Support in Plants and Animals
Support in Plants and Animals
Support in Plants and Animals
April 1998
Number 21
Fig 2. Collenchyma
Animals and plants require support in order to maintain their shape. Plants
must support their above-ground structures so that they can:
Thick cellulose
walls
Similarly, collenchyma (Fig 2) consists of living cells, but with extra cellulose
thickening in the corners to provide flexible support to stems. The
collenchyma is situated in a peripheral cylinder towards the outer
circumference of the stem and leaf petiole and this allows both the stem
and the leaves to withstand the lateral force of the wind.
When greater tensile strength is needed, plant tissues may become lignified.
Tissues such as sclerenchyma (sclereids and fibres) are found in bundle
caps (stems) and as a central stele in dicot roots. When mature, sclerenchyma
cells are dead and lignin provides great strength. Sclereids may be scattered
or concentrated in, for example, the testa of seeds, whereas fibres are
arranged as concentric cylinders to provide mechanical support to stems
and to provide anchorage for roots. The cylindrical arrangement of flexible
and inflexible supporting tissues in dicot stems therefore represent a form
of endoskeleton (Fig 3).
Supporting tissues
All plants and animals derive some support from water. Most organisms
contain a high percentage of water, a high-density, incompressible liquid
which provides support wherever it occurs. This water may help to
support the entire body, as in the hydrostatic skeleton of the earthworm
or leech. Such organisms have a coelom - fluid filled cavity against which
longitudinal and circular muscles can act and which, therefore, also provide
a means of locomotion.
In other cases the water may be used to support particular organs, eg. in
the aqueous and vitreous humour of the human eye.
All plants and animals possess cells or tissues which are in some way
specialised for support. Plants rely mainly on internal skeletons, whereas
in the animal kingdom, skeletons may be internal (endoskeletons) or
external (exoskeletons).
outer ring of
collenchyma
provides
flexible
strength
turgid parenchyma
sclerenchyma
distributed
around outer
circumference
to provide
mechanical
strength
Fig 1. Parenchyma
Tightly packed cells,
with air spaces (cells
are living) and thin
cell walls = support
through turgidity
Thin
cellulose
walls
Bio Factsheet
bone
matrix
Plants
canaliculi - allow
exchange of materials
between osteocyte and
blood vessels
Fig 5. Cartilage
matrix
layer of connective
tissue - perichondrium
Animals
Practice Questions
1. The diagram shows the structure of compact bone
A
chondryte
B
Exoskeletons or outer skeletons are found in arthropods. The exoskeleton
of insects is made of chitin, a tough polysaccharide which may be
waterproofed in terrestrial arthropods with a coating of wax. The insect
exoskeleton contains movable joints between the segments of the cuticle.
Pairs of antagonistic muscles at each joint allow insects to move. However,
exoskeletons must be periodically shed for growth to occur, a period during
which the insect is extremely vulnerable both to desiccation and predators.
Whilst exoskeletons provide support, their weight effectively limits the
maximum size of such organisms.
(1 mark)
(1 mark)
(b) How does the structure of compact bone differ from that of
cartilage?
(2 marks)
Answers
Marking points are shown by semicolons
Acknowledgements;