1 / 93

22.1 Section Objectives – page 577

22.1 Section Objectives – page 577. Section Objectives: 22.1. Identify the structures of nonvascular plants. Compare and contrast characteristics of the different groups of nonvascular plant. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580.

caroun
Télécharger la présentation

22.1 Section Objectives – page 577

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 22.1 Section Objectives – page 577 Section Objectives: 22.1 • Identify the structures of nonvascular plants. • Compare and contrast characteristics of the different groups of nonvascular plant.

  2. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Because a steady supply of _____ is not available everywhere, _________ plants are limited to moist habitats by streams and rivers or in temperate and tropical rain forests.

  3. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Recall that a lack of vascular tissue also limits the ____ of a plant. • Nonvascular plants, such as ____ are successful in habitats with adequate water.

  4. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • As in all plants, the life cycle of nonvascular plants includes an a_______ of _________ between a diploid sporophyte and a haploid gametophyte. • However, nonvascular plant divisions include the only plants that have a dominant ____________ generation.

  5. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • ____________ grow attached to and depend on gametophytes to take in water and other substances. • Non-_______ sporophytes depend on their gametophytes for food.

  6. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Gametophytes of nonvascular plants produce two kinds of sexual ____________ structures. • The ____________ is the male reproductive structure in which sperm is produced.

  7. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • The __________ is the female reproductive structure in which eggs are produced. • _________, which begins the sporophyte generation, occurs in the archegonium.

  8. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • There are several divisions of nonvascular plants. • The first division you’ll study are the mosses, or ____________. • Mosses are small plants with _____ stems.

  9. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • The leaves of mosses are usually ____ cell thick. • Mosses have ______, colorless multicellular structures, which help anchor the stem to the soil.

  10. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Some species have a few, long water-conducting cells in their stems. • Mosses usually grow in dense carpets of _________ of plants.

  11. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Some have upright stems; others have creeping stems that hang from steep banks or tree branches. • Some mosses form extensive mats that help ________ erosion on exposed rocky slopes. • Moses grow in a wide variety of __________.

  12. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • They even grow in the _____ during the brief growing season where sufficient moisture is present. • A well-known moss is Sphagnum, also known as ___ ____.

  13. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • This plant thrives in acidic bogs in northern regions of the world. • It is harvested for use as ____ and is a commonly used soil additive.

  14. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Another division of nonvascular plants is the liverworts, or _______. • ________ are small plants that usually grow in clumps or masses in moist habitats.

  15. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • The flattened body of a liverwort gametophyte is thought to resemble the shape of the lobes of an animal’s _____. • A liverwort can be categorized as either ______ or leafy.

  16. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • The body of a thallose liverwort is called a _______. It is broad and ribbon-like and resembles a fleshy, lobed leaf. • Thallose liverworts are usually found growing on ____ soil.

  17. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Leafy _______ grow close to the ground and usually are common in tropical jungles and areas with persistent fog. • Their stems have flat, thin leaves arranged in ___ rows—a row along each side of the stem and a row of smaller leaves on the stem’s lower surface. • Liverworts have ______ that are composed of only one elongated cell.

  18. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • ____________ are the smallest division of nonvascular plants, currently consisting of only about 100 species. • Also known as _______, these nonvascular plants are similar to liverworts in several respects.

  19. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 Sporophyte with sporangium (2n) • Hornworts have a _____ body. • The _________ of a hornwort resembles the horn of an animal. Gametophyte (n)

  20. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Another feature unique to hornworts is the presence of one to several __________ in each cell of the sporophyte depending upon the species. • Unlike other ________ plants, the hornwort sporophyte, not the gametophyte, produces most of the food used by both generations.

  21. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • Fossil and genetic evidence suggests that liverworts were the ____ land plants. • Fossils that have been positively identified as nonvascular plants first appear in rocks from the early _______ Era, more than 440 million years ago.

  22. Section 22.1 Summary – pages 577 - 580 • _______ suspect that nonvascular plants were present earlier than current fossil evidence suggests. • Both nonvascular and vascular plants probably share a ______ ancestor.

  23. 22.2 Section Objectives – page 581 Section Objectives: 22.2 • Evaluate the significance of plant vascular tissue to life on land. • Identify and analyze the characteristics of the non-seed vascular plant divisions.

  24. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • The obvious difference between a vascular and a nonvascular plant is the presence of vascular tissue. • Vascular tissue is made up of tubelike, elongated cells through which ____ and ______ are transported. • Vascular plants are able to adapt to changes in the availability of water, and thus are found in a variety of habitats.

  25. ____ transports water and dissolved substances other than sugar throughout the plant. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 Phloem Xylem _________transports dissolved sugar throughout the plant. Cambium Cambium produces xylem and phloem as the plant grows.

