This image was taken through the 100x oil objective and a 2x camera adapter projecting the image into a Nikon D7500. The sample is a leaf from one of my plants (Dioscorea elephantipes, but I don’t think this picture would look very different for other plant species)
The edges of he leaf were already yellowish brown. Here is a photo of that area with much less chlorophyll:
And here is a photo through the 40x objective using oblique illumination:
If you want to see some really fantastic photos of plant stomata I recommend having a look at Rolf Vossen’s photographs here: https://microscopyofnature.com/stomata
I am looking through his documentation trying to understand how he managed to get those images. They are spectacular.
I think so… What is interesting to me though is that the chloroplasts (I think) are visible in the stomata. Do you think it might be because the layers below it are thinner? Actually… What is “under” the stomata that opening up allows air to access to? Rhetorical question - I am just thinking out loud. I’ll look it up!
Ok, I have looked at this leaf diagram but I still don’t get why the chloroplasts in guard cells would be more visible if the layers below are so chlorophyll-dense… Need to go deeper…
Under stomata is stomatal pore into the mesophyll. Kinda weird. Here’s some pics
https://propg.ifas.ufl.edu/01-biology/02-cell-types/10-celltypes-stomate.html
Cool, thanks!
In this picture the cells in the epidermis layers appear to lack chloroplasts. I wonder if that’s the case… That might also explain this.