Up Ordinary epidermis Guard cells Thick cuticle Thicker cuticle Thin cuticle Parasitic plant Petal epidermis Sclerified epidermis Papillose epidermis Sculptured cuticle Elaborate cuticle Cuticular horns Radial walls Cuticle proper No epidermis Epidermal peels Cycad peel Paradermal Typical stoma Sunken stoma Stomatal orientation 1 Unusual orientation 2 Artifact Stomata and fibers Stomatal crypts Crypts, mag. Crypt margin Non-crypt Water lily Stomatal channels Groove, hi mag Subsidiary cells Ledges Papillae Trichome Uniseriate hair Peltate hair, mag Peltate, lo mag Branched hairs Trichome base Lithocyst, Ficus Lithocysts, hemp Bulliform cells Grass epidermis Multiple epi Uniseriate? Peperomia
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Fig.
10.6-1. Transverse section of fig leaf (Ficus). The thick band
of giant, empty-looking cells is part of a multiple
epidermis. There is a layer of cells that appears to be an epidermis,
but those cells are only part of the total epidermis; both they and the giant
cells are derived from the protoderm. In a uniseriate epidermis, protoderm cells
divide with anticlinal walls only, but in a multiseriate epidermis, protoderm
cells divide in various planes. In species like this in which the outermost
layer looks so much like an epidermis – and the inner layers of giant cells
look so unlike epidermis – developmental studies are necessary to be certain
that it is a multiple epidermis and not just a uniseriate epidermis and an
unusual hypodermis.
Several stomata are visible in the lower epidermis (arrows; the middle
two stomata are somewhat indistinct); none is present in the upper, multiseriate
epidermis.
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