The document discusses the mechanical tissues in plants and their properties and significance. It explains that plants have developed different types of specialized tissues to withstand environmental forces and stresses. These mechanical tissues include sclerenchyma fibers, sclereids, and collenchyma cells. Their distribution in plants follows engineering principles of strength and stability. Inflexible organs contain tissues arranged like I-beams to resist bending, while inextensible organs have a dense central bundle to resist pulling. Incompressible trunks utilize concentric rings of tissues like concrete pillars. These tissues allow plants to survive in varied habitats through rigidity, elasticity, and efficient material use.
Mechanical Tissues in Plants Provide Strength and Support
1. PLANT ANATOMY
Welcome to
MECHANICAL TISSUES IN PLANTS
Properties & -Significance.
By
N. Sannigrahi, Associate Professor,
Department of Botany,
Nistarini College, Purulia, 723101(W.B) India
3. MECHANICAL TISSUES & PLANTS
Having wide range of habitats, plants have to withstand
different environmental forces like force of gravity, wind,
weather along with their body structure, weight and form.
Mechanical tissues are such group of tissues as ‘Stereome’
coined by Haberlandt and ‘Sterides’ as cells of the tissues.
Plants have to withstand-
Longitudinal compressions due to weight of the canopy,
Longitudinal pulling due to bending force as well as due to
weight of some parts
Radial pressure and shearing stress , bending on any direction
due to wind current.
The plants developed mechanical tissues with maximum
possible requirements of rigidity, elasticity and the economy of
the tissue deposition.
5. MECHANICAL TISSUES
There are four major basic building blocks of the cell wall-
cellulose, hemicelluloses, lignin and pectin. The
microstructure of the plant cell walls varies in different type of
plants with cellulose fibers reinforcing g in matrix of
hemicelluloses and pectin or lignin in one or more layers with
volume fraction and orientation of cellulosic fibers varying in
each layer.
Some tissues are specially meant for providing mechanical
strength or support to the plant members which are frequently
subjected to various kinds of strains and stresses. The most
important mechanical tissues are sclerenchyma fibers with
highly lignified walls and peculiarly interlocked ends,
sclereids, with massive lignified walls, and collenchymas with
7. MECHANICAL TISSUES
unevenly thickened cellulose walls. The sclerenchyma fibers,
as already stated, may be present in cortex, in pericycle, with
vascular elements and even in pith. They are undoubtedly the
most effective mechanical tissues. Sclereids may occur in
different parts of the plants for the same purpose.
Collenchymas forms either continuous strands or isolated
patches in the superficial regions of the aerial organs of the
dicotyledons. They provide sufficient strength to the growing
organs. These tissues giving mechanical strength had been put
under a system, known as stereome, by some workers in the
last century. The tracheary elements of xylem—the xylem
fibers and extra-xylary fibers, bast fibers and wood fibers
constitute a major inputs in this regard .Thus, plants developed
different type of tissues with specialized structure to resist the
various forces of nature.
9. PROPERTIES
tracheids and tracheae, are primarily meant for the conduction of
water and solutes. But as they possess thick lignified walls with
different types of localized thickenings, they possibly can give
mechanical support as well.
Parenchyma tissues in stem have the micro fibrils oriented
transversely on the vertical walls so that the cells bend without
breaking and in root, the micro fibrils have steeply pitched and
helical orientation to resist extension pressure.
Collenchymas tissues are characterized by their tensile strength and
plasticity. Some collenchymas sclerify and modify their walls in
such way they are able to withstand tensile and comprehensive
components of bending stress.
Sclerenchyma having most plant lignin possess the hardness of a
steel. Sclerides give strength, resistance and inflexible protection
.They serve major mechanical attributes.
Thus. Plants develop different type of specialized tissues to
withstand the adverse environmental condition as emerge from time
to time.
11. PROPERTIES OF MECHANICAL TISSUES
In general, plants face bending, pulling and compression
pressure. So to resist these stresses, plants have distributed the
various mechanical tissues in the internal structures of the
different parts. The principles of distribution was in
conformity with the engineering principles involved in various
construction practiced in engineering sciences( Schwendener).
The plants achieved the resistance to various forces through
get max. Strength and stability with the minimum use of
materials by the tissue orientation and biomechanics of
different organs.
PROPERITIES OF MECHANICAL TISSUES
There are three principles based on which the mechanical
tissues have been distributed-inflexibility, inextensibility,
incompressibility. In addition to that, sheering stress is another
attributes in this regard.
Inflexibility: It refers to the resistance to bending. The organs
which experience this are mainly aerial trunk, branches, stems,
petioles , peduncles, stalks of fruits, leaf blades etc as these are
called inflexible organs.
12. INFLEXIBILITY
If a load is put at the middle portion of a straight girder
supported at the ends, the result would be a curvature when the
upper surface would be shortened and the lower lengthened.
That shows that the upper surface is subjected to compression
and the lower to tension, while at the middle portion tension
will come to zero. So requisite materials should be
concentrated on the two surfaces, which are regions of greatest
tension. The typical girders are constructed accordingly, so that
they appear as ‘I’ in cross-section.
From this it is quite clear that to possess maximum
inflexibility in the I-girder, the strengthening material be
distributed on the peripheries known as flanges. The strength
of the girder depends on the strength of the flanges and it
increases in distance between the flanges. There is no need of
13. PROPERTIES
strengthening materials at the neutral layers due to lack of
tension or zero tension.
Thus, the I-girder can resist the bending forces whether it
comes from one side or the other side. The inflexible organs of
the plants have been constructed on the principles of I –girder
with multiple I-girders in ring to resist the bending due to
radial pressure.
