Skip to main content Site map

Introduction to Plant Structure and Development, An: Plant Anatomy for the Twenty-First Century 2nd Revised edition


Introduction to Plant Structure and Development, An: Plant Anatomy for the Twenty-First Century 2nd Revised edition

Hardback by Beck, Charles B. (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)

Introduction to Plant Structure and Development, An: Plant Anatomy for the Twenty-First Century

£64.99

ISBN:
9780521518055
Publication Date:
22 Apr 2010
Edition/language:
2nd Revised edition / English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Pages:
459 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 24 - 29 May 2024
Introduction to Plant Structure and Development, An: Plant Anatomy for the Twenty-First Century

Description

A plant anatomy textbook unlike any other on the market today. Carol A. Peterson described the first edition as 'the best book on the subject of plant anatomy since the texts of Esau'. Traditional plant anatomy texts include primarily descriptive aspects of structure, this book not only provides a comprehensive coverage of plant structure, but also introduces aspects of the mechanisms of development, especially the genetic and hormonal controls, and the roles of plasmodesmata and the cytoskeleton. The evolution of plant structure and the relationship between structure and function are also discussed throughout. Includes extensive bibliographies at the end of each chapter. It provides students with an introduction to many of the exciting, contemporary areas at the forefront of research in the development of plant structure and prepares them for future roles in teaching and research in plant anatomy.

Contents

1. Problems of adaptation to a terrestrial environment; 2. An overview of plant structure and development; 3. The protoplast of the eukaryotic cell; 4. Structure and development of the cell wall; 5. Meristems of the shoot and their roles in plant structure and development; 6. Morphology and development of the primary vascular system of the stem; 7. Sympodial systems and patterns of nodal anatomy; 8. The epidermis; 9. The origin of secondary tissue systems and the effect of their formation on the primary body of seed plants; 10. The vascular cambium: structure and function; 11. Secondary xylem; 12. The phloem; 13. Periderm, rhytidome, and the nature of bark; 14. Unusual features of structure and development in stems and roots; 15. Secretion in plants; 16. The root; 17. The leaf; 18. Reproduction and the origin of the sporophyte.

Back

University of Worcester logo