The Plant Stem: A Microscopic Aspect

Author:   Fritz H. Schweingruber ,  Annett Börner
Publisher:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Edition:   Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
ISBN:  

9783030088057


Pages:   207
Publication Date:   11 February 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $116.41 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

The Plant Stem: A Microscopic Aspect


Add your own review!

Overview

This unique and attractive open access textbook combines the beauty of macroscopic pictures of plant stems with the corresponding colorfully stained images of anatomical micro-structures. In contrast to most botanical textbooks, it presents all the stem characteristics as photographs and shows the microscopic reality. The amount of text is reduced to a minimum, and the scientific information is highlighted with short legends and labeled photographs, allowing readers to focus on the pictures to easily understand how the anatomical structures relate to genetic, ecological, decomposition and technical influences. It includes a chapter devoted to simple anatomical preparation techniques, and further chapters showing the cell content, cell walls, meristematic tissues and stem structures of all major taxonomic units and morphological growth forms in various ecological and climatic regions from subarctic to equatorial latitudes, as well as structures of fossil, subfossil and technically altered wood. This textbook appeals to students and researchers in the fields of plant anatomy, taxonomy, ecology, dendrochronology, history, plant pathology, and evolutionary biology as well as to technologists.

Full Product Details

Author:   Fritz H. Schweingruber ,  Annett Börner
Publisher:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Imprint:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Edition:   Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Weight:   0.774kg
ISBN:  

9783030088057


ISBN 10:   3030088057
Pages:   207
Publication Date:   11 February 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

"TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Introduction 2 Preparation techniques - Making anatomical structures visible 3 Morphology of the plant body                 3.1 Growth forms and life forms                 3.2 Parts of stems and definition of bark terms 4 Cellular composition of the plant bodies                 4.1 The individual cell                 4.2 Meristematic initials - The source of new cells                 4.3 The cuticula - Protection against dehydration                 4.4 Epidermis - The skin of plants                 4.5 Collenchyma - Local peripheral stability                 4.6 Parenchyma cells - Storage and repair                 4.7 Fibers and tracheids - Stabilization and water conduction                 4.8 Sclereids in the bark - Aberrant cell wall                 thickening                 4.9 Vessels - Water conductance                 4.10 Cork cells - Defense against organisms, heat and cold                 4.11 Sieve cells, sieve tubes and companion cells - Conduction of assimilates                 4.12 Secretory cells - Defense                 4.13 Intercellulars and aerenchyma - Air circulation within the plant 5 Structure of cell walls and cell contents                 5.1 Principal cell wall construction - Form and stability                 5.2 Pits - Lateral contact between cells                 5.3 Perforation plates - Axial contact between vessels                 5.4 Helical (spiral) thickenings - Special wall thickenings                 5.5 Tyloses - Permanent interruption of water flow                 5.6 Cell contents - Everything inside the cell wall                                 5.6.1 Nuclei in Protoplasts - Metabolic centers of the plant cells                                 5.6.2 Plastids - Green, yellow and white bodies                                 5.6.3 Starch grains - Stored energy                    5.6.4 Crystals in vacuoles - Regulators and metabolic waste                                 5.6.5 Stained substances within the stem - Defense 6  Primary, secondary and tertiary meristem             6.1 Primary meristems in apical zones - Initials of longitudinal and radial growth                                 6.1.1 Macroscopic aspect of primary meristems in apical shoots and roots - Grow higher, grow deeper                                 6.1.2 Apical shoot dynamics - Long and short shoots - Grow fast, grow slow                                 6.1.3 Shoot death and metamorphosis - The end of longitudinal growth: Twigs must die                                 6.1.4 Microscopic aspect of apical meristems of shoots and roots - Towards heaven and earth                                 6.1.5 From the primary apical meristem to the secondary lateral meristems in shoots - From longitudinal to radial growth                                  6.1.6 From the primary apical meristem to the secondary lateral meristems in roots - From longitudinal to radial growth                                 6.1.7 From the primary apical meristem in shoots to roots in plants without cambium (monocotyledons)                                 6.1.8 From the primary apical meristem of vascular spore plants in shoots to roots                                 6.1.9 Pericycle and endodermis - Central cylinder and cortex are separated                                 6.2 Secondary and tertiary meristems and radial growth - Cambium and cork cambium                                 6.2.1 Macroscopic aspect of radial growth and xylem coloration - Stems get thicker                                 6.2.2 Microscopic aspect of radial growth (conifers, dicotyledonous plants and palm ferns) - An overview                                 6.2.3 The production and enlargement of new cells in the xylem of a thickening stem - The need of more and larger cells                                 6.2.4 Cell formation and differentiation in the xylem - The multifunctional stem center                                 6.2.5 Timing of xylem formation                                 6.2.6 Cell differentiation in the phloem - The multifunctional stem periphery                                 6.2.7 Formation of tertiary meristems, the cork cambium – A new skin                                 6.2.8 Life time and death of cells - Cells must die                 6.3 Cambial variants - Phloem elements within the xylem          6.4 Intercalary meristems - Longitudinal growth far behind the tips of shoots and roots   7 Stem anatomical structures of major taxonomic units          7.1 Stem-forming fungi and algae                                 7.1.1 Sporophytes of fungi                                 7.1.2 Thallus and stems of brown algae                 7.2 Mosses - The oldest living plants                 7.3 Fern-like plants                                  7.3.1 Spikemosses, quillworts and clubmosses                                 7.3.2 Whisk fern and moonwort                                 7.3.3 Horsetails                                 7.3.4 Ferns          7.4 Seed plants                                 7.4.1 Palm ferns                                 7.4.2 Ginkgo                                 7.4.3 Conifers                                 7.4.4 Gnetales                                                   Ephedraceae                                                   Welwitschiaceae                                                   Gnetaceae                                                   Gnetales: Conifers or Angiosperms?                                 7.4.5 Angiosperms - Monocotyledons and their growth forms                                                   Palms (Arecaceae)                                                   Bamboo (Poaceae)                                                   Grass-like terrestrial herbs (Cyperaceae)                                                   Terrestrial grasses (Poaceae)                                                   Orchids (Orchidaceae)                                                   Lianas                                                   Hydrophytes                                                   Trees and shrubs with secondary growth (Dracaena, Aloe)                                 7.4.5 Angiosperms - Dicotyledons and their growth forms                                                   Annual herbs (therophytes)                                                   Perennial herbs (hemicryptophytes and geophytes)                                                   Dwarf shrubs (chamaephytes and nanophanerophyte)                                                   Shrubs (nanophanerophytes)                                                   Trees (phanerophytes)                                                   Lianas                                                   Succulents                                                   Parasites                                                   Hydrophytes and helophytes 8 Evolution of stems                 8.1 Paleobotanic evidences of stems                                                   Early plant evolution                                                   The move to the land                                                   The earliest small land plants                                                   The earliest trees                                                   The Carboniferous clubmoss and horsetail forests (Lycophyta and the Sphenophytes)                                                   The first gymnosperms (Cordaitales)                                                   The development of Angiosperms          8.2 Evolution and homoplasy of wood anatomical traits                               Homoplasy and evolution          8.3 Parallel evolution of macroscopic and microscopic traits                                 8.3.1 Mesic European fir forest (Adenostylo-Abietetum)                    8.3.2 Heathlands along European North Atlantic coast                    8.3.3 Alpine meadows (Caricetum curvulae)   9 Anatomical adaptions to permanent changed environmental conditions          9.1 Anatomical and morphological plasticity of species          9.2 Anatomical and morphological adaption to different climates                                 9.2.1 Trees in the tropics, the temperate and boreal zone                                             Tropical rain forest                                             Temperate forest                                             Boreal forest                          9.2.2 Shrubs in the tropics, the Mediterranean and arctic zone                                             Subtropical African dry climate, Sahara                                             European thermo-Mediterranean zone                                             Arctic zone 10 Anatomical adaptions to temporarily changed environmental conditions                 10.1 Anatomical effect of short-term environmental changes during the vegetation period                                 10.1.1 Individual small and large annual rings and missing rings                                 10.1.2 Discontinuous growth - Wedging rings                                 10.1.3 Individual small and large latewood zones and latewood zones with thin- or thick-walled tracheids                                 10.1.4 Individual, not fully lignified latewood zones (""blue rings"")                                 10.1.5 False rings and density variations                                 10.1.6 Tissue and fiber cracks                                10.2 Effect of multi-annual environmental changes                                 10.2.1 Abrupt growth changes                                 10.2.2 Structural changes                 10.3 Eccentricity and irregular stem forms                 10.4 Reaction wood - Reaction to mechanical stress                                 10.4.1 Compression wood in conifers                                 10.4.2 Tension wood in angiosperms                 10.5 Cell collapse and lateral ray compression                 10.6 Cambial wounding - Callus formation, overgrowing of wounds                 10.7 Prevention of wounds                 10.8 Resin and gum ducts           11 Coexistence of algae, fungi and vascular plants                 11.1 Mycorrhiza -                 11.2 Lichens - Coexistence of algae and fungi 12 Wood decay                 12.1 Abiotic decomposition                 12.2 Anaerobic decay - Absence of oxygen                 12.3 Aerobic decay - Wood-decaying fungi                 12.4 Compartimentalization - The natural limit to fungal growth                 12.5 Decay by xylobiontic insects           13 Fossilization, permineralization, coalification, carbonization and wetwood conservation                 13.1 Fossilization                 13.2 Permineralization of archeological artefacts                 13.3 Coalification                 13.4 Carbonization"

Reviews

Author Information

Fritz Hans Schweingruber After studies at the University of Bern, Switzerland and postdocs by Hal Fritts in Tucson, Arizona he was teaching during 26 years wood anatomy and dendrochronology at the University of Basel. At the same time he was leader of the Research Group Tree Rings and Environment at the Swiss Federal Institute of Forest, Snow and Landscape in Birmensdorf, Switzerland where he constructed the Northern hemispheric dendroclimatological densitometric network and wood anatomical books from Europe, Russia and the Sahara. 1986 he founded the International dendroecological field week and 2001 the International dendroanatomical weeks. Annett Börner She is a geo-ecologist with a special interest plant ecology. She has worked for more than 15 years as an editor and designer in the field of scientific publications, in print and web media. She specialises in science communication, and her clients include a number of major research institutes in Europe and Australia. She lives in Adelaide, Australia.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

wl

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List