberries or spider plants.

What is a stolon?

500

Explain why water moves into phloem when sugars enter, and what happens when sugars leave the phloem at the sink.

What is sugars make the phloem more negative in terms of water potential so water enters to raise the potential and help move the sugars (sap). When sugars leave at the sinks, phloem becomes less-negative so water moves back to the xylem or other negative water potential spaces.

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