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BOTANY The Study of Plants
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BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Jan 11, 2016

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Page 1: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

BOTANY

The Study of Plants

Page 2: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Where Do Plants Fit In

• Living Things: Kingdoms– Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes;

bacteria– Protista: cells with nuclei and organelles;

amoebae, algae, diatoms, slime molds– Fungi: cell walls of chitin, mitosis and meiosis

different from Plantae, heterotrophs– Plantae: mostly autotrophic, cell walls of cellulose– Animalia: multicellular, no cell walls, no

photosynthesis

Page 3: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

PLANT CLASSIFICATION

• Kingdom: Plantae

• Division: Tracheophyta (vascular)

• Class: Angiospermae (seeds in fruits)

• Order: Campanulatae

• Family: Asteraceae (Compositae)

• Genus: Coreopsis

• Species: lanceolata (lance-shaped)

Page 4: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Vascular Plants

• Gymnosperms: nonflowering (naked) seed plants (mostly conifers)

• Angiosperms: (angos=vessel) flowering, fruit-seed plants

• Monocots--one seed leaf: grasses (grains), lilies, orchids, irises

• Dicots--two seed leaves: peas, tomatoes, most deciduous trees

Page 5: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Scientific names

• Based on classification

• In angiosperms based on flower structure

• Uniformity among texts and discussions

• Often tell us something about the plant

Page 6: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Gymnosperms

• Fruitless seed plants: ovule not enclosed in an ovary. (Ovary becomes the fruit in angiosperms.)

• Modified leaves form scales of cones or the fleshy coverings in yews and junipers

Page 7: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Gymnosperm - Pine

Page 8: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Gymnosperm

Page 9: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Gymno vs Angiosperm

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Flower Structure

Page 11: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

SEEDS• Develop from ovule

• Cotyledon--seed leaf

• Radicle--first root

Page 12: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Seed Germination

• Period of dormancy

• Factors: scarification, stored food

– Temperature: some require a period of cold

– Moisture

– Light

– Oxygen (water logged soil may prevent germination)

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Vascular Plants

• Plants with:– Roots– Stems– Leaves– Vascular systems

Page 14: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

ROOTS

• Have no nodes

• Never bear leaves or flowers directly

• Have a root cap

• Are the first structure to develop from a seed

• Function: absorb water and nutrients– Anchor the plant – Furnish physical support for the stem– Serve a food storage

Page 15: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

ROOTS

Page 16: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Root Cap• Not present in

“water roots”

Page 17: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Root growth in loose vs compact soil

Page 18: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Mycorrhizae

• From mykes or fungus and rhiza or root

• Symbiotic relationships between fungi and plant roots: the fungi get sugars or food and the plants absorption of water and minerals is greatly enhanced

• Occurs in >80% of vascular plants

Page 19: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Mycorrhizae

Page 20: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Specialized Roots

• Tap root: large main root taps deep for water, develops from radicle and produces lateral roots

• Fibrous root (a form of adventious root) common in monocots and seedless plants

• Adventious root: not from radicle

• Aerial root arises from stem (ivy, orchid)

• Buttress root (Ficus)

• Suckers

• Pneumatophores provide oxygen in wet areas

Page 21: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Plant Stems

• Support the weight of leaves

• Conduct water and minerals up to leaves and food down to roots in the vascular tissue

• Complex growth: produces leaves and branches at nodes as well as lengthens

Page 22: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Plant Stem

Page 23: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Stem or Twig

Page 24: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Meristem or Cambium

• Site of cell division and growth located between phloem and xylem

• At nodes and at the tip meristem tissue forms buds.

• Meristem cells are undiffferentiated: origin of all other cells

– Flower parts are modified leaves

Page 25: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Stem Cross Section

Page 26: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Woody Stem Cross Section

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Apical Meristem

Page 28: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Specialized stems

• Rhizome: horizontal underground stem with (nodes and buds); iris, bermudagrass

• Bulbs: shortened, compressed stem surrounded by leaves (scales) that envelop a flower bud

• Corm: similar to bulb with scales reduced to dry covering

• Tuber: enlarged portion of underground stem; potato with nodes as “eyes”

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Rhizome

• The iris has a large fleshy underground stem that runs parallel with the soil.

