Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn,...

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Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn, oats Roots – beets, carrots, turnips, potatoes - low in amino acids ??? Legumes – peas, beans, peanuts, protein , bacteria fix nitrogen in soil (pg 373, 415) Fruits – from a flower; nuts are dry, hard fruits Vegetables – from leaves, stems, roots

Transcript of Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn,...

Page 1: Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn, oats Roots – beets, carrots, turnips, potatoes - low in.

Biology Chapters 27-31Pg 545

• Botany – study of plants• Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn, oats• Roots – beets, carrots, turnips, potatoes

- low in amino acids???• Legumes – peas, beans, peanuts, protein,

bacteria fix nitrogen in soil (pg 373, 415)• Fruits – from a flower; nuts are dry, hard fruits• Vegetables – from leaves, stems, roots

Page 2: Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn, oats Roots – beets, carrots, turnips, potatoes - low in.

Quiz Your Brain

• Do you think plants are the same now as they were 100’s of years ago?

• As the human population continues to grow what do you think will happen to our food sources?

• What processes do you think helps farmers with mass production of our fresh fruits?

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• Fertilizers – extra nutrients for plants, chemical or natural (organic, manure, compost)

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• Pesticides – kills bugs on plants, chemical or natural (hot spices)

• Herbicides – weed killer, chemical or natural (ground cover: plant that grows over an area of ground, used to provide protection from erosion and drought as well as helping to prevent unwanted vegetation.

Page 5: Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn, oats Roots – beets, carrots, turnips, potatoes - low in.

Nonfood Uses Pg. 548-550

• Medicine: Bark of a White Willow used to make Acetylsalicylic Acid (Aspirin)

• Clothing: Tanning animal hides to make leather. Tannin from Oak trees.

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Addictive Plants Pg. 556

• Coca Plant

• Tobacco

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Quiz Your Brain

• List three ways that some plants can cause harm to people.

• List three nonfood, nonmedicinal uses of plants.

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Types of Plants Chapter 28 Pg 564

• NONVASCULARPhylum Bryophytes – mosses1. nonvascular plants

2. no tubes for water or food 3. absorbs water from ground 4. lives in damp, low areas 5. pioneer species 6. creates soil 7. no true roots, stems, leaves

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• VASCULAR – tubes (xylem for water, phloem for sugar)

1. With spores instead of seeds – ex: ferns Pg 580

2. With seeds A. Gymnosperms – cones male & female Pg 611 & 581 B. Angiosperms – flowers

1. monocot2. dicothandouts, Pg 576, 613,

594

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Angiosperm or Gymnosperm

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Quiz Your Brain

• Plants can be classified into 2 categories which are….

• Plants that produce cones are classified as……• Plants that produce flowers are classified as…• What special tissue helps transport water and

nutrients to all the parts of the plant?

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Flower Power Activity

•Color corresponding flower parts:• Purple – Petals (# 1, 2, and 3)• Yellow – Stamens (# 4 and 5)• Orange – Anthers (# 6 and 7)• Red – Ovules (# 8, 9, and 10)• Lavender – Stigma/Style (#11)• Pink – Ovary (#12)• Green – Sepal/Peduncle (#13)

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Chapter 29 Pg 583Plant Tissues

• Leaf layers – handout, Pg 601• Types of roots Pg 5871. Taproot – one main root,

dicots, dandelions2. Fibrous roots – many little

roots, monocots, grass

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Stem growthPg 586

• Apical Meristems – grow from top of stem or root Pg 588, grass grows after mowing, primary growth, monocots

• Lateral Meristems – grow in diameter, secondary, dicots 1. Vascular Cambium – makes more tubes2. Cork Cambium – replaces epidermis w/ dead cork, can’t change size, ruptures as tree grows & makes bark look rough

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• Heartwood – old xylem in center of tree that doesn’t transport water anymore, dark

• Sapwood – functional xylem wood, light• Annual Rings – thick springwood, lots of water - thin summerwood due to less water

- Pg 595

Page 17: Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn, oats Roots – beets, carrots, turnips, potatoes - low in.

Quiz Your Brain

• Heartwood and Sapwood are an example of what kind of growth?

• Are all tree rings the same width?• What is a Dendrochronolgy?

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Stem FunctionsPg 596

• Translocation – moving sugar using pressure

• Transpiration – moving water using:cohesion – water attracted to wateradhesion – water attracted to

xylem wall

capillarity – thinness of xylem draws water up like a straw

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Quiz Your Brain

• Explain why a plant species might develop thorny stems in response to its environment.

• Describe how water is transported through xylem tissue.

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Pollination & Seed Dispersal/StructureChapter 30 Pg 616-20

• Wind – flat flowers, lots of pollen/seeds• Animals – colorful, smelly flowers, tasty fruit,

sticky seeds/fruit/burs• Water – seeds or fruits able to float• Seed Coat – protection• Endosperm – nutrients in seed to help

germination (sprouting)

Page 21: Biology Chapters 27-31 Pg 545 Botany – study of plants Cereals – grains, ex: rice, wheat, corn, oats Roots – beets, carrots, turnips, potatoes - low in.

Quiz Your Brain

• How do the flowers of wind-pollinated plants differ from the flowers of animal-pollinated plants?

• Lack scents, nectar, and large colorful flowers. Animal-pollinated plants usually have these.

• Name three common methods of fruit and seed dispersal.

• Wind, Water, Animals

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Chapter 31 Pg 632Plant Hormones

• Chemical Messengers that affect a plants ability to respond to its environment.

• Auxins – growth• Gibberellins–big fruit, grapes Pg 634• Ethylene – ripening fruit (keep fruit

in bag to ripen faster)

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Plant MovementPg 636

• Photropism – plant in window moves toward sun• http://

plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/movements/tropism/tropisms.html

• Heliotropism – sunflowers follow sun all day• Thigmotropism – vines hold on to what it contacts• Gravitropism – roots grow towards gravity, stems

grow away from gravity• Thigmonastic – leaves close on contact• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgNTRaxgVtg

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Seasonal ResponsesPg 640

• Photoperiodism – plants that respond to length of day short day plants – need more darkness

ex: poinsettia, ragweed (fall allergies), mums, fall flowers

long day plants – need more light ex: wheat, summer flowers

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Quiz Your Brain

• What adaptive advantages might thigmonastic movements provide a plant?

• Which hormone is could be called the “ripening hormone”, and why?

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Fall ColorsPg 642

• Less chlorophyll when less sun.• Carotenoids visible:

(always there but hidden)1. xanthophylls – yellow/orange

2. anthocyanins - reds