Objectives: 10.0 Distinguish between monocots and dicots, angiosperms and gymnosperms, and vascular and nonvascular plants. 10.1 Describing the histology of roots, stems, leaves, and flowers 10.2 Recognizing chemical and physical adaptations of plants Examples: chemical -foul odor, bitter taste, toxicity; physical- spines, needles, broad leaves PLANT DIVERSITY CHAPTER 22
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Objectives: 10.0 Distinguish between monocots and dicots, angiosperms and gymnosperms, and vascular and nonvascular plants. 10.1 Describing the histology.
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Objectives:10.0 Distinguish between monocots and dicots, angiosperms and gymnosperms, and vascular and nonvascular plants.10.1 Describing the histology of roots, stems, leaves, and flowers 10.2 Recognizing chemical and physical adaptations of plantsExamples: chemical -foul odor, bitter �taste, toxicity;physical- spines, needles, broad �leaves
PLANT DIVERSITYCHAPTER 22
Plants:•Def: multicellular eukaryotes with cell walls made of cellulose
•Carry out photosynthesis using green pigments chlorophyll a and b
•MOST are autotrophs, but some are parasites or saprobes (organisms that get nutrients from decaying materials).
•Life cycles have two alternating stages:•Haploid (N) – gametophyte•Diploid (2N) – sporophyte•What is this called???
What Plants Need to Survive:1.Sunlight - for energy for
photosynthesis2.Water and minerals – water is needed
by ALL cells, and is a reactant in the process of photosynthesis
3.Gas exchange - Plants take in _________ and give off ___________.
4.Movement of water and nutrients:•Take up water through their roots, but make food in the leaves
•Specialized tissues carry water up through the plant and carry food down to all parts of the plant.
Plant Kingdom•Botanists classify plants in four groups based on:1. Water-conducting tissues2. Seeds3. Flowers
Bryophytes (Section 22-2)•Nonvascular plants – cannot transport water throughout the plant; can only obtain water by osmosis
•Depend on water for reproduction•Lack true roots – rhizoids (long, thin cells) anchor them in the ground
Seedless Vascular Plants (Section 22-3)•How do bryophytes transport water?•Vascular plants have vascular tissue to conduct water and nutrients throughout the plant:•Xylem: transports water from roots to the rest of the plant
•Phloem: transports solutions of nutrients and carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis
•The xylem, together with lignin, which makes the cell walls rigid, allows vascular plants to grow taller than nonvascular plants.
Ferns and Their Relatives•Seedless vascular plants include:•Club mosses – look like mini pine trees
Seed Plants• Divided into 2 groups:1.Gymnosperms – “naked seed”; seeds are
on the surface of cones2.Angiosperms – “enclosed seed”; flowering
plants• Do not require water for reproduction
to occur; can transfer sperm (pollen grains) by pollination (transfer of pollen – the male gametophyte – from male reproductive structures to female reproductive structures)
• Seeds are just fertilized plant embryos, surrounded by a protective seed coat.
Gymnosperms – Cone Bearers•Includes:• Gnetophytes• Cycads – palm-like plants with large cones• Ginkgoes – only one species (Ginkgo biloba)