Inextensibility: It is the resistance to extension or pulling.The
roots and other organs are called inextensible organs. The
pulling of the water from well by a rope and the rope has a
tight winding of the fibers. The degree of the extensibility
depends on the cross sectional area of its resistant elements.
14. PROPERTIES
The principle states that the force is evenly distributed and this
can not be satisfied unless the resisting structures are compact.
The more is the tightness of the resisting materials, the greater
is the efficiency to resist the extension pressure. Roots which
attach the plants to the soil or other substratum suffer from
longitudinal pull or tension. Mechanical tissues are
advantageously put in the central region in form of a compact
mass in these organs. The degree of resistance of course
depends on the cross sectional area of the mechanical
elements. Thus the roots have mechanical tissues associated
with the vascular elements inside the stele and built like
structure to perform the same a rope.
Thus, the plants can withstand the adverse condition and
remain intact.
15. PROPERTIES
INCOMPRESSIBILITY: It is the resistance to compressible
force. The axis of a spreading tree with its arrays of branches
and leaves has to bear the weight of the heavy crown, which
may be compared to putting a load at the top of a cylindrical
axis. Here the axis is subjected to longitudinal compression.
The mechanical tissues are effectively aggregated at the central
portion which serves as a solid column for withstanding
longitudinal compression. Therefore, the trunk is an
incompressible organ. The trunk of the plant is built on like a
pillar . In pillars, the strengthening material are found straight
and evenly distributed within the concrete materials and also
tagged to each other. This ensures the load passes to the
ground through the longitudinal axis without any damage to
the structure. Trunk in the plant is not only incompressible
part, it is also an inflexible structure as it is also subjected to
radial forces.
16. PROPERTIES
Therefore, it is built on the principle of I-girder as well as like
a pillar to resist the both forces
SHEARING STRESSES:
The flat organs like the leaves are often subjected to violent
shearing stresses due to movement of surrounding air or water.
The wind currents work at right angles to the surface of the
leaves and cause considerable laceration. To stand against this
stress the I-girders present for securing inflexibility are firmly
held together by a large number of cross ties in form of veins
which often form a network.
The I-girder arrangement is more pronounced in
monocotyledonous leaves, usually having parallel venation .
The margins of the leaves are particularly exposed to shearing
stresses. They have special arrangement for protection by
increased thickness of the epidermis, and frequent occurrence
of thick-walled collenchymas in the sub-epidermal region.
17. DISTRIBUTION OF MECHANICAL TISSUES
Composite peripheral girders- Found in Cyperaceae &
Juncaginaceae,
Sub-cortical fibro-vascular strands-Fibrous bundles have been
pushed from the surface into a more central position like in
Bamboo,
Simple hollow cylinder or tube of stereome with embedded
mestome strands- Cylinders hollow but vascular strands are
fused, as found in the members of Liliaceae, Cucurbitaceae,
Chenopodiaceae etc,
Peripheral hollow cylinder or tube of sterome reinforced by
isolated sub-epidermal girders-The flanges project from the
outer surface of the tubes at more or less regular intervals,
found in grasses.
18. MECHANICAL TISSUES INFLEXIBLE ORGANS
Inflexible organs are those can resist bending and radial
forces. These organs include stems, branches, petioles,
inflorescence axis, flower axis, fruit stalks, seeds stalks etc.
The distribution of mechanical tissues are based on I-girder
principle. The mechanical tissues like collenchymas,
sclerenchyma, xylem tissues etc form the flanges and the
parenchyma, phloem tissues in between the flanges constitute
the web position of the girder. The multiple number of the
girders arranged in a ring to form a composite girder system in
cylindrical structures.
Mainly five types of organization ( Haberlandt) of mechanical
tissues are found---
Sub-epidermal girders-Found in Lamiaceae in square or
rectangular in outline
19. TISSUES IN INEXTENSIBLE STRUCTURES
Inextensible structures are those subjected to longitudinal
stress and these include all such parts which attach the plants
to the substratum. These organs are roots, rhizomes, stilt roots
, fruit stalks etc. Here, the mechanical tissues are connected
into a single compact cable like central strand. More the
compactness, more the distribution of force to make it more
resistant. This is achieved by the formation of central
styereome3 bundle surrounded by several hadrome and
leptome groups. In the roots, stele remains compact by ring of
mechanical tissues. In some monocot climbers, longitudinal
tensions inextensibility is achieved by the sclerotic
development in the pith. In pendulous fruit stalks,
inextensibility is provided either by the contraction of fibrous
cylinder and by the strengthening of their fibrous sheaths
which accompany the internal merestome strands.
20. TISSUES IN INCOMPRESSIBLE STRUCTURES
Incompressible organs faces compression pressures in plants
in trunk. Trunk bears the load of canopy and resists the radial
pressure. The trunk needs two mechanical needs-To resist
compression, To resist bending. So, the mechanical tissues
follows both the principle of incompressibility and
inflexibility. The Vascular bundles run upward to downward as
straight iron rods of a concrete pillar and transmit load to the
grounds. The secondary wood also bears the compression
pressure. The ring arrangement of the vascular bundles and the
concentric rings of the secondary wood and phloem provides
multiple I-girders and helps the trunk to withstand the radial
tensions., The stilt roots in Pandanus can withstand the
tensions due to their inextensible and inflexible properties. The
mechanical systems of stilt roots in maize having outer bast
fibers performs inflexibility and the inner serves
inextensibility.
22. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Google for the different images,
Different websites for content.
Anatomy of angiosperms- Mishra & Dash
Plant anatomy- B. P. Pandey,
Plant anatomy- Pijush Roy
Others.
This presentation has been prepared for the UG students of
Indian Universities and other Universities without any
financial interest.