Up Ragweed pith Primary pit fields Primary pit fields Wall, face view Nucleate cells Compact parenchyma Sclerenchyma Intercellular spaces Leaf, xs Chlorenchyma Shoot tip, ls Apical meristem Vascular cambium Secretory duct Resin canal Clusia duct Root cortex Leaf aerenchyma Air chambers Air chambers Aerenchyma, Acorus Stellate cells Epidermis Endodermis Phloem, ls Phloem, xs Transfer cells Bean cotyledon Acorn, starch Potato starch Ice plant cell Tannin cell Small cells
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Fig.
3.6-4. Transverse section through a leaf of ice plant (Mesembryanthemum
crystallinum). The large circle protruding from the surface of the leaf is an
epidermis cell that stores water. It has a
volume hundreds of times larger than that of other parenchyma cells in the leaf,
so its water storage capacity is comparatively great, but it also has a large
surface area through which water can be lost to the air. The
nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio in this cell is extremely low, but water storage is a
simple metabolism and the cell probably does not need a great deal of nuclear
control.
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