Plant Anatomy 【2026 Release】

The provides structural support and positions leaves optimally for light capture. Its anatomy shows an arrangement of vascular bundles embedded in ground tissue. In dicots, these bundles are arranged in a ring, allowing for secondary growth via the vascular cambium. In monocots, bundles are scattered throughout the ground tissue, which generally limits them to primary growth. The vascular cambium, a lateral meristem, produces secondary xylem (wood) to the inside and secondary phloem to the outside, leading to an increase in girth.

Connecting the other systems is the , a continuous transport network. It consists of two specialized conducting tissues: xylem and phloem. Xylem conducts water and dissolved minerals from roots to shoots. Its key conducting cells are tracheids and vessel elements, both dead at maturity with lignified walls. Vessel elements, found in angiosperms, align end-to-end to form continuous tubes, offering high efficiency. Phloem transports the products of photosynthesis (primarily sucrose) from source to sink organs. Its conducting cells, sieve-tube elements, remain living but lose their nuclei and are metabolically supported by adjacent companion cells. Phloem sap flows under hydrostatic pressure generated by osmosis. plant anatomy

Beneath the dermis lies the , which fills the interior of the plant and performs metabolic support functions. It comprises three cell types: parenchyma, collenchyma, and sclerenchyma. Parenchyma cells are thin-walled, living, and versatile; they are the sites of photosynthesis (chlorenchyma), storage, and secretion. Collenchyma cells have unevenly thickened primary walls and provide flexible support in growing stems and leaves. Sclerenchyma cells, including fibers and sclereids, possess thick, lignified secondary walls and are dead at maturity, providing rigid, durable structural support. In monocots, bundles are scattered throughout the ground