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Ordinary epidermis
Guard cells
Thick cuticle
Thicker cuticle
Thin cuticle
Parasitic plant
Petal epidermis
Sclerified epidermis
Papillose epidermis
Sculptured cuticle
Elaborate cuticle
Cuticular horns
Radial walls
Cuticle proper
No epidermis
Epidermal peels
Cycad peel
Paradermal
Typical stoma
Sunken stoma
Stomatal orientation 1
Unusual orientation 2
Artifact
Stomata and fibers
Stomatal crypts
Crypts, mag.
Crypt margin
Non-crypt
Water lily
Stomatal channels
Groove, hi mag
Subsidiary cells
Ledges
Papillae
Trichome
Uniseriate hair
Peltate hair, mag
Peltate, lo mag
Branched hairs
Trichome base
Lithocyst, Ficus
Lithocysts, hemp
Bulliform cells
Grass epidermis
Multiple epi
Uniseriate?
Peperomia

Fig. 10.2-14. Transverse section of Ficus leaf (related to fig). This is an extremely thick cuticle proper (the pink layer) and cutinized wall (the white layer). The shape of the protoplasts is not the shape of the cell: the whitish areas are cell walls with cutin deposited in them, and their shape indicates that the outer parts of the radial walls are thickened, as is all of the outer wall. After secreting enough cutin to encrust all this wall, the cells continued to produce enough cutin to build a thick layer above the cells.