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Title: Plant Unit Notes


1
Plant Unit Notes
2
1-Vascular Plant Characteristics
  • For plants to survive on land, they must have
    ways to obtain water and other materials from
    their surroundings.
  • They must be able to retain water, transport
    materials throughout the plant, support their
    bodies, and reproduce successfully.

3
  • Most plants live on land.
  • Most plants have a waxy waterproof layer covering
    their leaves called a cuticle.
  • The cuticle helps keep water inside the plant
    cell rather than let it evaporate into the air.

4
  • Some plants have vascular tissue, an internal
    system of tubelike structures through which food
    and water move inside the plant.
  • The vascular tissue also strengthens and supports
    the large bodies of plants.

5
  • All plants undergo sexual reproduction that
    involves fertilization.
  • Fertilization occurs when a sperm cell unites
    with an egg cell.
  • The fertilized egg is called a zygote.

6
  • Plants have complex life cycles that are made up
    of 2 different stages.
  • In one stage, the sporophyte, the plant produces
    spores, which grow into new organisms.
  • The spore develops into the second stage, the
    gametophyte.

7
  • The gametophyte stage produces gametes.
  • Gametes are sperm cells and egg cells.
  • Vocabulary1-7
  • Cuticle, vascular tissue, fertilization
  • zygote, sporophyte, gametophyte, gamete

8
Section 2 notes-Moss/Nonvascular
  • Mosses are a type of nonvascular plant.
  • Some other nonvascular plants are liverworts and
    hornwarts.
  • All nonvascular plants are low-growing plants
    that lack vascular tissue.

9
  • These small low-growing plants have only their
    rigid cell walls for support.
  • They do not have complex systems to transport
    water, nutrients, and food through their bodies.
  • Nonvascular plants can only pass these materials
    from one cell to the next.

10
  • Nonvascular plants must live in places with
    enough moisture for them to survive and
    reproduce.
  • The familiar green, fuzzy part of the moss is the
    gametophyte.
  • The sporophyte generation grows out of the
    gametophyte.

11
  • The sporophyte has a slender stalk with a
    capsule at the end.
  • The capsule contains spores.
  • Thin rootlike structures called rhizoids anchor
    the moss and absorb water and nutrients from the
    soil.

12
  • Sphagnum moss is a type of moss that grows in a
    wetland called a bog.
  • The bog water is so acidic that the plants do not
    decompose when they die, instead they pile up at
    the bottom.
  • Over time, the mosses become compressed into
    layers and form peat.

13
  • Peat is used as a fuel to heat homes and cook
    food in Europe and Asia.
  • Vocabulary 8-11
  • Nonvascular plant, rhizoid, bog, peat

14
Section 3 notes-Ferns/Seedless Vascular
  • Ferns and their relatives share 2 major
    characteristics.
  • They have vascular tissue and use spores to
    reproduce.
  • Vascular plants are much more suited to life on
    land than mosses.

15
  • Ferns, club mosses, and horsetails need to grow
    in moist surroundings because they produce
    spores.
  • These spores grow into gametophytes, which then
    produce egg cells and sperm cells, they need
    water for fertilization to occur.

16
  • The leaves of ferns are called fronds.
  • The frond has the sporophyte stage, tiny spore
    cases on the underside of the mature leaf.
  • The spores will develop into a tiny gametophyte
    if it lands on moist, shaded soil.

17
  • The developing uncurled leaves of the fern are
    called fiddleheads.
  • There are few club mosses and horsetails today.
  • They have true leaves, like the ferns, and a
    similar life cycle.

18
  • The ferns, club mosses and horsetails are all
    considered seedless vascular plants because they
    produce spores to reproduce, not seeds.
  • Vocabulary 12,13
  • Frond,fiddlehead

19
4-Seed Plants
  • All seed plants share 2 characteristics.
  • They have vascular tissue and use seeds to
    reproduce.
  • They all have body plans that include leaves,
    stems, and roots.

20
  • Water, food, and nutrients are transported
    throughout the plants vascular tissue.
  • Phloem- vascular tissue through which food moves.
  • When food is made in the leaves, it enters the
    phloem and travels to the stems and roots.

21
  • Xylem-water and nutrients travel in this vascular
    tissue from the soil.
  • Seeds are structures that contain a young plant
    inside a protective covering.
  • Seeds have 3 parts- embryo, stored food, seed
    coat

22
  • The young plant that develops from the zygote, or
    fertilized egg, is called the embryo and has the
    beginnings of roots, stems and leaves
  • in some plants food is stored inside 1 or 2 seed
    leaves, called cotyledon.

23
  • The outer covering of a seed is called the seed
    coat.
  • Germination is the early growth stage of the
    embryo.
  • Germination begins when the seed absorbs water
    from the environment
  • Germination continues as the embryo uses its
    stored food to begin to grow.

24
  • stoma open and close to control when gases enter
    and leave the leaf.
  • The process by which water evaporates from the
    stomata in a plants leaves is called
    transpiration.

