STEMS 



are not simple cells. They might be regarded as compound 

 cells. They have been formed by rows of cells whose end 

 walls disappear and which thus become united -into a 

 single vessel or canal. As you have noted in the picture 

 (Figure 60), the walls of the tracheary vessels are peculiar. 

 They are thick, and the thickenings are not evenly arranged 



over the surface. Thus 

 at A in Figure 60 we 

 have what are called 

 spiral vessels ; the thick- 

 ened portion of the wall 

 takes the form of a spiral. 

 The advantage of this ar- 

 rangement is not clear, 

 but it has been found 

 that the first tracheary 

 vessels to be formed are 

 of this type. At B in 

 Figure 60 we have what 



A B 



FIG. 60. Tracheary vessels of the xylem 

 viewed lengthwise, very highly magnified ; 

 A, spiral vessels; B, pitted vessels. 



are called pitted vessels. 

 In these the thickening 

 covers nearly all of the 

 surface, but it is marked 

 by frequent pits. This is the type of vessel of which the 

 secondary wood is chiefly composed. (By secondary wood 

 is meant, as you will recall, wood which is produced 

 by the cambium and not by the original growth of the 

 stem.) 



The tracheary vessels are of more service to the plant 

 when they are dead than when they are alive, and they 

 die soon after they are formed. This death, however, is 

 not accompanied by decay. Completely surrounded as 



