When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Stoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoma

    Stoma in a tomato leaf shown via colorized scanning electron microscope image A stoma in horizontal cross section The underside of a leaf. In this species (Tradescantia zebrina) the guard cells of the stomata are green because they contain chlorophyll while the epidermal cells are chlorophyll-free and contain red pigments.

  3. Guard cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guard_cell

    Guard cells have cell walls of varying thickness(its inner region, adjacent to the stomatal pore is thicker and highly cutinized [7]) and differently oriented cellulose microfibers, causing them to bend outward when they are turgid, which in turn, causes stomata to open. Stomata close when there is an osmotic loss of water, occurring from the ...

  4. File:Stoma Opening Closing.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Stoma_Opening_Closing.svg

    1-Epidermal cell 2-Guard cell 3-Stoma 4-K+ ions 5-Water 6-Vacuole a. Open stoma: stomata are the small pores in the epidermis of leaves. They are bordered by guard cells. The stomata open when the turgor pressure increases in the guard cells, causing the cells to buckle outward. This happens when water flows into the guard cells.

  5. Transpiration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transpiration

    The stomata are bordered by guard cells and their stomatal accessory cells (together known as stomatal complex) that open and close the pore. [5] The cohesion-tension theory explains how leaves pull water through the xylem. Water molecules stick together or exhibit cohesion.

  6. Turgor pressure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turgor_pressure

    Open stomata on the left and closed stomata on the right. Turgor pressure within the stomata regulates when the stomata can open and close, which plays a role in transpiration rates of the plant. This is also important because this function regulates water loss within the plant.

  7. Crassulacean acid metabolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crassulacean_acid_metabolism

    During the day, the stomata close to conserve water, and the CO 2-storing organic acids are released from the vacuoles of the mesophyll cells. An enzyme in the stroma of chloroplasts releases the CO 2, which enters into the Calvin cycle so that photosynthesis may take place. [8]

  8. Leaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaf

    The epidermal cells are the most numerous, largest, and least specialized and form the majority of the epidermis. They are typically more elongated in the leaves of monocots than in those of dicots. Chloroplasts are generally absent in epidermal cells, the exception being the guard cells of the stomata. The stomatal pores perforate the ...

  9. Vascular plant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vascular_plant

    The movement of water out of the leaf stomata sets up transpiration pull or tension in the water column in the xylem vessels or tracheids. The pull is the result of water surface tension within the cell walls of the mesophyll cells, from the surfaces of which evaporation takes place when the stomata are open.