Chapters 22, 23, & 25 Are eukaryotic, are multicellular, and have cell walls. Plants.
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Transcript of Chapters 22, 23, & 25 Are eukaryotic, are multicellular, and have cell walls. Plants.
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Chapters 22, 23, & 25
Are eukaryotic, are multicellular, and have cell
walls.
Plants
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Adaptations of plants
Meristem– where new cells are found; tip of stem.
• Plants grow in response to environmental factors:
– Light
– Moisture
– Gravity
– Temperature
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Adaptations of plants
Some plants respond to chemicals or hormones.
Auxin – is a hormone that makes stems grow toward light ad away from the pull of gravity. They make roots grow away from sunlight and toward the pull of gravity.
Cytokinins – hormones that stimulate cell division and make dormant seed sprouts. Opposite of auxins.
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Adaptations of plants
Tropisms – response to gravity, light, and touch.
• Gravitropism – response of a plant to gravity. Ex. Roots grow into soil.
• Phototropism – response of a plant to light. Ex. Change in color; leaves fall off; grow in direction of light.
• Thigmotropism – plant’s response to touch. Ex. Venus flytrap.
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Adaptations of plantsAdaptations
• Aquatic plants – live in mud with little oxygen so have air-filled sacs that oxygen diffuses out of.
• Salt water plants – cells pump slat out of leaves.
• Desert plants – (xerophytes) tolerate heat, sand, winds and little rain. Seeds are often dormant.
• Carnivorous & Parasitic plants – soil has little nutrients so must trap & digest insects or live on a host plant to get nutrients.
• Epiphytes – not rooted in soil so grow directly on other plants. (not parasites)
• Many plants produce chemicals that are poisonous if eaten. Tobacco – Nicotine.
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Classification of Classification of PlantsPlants
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Plant Kingdom
Flowering Plants
Non-flowering Plants
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Plant Life Cycle
• 2 phases
– Sporophyte – diploid (2N)
– Gametophyte – haploid (N)
Alternating from diploid to haploid is called alternation of generations.
• Use energy from sunlight to carry out Photosynthesis.
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A plant can be divided into 3 partsA plant can be divided into 3 parts
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3 groups
FernsFernsMossesMosses GymnospermsGymnosperms
Non - flowering Plants
Do NOT produce flowers
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Examples of Examples of MossesMosses
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spores
Spore-producing capsule
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No true roots, No vascular tissues (no transport)
Characteristics of Characteristics of Mosses (Bryophytes)Mosses (Bryophytes)
Simple stems & leaves
Have rhizoids for anchorage; no roots
Spores from capsules (wind-dispersal)
Damp terrestrial land
Simplest plants
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underground stem
root
A leaf (finely divided into small parts)
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True roots, feathery leaves & underground stems
Characteristics of Ferns
have vascular tissuesvascular tissues (transport & support)
DampDamp & shadyshady places
Spore-producing organSpore-producing organ on the underside of leaves called a sporangia (reproduction)
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needle-shaped leaves
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Male cones (in clusters)
Female cones (scattered)
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roots, woody stems
Characteristics of Characteristics of GymnospermsGymnosperms
needle-shaped leaves
tall evergreen trees
cones with reproductive structures
dry places
vascular tissues (transport)
naked seeds in female cones
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Angiosperms – Flowering Plants
• Have reproductive organs called flowers.
• Flowers attract animals which carry pollen (pollination).
• Seeds are protected and develops into a fruit.
• 2 groups – monocot (1 seed leaf)& dicot (2 seed leaves).
• Annuals (1 season), Biennials (2 seasons), Perennials (many years)
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2 2 groupsgroups
MonocotyledonsMonocotyledons DicotyledonsDicotyledons
Flowering Plants
roots, stems, leaves
vascular tissues (transport)
flowers, fruits (contain seeds)
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MonocotyledonsMonocotyledons
Parallel veins
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one seed-leaf
Characteristics of Characteristics of MonocotyledonsMonocotyledons
leaves have parallel veins
herbaceous plants
e.g. grass, maize
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DicotyledonDicotyledonss
Veins in network
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two seed-leaves
Characteristics of Characteristics of DicotyledonsDicotyledons
leaves have veins in network
e.g. trees, sunflower, rose
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Roots, Stems, & Leaves
• Made up of: – Dermal tissue -“skin”; prevents water
loss.– Vascular tissue -moves water &
nutrients.– Ground Tissue – cells that lie b/w
dermal & vascular.– Meristematic – responsible for new
plant cells and growth.
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Roots, Stems, & Leaves
Roots:• Seedlings grow into primary roots,
then to secondary roots.• Has a vascular cylinder (xylem &
phloem).• Function is to anchor plant to ground
& absorb water and dissolved nutrients from the soil.
• Root pressure forces water upward.
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Roots, Stems, & Leaves
Stems:• Function is to produce leaves, branches &
flowers; hold leaves upright to sun; transport water & nutrients b/w roots and leaves.
• Monocot stems-vascular bundles are scattered throughout stem.
• Dicot stems-vascular bundles are in a ring & contain xylem and phloem tissue.
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Roots, Stems, & Leaves
Leaves:
• Plants main organs.
• Make food (photosynthesis).
• Have chloroplasts.
• Xylem and Phloem tissue are in bundles called veins which connect to the stem.
• Stomata allow air/gases in & out.
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Transport in Plants• Xylem – moves water.• Phloem – moves sugars.• Root pressure forces water up.• Water is pulled up by a force called
cohesion (molecules pulled together).• Water molecules are also attracted
to other molecules by adhesion.• Capillary action is cohesion and
adhesion together causing water to move upward. Water will move higher in a narrow tube than in a wider tube.
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Plant ClassificationPlant Classification
Non-flowering
Plants
Flowering
Spore-bearing
Naked seeds
No roots
with roots
Mosses Ferns
Gymnosperms
1 seed-leaf
2 seed-leaves
Monocots Dicots