  26. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • Vascular plants, like all plants, exhibit an ________ of generations • Unlike nonvascular plants, the spore-producing vascular sporophyte is ______ and larger in size than the gametophyte. Sporophyte (2n) Gametophyte (n)

  27. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • The mature sporophyte does not depend on the ___________ for water or nutrients. Sporophyte (2n) Gametophyte (n)

  28. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • A major advance in this group of vascular plants was the adaptation of leaves to form structures that protect the developing ____________ cells. • In some non-seed vascular plants, sporebearing leaves form a compact cluster called a ________.

  29. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • A fern gametophyte is called a __________. • __________ are relatively small and live in or on the soil. • ________ and ________ develop on the gametophyte. • ____ are released from antheridia and require a continuous film of water to reach eggs in the archegonia.

  30. Egg Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 Archegonium Prothallus Rhizoids Sperm Antheridium

  31. ________ are commonly called club mosses and spike mosses. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • Their leafy stems resemble ____ gametophytes, and their reproductive structures are club or spike shaped. • However, unlike mosses, the sporophyte generation of the lycophytes is ____________.

  32. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • It has roots, stems, and small leaflike structures. • A ______ vein of vascular tissue runs through each leaflike structure. • The stems of lycophytes may be upright or creeping and have roots growing from the base of the stem.

  33. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • The club moss, _______, is commonly called ground pine because it is evergreen and resembles a miniature pine tree. • Some species of ground pine have been collected for decorative uses in such numbers that the plants have become endangered.

  34. ___________, or horsetails, represent a second group of ancient vascular plants. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 Early horsetails were tree-sized members of the forest community. Today’s arthrophytes are much smaller than their ancestors. There are only about 15 species in existence, all of the genus _________.

  35. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • The name horsetail refers to the bushy appearance of some species. • These plants also are called scouring rushes because they contain _____, an abrasive substance.

  36. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • Most horsetails are found in marshes, in shallow ponds, on stream banks, and other areas with damp soil. • The stem structure of horsetails is ribbed and hollow, and appears jointed. • At each joint, there is a ______ of tiny, _______ leaves.

  37. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • Arthrophyte spores are produced in ________ that form at the tips of non-photosynthetic stems. • After the spores are released, they can grow into gametophytes with antheridia and ________.

  38. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • According to fossil records, ferns—division______—first appeared nearly 375 million years ago. • Ancient ferns grew tall and treelike and formed vast forests.

  39. Ferns range in size from a few meters tall, like tree ferns, to small, floating plants that are only a few centimeters in diameter. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 Some ferns inhabit dry areas, becoming dormant when moisture is scarce and resuming growth and reproduction only when water is available again.

  40. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • As with most vascular plants, it is the ______ generation of the fern that has roots, stems, and leaves. • The part of the fern plant that we most commonly recognize is the __________ generation. • The gametophyte in most ferns is a thin, flat structure that is __________ of the sporophyte.

  41. In most ferns, the main stem is underground. This thick, underground stem is called a rhizome. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 The leaves of a fern are called fronds and grow upward from the rhizome. Fronds The fronds are often divided into leaflets called pinnae, which are attached to a central rachis. Rhizome The branched veins in ferns transport water and food to and from all the cells. Root

  42. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • The leaves of a fern are called fronds and grow upward from the ______. • The fronds are often divided into leaflets called _____, which are attached to a central ______. • The branched veins in ferns transport water and food to and from all the cells.

  43. Fern spores are produced in structures called __________. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • Clusters of sporangia form a structure called a _____ (plural, sori). Sori are usually found on the underside of fronds but in some ferns, spores are borne on modified fronds.

  44. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • The earliest evidence of non-seed vascular plants is found in fossils from early in the __________ Period, around 375 million years ago. • Many of these species of non-seed vascular plants died out about 280 million years ago —a time when Earth’s climate was cooler and drier.

  45. Section 22.2 Summary – pages 581 - 587 • Today’s non-seed vascular plants are much smaller and less widespread in their distribution than their prehistoric ancestors. • The evolution of vascular tissue enabled these plants to live on land and to maintain larger body sizes in comparison with nonvascular plants.

  46. 22.3 Section Objectives – page 588 Section Objectives: 22.3 • Identify and analyze the characteristics of seed plants. • Analyze the advantages of seed and fruit production.

  47. Some vascular plants produce seeds in which reduced ________ plants are enclosed within a protective coat. Section 22.3 Summary – pages 588 - 597 In seed plants, as in all other plants, spores are produced by the s__________ generation. These spores develop into the ____ and ______ gametophytes.

  48. Section 22.3 Summary – pages 588 - 597 • The male gametophyte develops inside a structure called a ____ ____ that includes sperm cells, nutrients, and a protective outer covering. anther stamen filament

  49. Section 22.3 Summary – pages 588 - 597 • The female gametophyte, which produces the egg cell, is contained within a sporophyte structure called an _____. anther stigma stamen filament style pistil ovary ovule

  50. Section 22.3 Summary – pages 588 - 597 • The union of the sperm and egg, called __________, forms the sporophyte ______. • Because they do not require a continuous film of water for fertilization, seed plants are able to grow and reproduce in a wide variety of habitats that have limited water availability.

More Related