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root
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root
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
root in botany, the descending axis of a plant, as contrasted with the stem, the ascending axis. In most plants the root is underground, but in epiphytes the roots grow in the air and in hydrophytes (e.g., cattails and water lilies) they grow in water or marshes. Roots function to absorb water and dissolved minerals from the soil, to anchor the plant, and often to store food. There are two main types of root system: the tap-root system, in which there is a main primary root larger than the other branching roots; and the diffuse (or fibrous) root system, in which there are many slender roots with numerous smaller root branches. Tap roots are characteristic of most trees and of many other plants, including the carrot, parsnip, radish, beet, and dandelion. The grasses (e.g., corn, rye, and alfalfa) have diffuse roots; in the sweet potato some of the larger fibrous roots swell to store food—although these should not be confused with the tuber of the Irish potato, which is a modified underground stem . Root systems often far exceed in mass the aboveground portions of the plant: alfalfa roots sometimes reach 40 ft (12 m) in length, and the combined length of all the roots of a mature rye plant has been measured at 380 mi (612 km). These ramified root systems are important agents in preventing soil erosion. Roots grow primarily in length; only the older roots may develop a cambium layer that increases their diameter. Protecting the constantly growing tip of the root is a cap of cells that break off as the root probes through the soil; they are replaced by new cells from a layer of meristematic tissue just behind them. In the center of the root the cells formed earlier by the embryonic cells of this layer differentiate into storage tissue and xylem and phloem vessels to conduct sap upward to the leaves and back down to nourish the root cells. On the surface of the epidermis of the growing portion of the root, tiny cellular projections called root hairs extend into the soil to absorb water and minerals. Although root hairs are less than 1/3 in. (.84 cm) long, their great number enables the plant to collect enormous quantities of water, most of which is promptly lost into the air by transpiration. In spite of their slenderness and delicate structure, the spiraling forward thrust of the root tips and the pressure of their expanding cells is sufficient to split solid rock.
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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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Understanding root forms: knowing how roots grow and utilize the soil is critical to proper tree management.(TREE MAINTENANCE)
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Underground and underwater
; ...their ability to develop a large root system. The annual production of...trees planted 0.5m apart, the major root systems reach a total length of 12km to 18km, but if the minor root systems and the root hairs are added to this, the length becomes...Because they are so large, ...
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The Roots of the Matter.
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The hot and the classic
; ...and refined. Indeed, this proposed function of root hairs raises a host of questions. For example, are the...root surface area resulting from the presence of root hairs? Do root hairs function in processes other than absorption (e...
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Invasion of Lotus japonicus root hairless 1 by Mesorhizobium loti Involves the Nodulation Factor-Dependent Induction of Root Hairs1[w]
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A Class I ADP-Ribosylation Factor GTPase-Activating Protein Is Critical for Maintaining Directional Root Hair Growth in Arabidopsis1[W][OA]
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Environmentally Induced Plasticity of Root Hair Development in Arabidopsis1
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Get to the root of cereal yield difficulties
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On the inside
; ...both stages are different. Endoplasmic Microtubules in Legume Root Hairs In addition to the cortical microtubules (CMTs) that the root hairs of all species have, legume root hairs also possess endoplasmic microtubules (EMTs). To investigate...
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