Up Primary xylem Oak wood Leaf vein Vein ends Bean seed Pine tracheids, xs Fern TE, xs Fern, TE, mag Annular walls Annular, stretched Annular, narrow Scalariform walls Scalar., narrow CBP, pine CBP, dicot CBP, irregular Contact faces Pits, side view CBP, pine, xs CBP,angio, xs CBP, fern, xs Contact face, xs Simple perf. plate 1 Simple perf. plate 2 Pitted perf. plate Perf. plate & helix Perf. plate, face Perf. plate, mag Perf. plate, section Perf. plate rim Perf. plate & wall Scalariform Per plate Primary xylem Vessel sizes Fern TE Pine needle VE precursor, ls Protoxylem 9 Contact faces VE precursor, xs Precursor 2 Torn vessel Torn vessel 2
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Fig.
7.1-3. Transverse section of leaf of sugar cane (Saccharum
officinale). Students often study the xylem of leaf
veins (vascular bundles), and this vein in a sugar cane leaf is
rather representative of monocots. It is common to encounter a sheath of fibers,
which are easy to confuse with tracheary elements because they have thick walls
that are usually stained red. But most tracheary elements are much wider than
fibers, as are two of the three vessels here. The narrowest vessel is just a
little wider than a fiber, and it is often very difficult to be certain if some
cells are fibers or tracheary elements.
The set of brownish cells below the two large
vessels is the phloem (larger, empty-looking cells are sieve tube members, the
small cells with contents are companion cells).
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