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PLANTS

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Title: PLANTS Author: Cy-Fair ISD Last modified by: Administrator Created Date: 4/17/2000 8:23:18 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PLANTS


1
Chapter 22-25
KINGDOM PLANTAE
2
Plant Characteristics
  • Multicellular
  • Eukaryotic
  • Cell walls made of cellulose
  • Autotrophic
  • Carries out photosynthesis using green pigment
    called chlorophyll
  • Usually have large central vacuoles

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Non Vascular Plants Mosses (Bryophytes)
  • Require damp environment
  • Require water for reproduction
  • Do not have true roots (have rhizoids instead)

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Vascular Seedless Plants Ferns (Pteridophytes)
  • Largest group
  • Usually live in moist environment
  • Need water for fertilization
  • Have true leaves, stems, and roots

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Vascular Seed Plants- GYMNOSPERMS
  • Conifers do not require water for fertilization
  • Wind carries the pollen from male cones to female
    cone where egg is fertilized.
  • Zygote becomes embryo and ovule becomes seed
  • Seeds produced in cones

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EXAMPLES
Fir
White Pine
Spruce
Cypress
11
The giant redwoods (Notice the person in the
tree to your right.)
12
Ancient GynmnospermWelwitschia spp.
13
Other types of Gymnosperms
Gnetae
Ginko
Cycad
14
While some gymnosperms lose their leaves, most
have needle-like leaves that they keep all year.
This is why they are referred to as evergreens.
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Vascular Seed Plants- ANGIOSPERMS
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  • The most abundant and recent type of plants on
    Earth
  • Have seeds that are protected by a fruit.

Passion flower and fruit
18
  • Divided into two groups monocots and dicots.
  • Monocot seeds have one cotyledon (seed leaf).
    These are seeds that cannot be split in half,
    like a piece of corn.
  • Dicots have two cotyledons. These seeds can be
    split in half like peanuts and beans.

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20
Monocots vs. Dicots
21
EXAMPLES OF MONOCOTS
Lily
Flower parts usually in groups of three
22
EXAMPLES OF DICOTS
Chrysanthemum
Petunia
Sunflower
Flower parts usually in groups of four or five
Trenia
Rose
23
Vascular Tissue
  • Xylem carries water and minerals upward in a
    plant.
  • Water always moves in only one direction from
    the roots to the stems and leaves.
  • Water evaporates from the plant through
    structures on the leaves called stomata (singular
    stoma).

24
  • Phloem carries the food of the plant.
  • A plants food is sugar dissolved in a solution
    called sap.
  • It carries sugars in two directions.
  • Sugar can be carried from where it is made
    (usually the leaves) to where it is stored
    (usually stems and roots).

25
ROOTSThere are two kinds of roots
  • Taproots - a large, main, primary root.
  • Example carrot
  • Fibrous - branching, secondary roots.
  • Example grasses

26
  • Water is absorbed into the plant by the process
    of osmosis.
  • Water enters the root through the root hairs.
  • Root hairs give the root more surface area so
    that it can absorb more water.
  • The amount of
  • water that is absorbed is dependent upon the
    amount of water in the soil.

27
STEMS
  • Stems typically have two main functions
  • Supporting leaves and flowers
  • Transporting water and food
  • Some plant stems have the additional job of food
    storage. EX The potato is a special stem that
    stores starch.

28
  • Secondary growth is when the plant grows wider. .
  • Cambium is the meristem tissue that allows plants
    to get wider.
  • This secondary growth creates a layer of dead
    cells called wood.

29
  • The secondary phloem, cork cambium and the cork
    combine to form the bark of a tree.

30
Trunk of an Oak Tree Notice the splits in the bark
31
  • As the xylem gets older, it becomes clogged and
    can no longer carry water. These dark-colored
    layers are known as heartwood. Heartwood is
    stronger and more resistant to decay than sapwood.

32
  • The alternation of spring and summer wood is what
    forms the trees growth rings.
  • The wider the rings, the more favorable the
    conditions were for growth.
  • The more narrow the rings, the poorer the
    conditions.

33
Summer Wood
Spring Wood
34
Annual Rings
35
LEAVES
  • The blade is the actual leaf.
  • It attached to the stem by a thin structure
    called a petiole.
  • The vascular tissue enters the leaf through the
    petiole and forms the veins of the leaf.

36
  • The top and the bottom of the leaf is covered by
    epidermis.
  • The upper layer usually has a waxy layer known
    as a cuticle to prevent water loss.

37
  • Guard cells in the lower epidermis take in water
    and swell unevenly.
  • This causes an opening to form between the guard
    cells.
  • This opening is called the stoma.
  • Stomata allow carbon dioxide to enter the leaf
    and oxygen and water vapor to diffuse out.

38
  • The mesophyll (middle layer) is where most of the
    photosynthesis takes place.

39
Leaf Cross-Section
40
Flowers
  • The most common sexual reproductive structure is
    the flower. A perfect flower contains both male
    and female parts.

41
  • The male part of a flower is called the stamen.
  • Formed by a filament which holds anther.
  • The anther produces the pollen, which in flowers
    is the male gamete or sperm.

42
  • The female flower parts form the pistil, which is
    composed of a sticky top called the stigma, a
    neck called the style and a base called the
    ovary.
  • The ovary contains the female gametes - egg or
    ovules.

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  • The petals are usually colorful to attract
    pollinators.
  • The sepals are protective green leaves at the
    base of a flower. They protect the bud before the
    flower blooms.

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  • During pollination, pollen is transferred from
    the anther to the stigma. When a pollen grain
    lands on a stigma, it sends out a pollen tube
    that grows through the style to the ovary. Ovule
    fertilized by sperm.

Pollen Tube
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  • The ovary will eventually develop into a fruit.
  • The ovules will develop into seeds.

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52
  • The job of a fruit is to protect the seeds and to
    sometimes help them be spread.
  • The spreading of seeds is known as seed
    dispersal.
  • Seeds can also be dispersed by wind, water,
    animals, and being carried away on fur or
    clothes.

53
Modes of Seed Dispersal
Gravity              Animals              Force               Wind              Water
54
PLANT RESPONSES
  • Phototropism is the response of plants toward
    light.

55
  • Gravitropism is a plants response to gravity.
    This assures that roots grow down and stems grow
    up.

56
  • Thigmotropism is a response to touch. This allows
    a plant to grow on a surface that can support it.
    Whenever the stem touches the support, the cells
    on the opposite side of the stem grow longer,
    causing the stem to coil around or grasp a hold
    of the support.

57
  • The response of a plant to daylight length is
    called photoperiodism. It is actually a response
    to the hours of continuous darkness. A single
    flash of light during darkness can upset the
    cycle of some plants.

Long Night Short Night Long
Night Short Night
58
Importance of plants?
  • Food
  • Fiber
  • Fuel
  • Construction
  • Transport
  • Medicine

59
THE END
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