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Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert
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Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Jan 18, 2016

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Page 1: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Introduction to Plants! Introduction to Plants!

Mrs. LambertMrs. Lambert

Page 2: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Plants

The Basics• Multicellular• Eukaryotes• Cell walls made of

cellulose• Autotrophs

An Early Scientist described plants as, “Stationary animals that eat sunlight.”

Page 3: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Life Cycle

• Plants have a life cycle that is characterized by alternation of generations.

Page 4: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• Two generations:– Gametophyte – plant that produces haploid

gametes (N).• Gametes – eggs and sperm that fuse to

produce diploid individual.– Sporophyte – plant that produces diploid spores

(2N).• Spores – reproductive cells that produce a

new individual by mitosis.

• All plants have gametophyte stage and sporophyte stage.

Page 5: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 6: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

The lives of plants revolve around:

1. The need for sunlight, water and minerals.– Plants use water quickly when the sun is

shining.

2. Gas Exchange• Plants require oxygen to support respiration

as well as carbon dioxide for photosynthesis.

3. Movement of water and minerals.• Plants take up water and minerals through

their roots but make food in their leaves.

Page 7: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Early Plants

• Early plants lived in the water.

• When they moved to land, they changed the environment in ways that made it possible for other organisms to develop.

• Early plants probably looked like multicellular green algae.

Page 8: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Plants are divided into two categories:

• Bryophytes – Non-vascular plants.– No tissue to transport water and nutrients

throughout the plant.

• Tracheophytes– Vascular plants.– Tissue to transport water and nutrients.

Page 9: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Bryophytes

• Three divisions:– Mosses– Liverworts– Hornworts

• The simplest plants – no tissue to transport water and nutrients.– No true roots, stems, or leaves.

Page 10: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 11: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Mosses

• The most common bryophytes.• Live in wet habitats – swamps, bogs,

streams.• Can tolerate very low temperatures.

– Most abundant plants in polar region.

• Leaves of mosses are only one cell thick.

Page 12: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• Must be close to water – found in moist shaded environments.– Size is limited.

• Anchored to the ground by filaments called rhizoids.

• Obtain water and nutrients by absorbing them directly into plant cells.– Water seeps from one cell to the next.

Page 13: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 14: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Reproduction in bryophytes

• Reproduce with alternation of generations.

• Gametophyte is dominant stage of life cycle.

• Sperm must swim to egg.– Bryophytes must live in areas where water

is available.

Page 15: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Tracheophytes

• Contain vascular tissue.– Xylem – carries water upward from roots to

every part of the plant.• Tracheids – hollow cells with thick walls

that resist pressure.– Phloem – transports solutions of nutrients

and carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis downward from leaves to the roots.

Page 16: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 17: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• Produce lignin – a substance that makes cell walls rigid.

• Because of xylem, phloem and lignin, Tracheophytes can grow upright to reach great heights.

Page 18: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Tracheophytes are divided into two main groups

• Seedless plants– Club moss, horsetails and fern

• Seed plants– Gymnosperms– Angiosperms

Page 19: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Seedless plants - ferns

Page 20: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Seedless plants - ferns

• Have roots, stems and leaves.– Roots – underground organs that absorb

water and minerals.– Leaves – photosynthetic organs that

contains vascular tissue gathered into veins of xylem and phloem.

• The leaves of ferns are called fronds.– Stems – supporting structures that connect

roots and leaves, carrying water and nutrients.

Page 21: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Life Cycle of the Fern

• In ferns and other vascular plants, the diploid sporophyte is the dominant stage.

• Fern sporophytes produce haploid spores on the underside of their fronds in tiny containers called sporangia.

• Sporangia are grouped in clusters called sori.

Page 22: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 23: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• The spores germinate and develop into haploid gametophytes.

• Small heart-shaped plants that grow independently of the sporophyte.

Page 24: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• On the underside of the gametophyte:– Antheridia –

where sperm are produced.

– Archegonia – where eggs are produced.

Page 25: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• Fertilization requires a thin film of water, allowing the sperm to swim to the eggs.

• The diploid zygote produced by fertilization grows into a new sporophyte plant.

• Sporophyte fronds may die in the winter, but rhizomes live through the winter and sprout again in the spring.

Page 26: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Life cycle of fern

Page 27: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Seed Plants

• The dominant group of photosynthetic organisms on land.