25
  • The stem carries substances between the plants
    roots and leaves.
  • The stem also provides support for the plant and
    holds up the leaves so they are exposed to the
    sun.

26
  • Inside the stem is a layer of cells called the
    cambium.
  • The cells of the cambium divide to produce new
    phloem and xylem and to increase the stems
    width.

27
  • Roots anchor a plant in the ground and absorb
    water and nutrients from the soil.
  • The tip of the root is rounded and is covered by
    a root cap.
  • The root cap protects the root from injury from
    rocks as the root grows through the soil.

28
  • Vocabulary14-22
  • Transpiration, cambium, root cap, Phloem, xylem,
    seed, embryo, cotyledon, germination

29
5-Gymnosperm/Angiosperms
  • A gymnosperm is a seed plant that produces naked
    seeds, seeds that have no protective covering.
  • All gymnosperms produce naked seeds.
  • Many gymnosperms have needlelike or scalelike
    leaves and deep-growing root systems.

30
  • Gymnosperms are classified into 4 groups-cycads,
    ginkgo, gametophytes, conifers.
  • Most reproduce with cones.
  • Two types of cones male and female
  • male cones produce tiny grains of pollen which
    contain microscopic cells that later become sperm
    cells.

31
  • Female cones contain at least 1 ovule at the base
    of each scale, it contains an ed cell.
  • After being fertilized, the ovule develops into a
    seed.
  • The cone closes and seals in pollen.
  • To reproduce pollen falls from a male cone onto a
    female cone.

32
  • In time a sperms cell and egg cell join together
    in an ovule on the female cone.
  • The transfer of pollen from a male to a female
    cone or structure is called pollination.
  • Conifers produce many useful products like paper
    and the lumber to build homes.

33
  • The rayon fibers in clothes are also from
    conifers.
  • Conifers are grown in large forests.
  • Clear cutting is one method to obtain lumber,
    when all the trees in a large area of forest are
    cut down.

34
  • This practice can destroy animals homes and
    cause the soil to be washed away by rains.

35
Angiosperms
  • An angiosperm is a plant that produces seeds
    that are enclosed in a fruit.
  • Seeds develop in a protective structure called an
    ovary.

36
  • The ovary is located within an angiosperms
    flower.
  • 2 characteristics that all angiosperms share all
    produce flowers and fruits.
  • Not all flowers appear the same.
  • Some flowers do not have petals, colorful
    structures that you see when flowers open.

37
  • The flower bud is enclosed by leaflike structures
    called sepals that protect the flower.
  • Within the petals are the male and female
    reproductive parts.
  • Thin stalks topped by small knobs inside the
    flower are stamen, this is the male part.
  • The stalk is called the filament.

38
  • The knob at the end of the filament is the
    anther, this is where the pollen is produced.
  • The pistil is the female part, usually found in
    the center of the flower.
  • The sticky tip of the pistil is called the stigma.

39
  • A slender tube down the center of the pistil is
    called the style, connecting the stigma to the
    ovary.
  • The ovary contains 1 or more ovules.
  • In reproduction pollen falls on a stigma, over
    time the sperm and egg cell join together in the
    ovule.

40
  • The zygote develops into the embryo part of the
    seed.
  • As the seed develops, the ovary changes and
    eventually becomes a fruit, a ripened ovary.
  • Angiosperms divide into 2 groups monocots and
    dicots

41
  • Monocots
  • 1 seed leaf,cotyledon
  • parallel veins
  • scattered bundles in veins
  • flower parts in threes
  • grasses, corn, wheat,rice, lilies, tulips

42
  • Dicots
  • 2 seed leaves, cotyledons
  • branching veins
  • circle of veins
  • flower parts in fours or fives
  • roses, violets, dandelions

43
  • Vocabulary23-36
  • Gymnosperm, cones, pollen, ovule, pollination
  • Angiosperm, ovary, flower, petal, sepal, stamen,
    pistil, monocot, dicot

44
Section 6- Plant Growth
  • A plants growth response toward or away from a
    stimulus is called a tropism.
  • Touch, light, gravity are important stimuli to
    which plants respond.

45
  • Hormones produced by a plant are chemicals that
    affect how the plant grows and develops.
  • Plant hormones control tropisms germination
    forming flowers, stems, and leaves shedding of
    leaves development of and ripening of fruit.

46
  • Auxin is an important plant hormone that speeds
    up the rate at which a plants cells grow.
  • Auxin controls a plants response to light by
    making some cells grow faster than others so the
    plant bends toward the light.

47
  • Flowering plants that flower and die in the same
    year are called annuals.
  • Ex marigolds, petunias, pansies, wheat,
    tomatoes, cucumbers.
  • Flowering plants that live 2 years are biennials.
  • Ex parsley, celery

48
  • plants that live for more than 2 years are
    perennials.
  • Ex oak trees and honeysuckle
  • Vocabulary 36-40
  • Tropism, auxin, annual, biennial, perennials
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