Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Perspective
Waste products in animals are excreted to the exterior through the digestive system, the urinary system, and, to a lesser extent, through sweat glands. By contrast, in the plant, waste products of metabolism as well as substances that will be further utilized are stored within individual cells or transferred to regions of living or non-living tissues or into cavities and ducts within the organism. A good example is the transfer of waste metabolites into the secondary wood (with the consequent formation of heartwood) where they are isolated from the functional regions of the plant body. The transfer of metabolites from one site to another is referred to as secretion rather than excretion although some substances are transferred to the plant surface, such as precursor compounds of cutin and waxes and a variety of substances that exit the plant through glands and glandular hairs. This concept of secretion also includes the transfer of substances within single cells such as, e.g., the movement of enzymes to chloroplasts, sites of photosynthesis, and the transport in vesicles of precursors of cellulose to sites of wall synthesis. We can, thus, define secretion in plants as the transfer of certain intermediate or end products of metabolism from one region to another within the cell or out of the protoplast to another part of the plant body.
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