Page 28: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Seed Plants are divided into two groups:

• Gymnosperms – bear seeds on the

surface of cones.– Conifers such as

pines and spruces.– Ancient ginkgoes.

Page 29: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Angiosperms

• Flowering plants that bear seeds within a layer of tissue that protects the seed.

• Include grass, flowering trees and shrubs, all flowers.

Page 30: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Reproduction in seed plants:

• Seed plants do not require water for fertilization of gametes.

• Adaptations that allow this:– Flowers or cones.– The transfer of sperm by pollination.– The protection of embryos in seeds.

Page 31: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Cones and Flowers

• Gametophytes of seed plants grow and develop in two types of sporophyte structures:– Cones – seed bearing structures of

gymnosperms.– Flowers – seed bearing structures of

angiosperms.

Page 32: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 33: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Pollen

• In seed plants, the male gametophyte is contained in a pollen grain.

Page 34: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• The pollen grain is carried to the female gametophyte by wind, insects, birds, or small animals.

• The female gametophyte is located in the ovary of the flower.

Page 35: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

This transfer is called pollination.

Page 36: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Seeds

• After fertilization, the zygote develops into a tiny plant called an embryo.

• A seed is an embryo of a plant that is encased in a protective covering and surrounded by a food supply.– Embryo – the early developmental stage of

the sporophyte plant.– Seed coat – surrounds and protects the

embryo.

Page 37: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• The embryo can remain within the seed for years.

Page 38: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Gymnosperms

• Include gnetophytes, cycads, ginkgoes and conifers.

Page 39: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Ginkgoes

• Belong to phylum Ginkgophyta.

• Only one species: Ginkgo biloba.

• Common when dinosaurs were alive.

• One of the oldest seed plant species alive today.

Page 40: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 41: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Conifers

• Belong to phylum Coniferophyta.

• Includes pines, spruces, firs, cedars, sequoias, redwoods and yews.

• Some can live for more than 4,000 years.

• Most conifers are evergreens.

Page 42: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Some redwoods can grow more than 300 feet tall.Tallest is 397.1 feet tall!

Page 43: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Angiosperms – Flowering Plants

• Angiosperms have unique reproductive organs known as flowers.– The vast majority

of living plant species.

– 235,000 species.

.

Page 44: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• Flowers attract animals such as bees or hummingbirds, which transport pollen from flower to flower.– Much more efficient

than wind pollination used by gymnosperms

Page 45: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• Flowers contain ovaries, which surround and protect the seeds.

• After pollination, the ovary develops into a fruit. – A thick wall of tissue surrounding the seed.– Fruit protects the seed and aids in its

dispersal.– Animals eat fruit and the seeds leave the

digestive system ready to sprout.

Page 46: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 47: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

• The animal disperses the seed when it travels.

• Plants use fruit to attract animals and increase the range of their habitat.

Page 48: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Diversity in Angiosperms

• Incredibly diverse with many different categories.

• Monocots and dicots.• Woody and herbaceous plants.• Annuals, biennials and perennials.• These categories overlap!

Page 49: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Two groups of angiosperms

• Named for the number of seed leaves or cotyledons in the plant embryo.

• Monocots and dicots.

Page 50: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Monocots

• One seed leaf or cotyledon.• Leaves: Parallel veins.• Floral parts in multiples of 3.• Stems: Vascular bundles scattered

throughout stem.• Fibrous roots.• Corn, wheat, lilies, orchids and palms.

Page 51: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 52: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Dicots

• Two cotyledons.• Leaves: Branched veins.• Floral parts in multiples of 4 or 5.• Stems: Vascular bundles arranged in a

ring.• Taproot.• Roses, clover, tomatoes, oaks and

daisies.

Page 53: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.
Page 54: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Monocots have fibrous roots, dicots have taproots

Page 55: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Woody and Herbaceous Plants

• Woody plants – made of cells with thick cell walls that support the cell body.– Trees, shrubs and vines.

• Herbaceous plants – do not produce wood as they grow.– Dandelions and sunflowers.

Page 56: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Classification of Angiosperms based on life

span:

• Annuals – complete life cycle within one growing season.

• Petunias, pansies, cucumbers.

Page 57: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Biennials

• Complete life cycle within two growing seasons.

• Parsley and celery.• Foxglove and Prince

William.

Page 58: Introduction to Plants! Mrs. Lambert. Plants The Basics Multicellular Eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Autotrophs An Early Scientist described.

Perennials

• Plants that live for more than two years.– Grass, asparagus,

maple trees.