Chapter 6: Tissues – CBSE Class 9 Science Notes

🧬 Chapter 6: Tissues – CBSE Class 9 Science Notes


🔹 What is a Tissue?

  • A tissue is a group of similar cells performing a specific function.
  • Tissues make the functioning of organs more efficient in multicellular organisms.

🪴 Plant Tissues

🔹 6.2.1 Meristematic Tissue

  • Meristematic tissues are actively dividing cells found in growing regions of plants.
  • Types of Meristematic Tissue:
    1. Apical meristem – at the tips of roots and shoots → increases length.
    2. Intercalary meristem – at internodes or base of leaves → length.
    3. Lateral meristem (Cambium) – along sides of stem → girth (thickness).

🧪 Cells are small, with dense cytoplasm, thin walls, large nuclei, and no vacuoles.


🔹 6.2.2 Permanent Tissue

Formed when meristematic cells lose ability to divide and differentiate.

🔸 (i) Simple Permanent Tissue

  1. Parenchyma
    • Living cells, thin-walled, loosely packed with intercellular spaces.
    • Stores food; may do photosynthesis (chlorenchyma) or help in floating (aerenchyma).
  2. Collenchyma
    • Living, elongated cells with thick corners.
    • Provides flexibility and mechanical support (e.g., leaf stalks, tendrils).
  3. Sclerenchyma
    • Dead cells with thick lignified walls, no internal space.
    • Provides rigidity (e.g., coconut husk).

🔸 (ii) Complex Permanent Tissue

Made up of more than one type of cell.

  1. Xylem – transports water & minerals upward.
    • Components: Tracheids, Vessels, Xylem Parenchyma, Xylem Fibres
  2. Phloem – transports food from leaves to plant parts.
    • Components: Sieve tubes, Companion cells, Phloem Parenchyma, Phloem Fibres (only dead cells)

🔹 Epidermal Tissue

  • Protective outer covering of plant body.
  • May have:
    • Stomata: pores for gaseous exchange and transpiration.
    • Guard cells: control stomatal opening.
    • Root hairs: increase absorption surface area.
    • Cuticle (wax layer): prevents water loss in desert plants.

🔹 Cork (Protective Tissue)

  • Replaces the epidermis in older stems/roots.
  • Made of dead cells with suberin in walls (water & gas resistant).

🧍‍♂️ Animal Tissues

🔹 6.3.1 Epithelial Tissue

  • Covers organs & lines body cavities.
  • Tightly packed, no intercellular spaces.
  • Types:
    1. Squamous Epithelium – flat cells (e.g., blood vessels, alveoli)
    2. Stratified Squamous – layered for protection (e.g., skin)
    3. Cuboidal – cube-shaped (e.g., kidney tubules)
    4. Columnar – tall cells (e.g., intestine)
    5. Ciliated Columnar – with cilia, in respiratory tract
    6. Glandular Epithelium – secretes substances (e.g., glands)

🔹 6.3.2 Connective Tissue

  • Connects different parts of body.
TypeFeatures & Function
BloodFluid matrix (plasma), transports materials
BoneHard matrix of calcium & phosphorus; supports body
CartilageFlexible, smoothens joints, in ear, nose, etc.
LigamentConnects bone to bone, elastic
TendonConnects muscle to bone, strong & stiff
Areolar tissueFills space, supports internal organs
Adipose tissueFat storage, insulation, under skin

🔹 6.3.3 Muscular Tissue

  • Responsible for body movement.
TypeFeaturesControlLocation
Striated (skeletal)Long, cylindrical, multinucleate, striatedVoluntaryLimbs
Smooth (unstriated)Spindle-shaped, uninucleateInvoluntaryWalls of organs (intestine, blood vessels)
CardiacBranched, striated, uninucleateInvoluntaryHeart

🔹 6.3.4 Nervous Tissue

  • Neurons are nerve cells that transmit messages (nerve impulses).
  • Structure: cell body, axon (long fibre), dendrites (short branches).
  • Forms brain, spinal cord, nerves.

📌 Key Terms to Remember

  • Differentiation: Process of cells becoming specialised.
  • Intercellular Space: Space between cells.
  • Meristem: Growth tissue in plants.
  • Contractile Proteins: In muscles for contraction.

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