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Adaptations of Leaves

The leaves of dicotyledonous plants are well adapted for photosynthesis:

Water loss

Water loss

  • The waxy cuticle covering the upper and lower epidermis creates a water proof barrier over the surface of the leaf, reducing water loss.
  • The guard cells around stomata in the lower epidermis of the leaf close in certain conditions to reduce water loss.
Gas exchange

Gas exchange

  • Carbon dioxide and oxygen can diffuse into and out of the leaf through stomata on the lower surface of the leaf.
  • There are air spaces between the spongy mesophyll cells of the leaf so carbon dioxide and oxygen can diffuse through the leaf.
Sunlight

Sunlight

  • The palisade mesophyll cells are located just under the upper epidermis, and packed tightly together so they can absorb as much sunlight as possible.
  • These cells also contain many chloroplasts for photosynthesis.
Jump to other topics
1

Classification of Living Organisms

2

Organisation of the Organism

3

Movement Into & Out of Cells

4

Biological Molecules

5

Enzymes

6

Plant Nutrition

7

Human Nutrition

8

Transport in Plants

9

Transport in Animals

10

Diseases & Immunity

11

Gas Exchange in Humans

12

Respiration

13

Excretion in Humans

14

Coordination & Response

15

Drugs

16

Reproduction

17

Inheritance

18

Variation & Selection

19

Organisms & Their Environment

20

Human Influence on Ecosystems

21

Biotechnology & Genetic Modification

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