Page 30: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.
Page 31: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Leaves

• Site of photosynthesis. Plants are photoautotrophs: they use light to make their own organic compounds and oxygen.

• Light is the energy source and CO2 is the carbon source.

• Plants also respire but the net effect is the production of oxygen in excess of carbon dioxide.

Page 32: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Leaf Structure

Page 33: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Leaf Arrangement

• Simple. Opposite, alternate, whorled

• Compound: Leaflets Palmate, Pinnate or Double Pinnate

• **Leaves attach to stems at nodes and buds occur only at nodes.

• (a common error is to mistake a leaflet for a leaf)

Page 34: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Simple leaf - Attachment

Page 35: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Leaf arrangement

Page 36: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Simple Leaves

Page 37: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Simple leaves

Page 38: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Compound Leaf with opposite leaflets

Page 39: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Compound Leaves

Page 40: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Hybrid

• Hybrid: a plant or animal which is the offspring of parents differing in one or more characteristics. The parents may be of the same or different species.

• Species:a group of individuals if nearly identical structure and behavior which can ordinarily interbreed and maintain their characteristic in nature.

Page 41: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Genetic variability

• In a given species or variety a gene may have quite a variable expression.

• Example: apple trees have so much variability that to propagate a standard one must use grafted stock. If one uses seeds the two parent trees contribute such different characteristics that one usually gets something very different from either parent.

Page 42: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Gene Dominance

• If S is dominant over s when SS is mated to ss all of the offspring will appear S. The offspring will be Ss.

(The Ss is the hybrid.) If Ss is mated to Ss, the offspring will be SS, Ss or ss and the ss will appear different.

If there are multiple genes acting in such a way the offspring of the hybrids may have many differences from the hybrids.

Page 43: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Propagation from Seeds

• The offspring may vary from the parents because of genetic variability or if the parent was a hybrid.

• This may be desired in some cases, but in apples usually the offspring are not tasty.

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PLANTS: Bryophytes

• Bryophytes (moss-plants) non-vascular. Mosses, club mosses, liverworts

Cell walls of cellulose

Do not produce flowers

Page 45: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Seedless Vascular Plants

• Lycophyta: club mosses, selaginellas, quillworts

• Sphenophyta: horsetails

• Pterophyta: ferns

Page 46: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Clubmoss

• Lycopodiums. Simplest vascular plants

Page 47: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Selaginella

Page 48: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Selagenella

Page 49: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Horsetail: Equisetum

Page 50: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Equisetum

Page 51: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Ferns

• Need moisture to complete the life cycle but often grow in a variety of conditions

Page 52: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Ferns

• Maidenhair

Page 53: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Non-flowering Plants

• Can be interesting as well as beautiful additions to outdoor and indoor gardens.

• They often need high humidity and some shade

– The north side of the house is often a good habitat for selaginellas and ferns

Page 54: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Adaptations of Plants

• Drought tolerance– Succulents have large vacuoles to store

water– Waxy coats to avoid water loss– Small leaves or needles to decrease

surface area (less effect from wind)– Stomata close during the day (cacti)– Hairs on leaves to collect moisture

Page 55: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

Seed Dispersal

• Plumes: butterfly weed, dandilions, maples

• Fruit: acorns, hollies, apples

• Water: coconuts

• Spines and barbs: beggar’s tick

• Explosive fruits: jewel weed

Page 56: BOTANY The Study of Plants. Where Do Plants Fit In Living Things: Kingdoms –Monera: Cells without nuclei and membranes; bacteria –Protista: cells with.

AsclepiasButterfly weed

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Bloodflower milkweed

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Monarch on Milkweed