1 / 38

Unit 13 “Plants”

Unit 13 “Plants”. Plant Basics Parts 1-2. Characteristics of All Plants. Multicellular Eukaryotic Cells surrounded by cell wall Autotrophic (a producer) Sessile Reproduce sexually with egg and sperm. Plant Parts. Roots =root system

chun
Télécharger la présentation

Unit 13 “Plants”

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. Unit 13“Plants”

  2. Plant BasicsParts 1-2

  3. Characteristics of All Plants • Multicellular • Eukaryotic • Cells surrounded by cell wall • Autotrophic (a producer) • Sessile • Reproduce sexually with egg and sperm

  4. Plant Parts • Roots=root system • Roots- anchor plants, absorb water/nutrients, stores food • Stems and leaves=shoot system • Stems- transport materials from roots to leaves • Leaves- absorb sunlight, site of photosynthesis

  5. Parts of a Leaf • Flat portion- blade • Leafstalk-petiole • Tip of the leaf- apex

  6. Leaf Structure • Cuticle- waxy top layer than prevents water loss. • Epidermis- Protective covering on the top and bottom of the leaf. • Stomata- tiny openings in the lower epidermis of the leaf that allows gases to enter/leave the leaf. • Guard cells- crescent-shaped cells located on the sides of the stomata that contract to open/close the stomata. • Veins- run through the leaf in order to deliver water/nutrients. • Leaf cells contain many chloroplasts.

  7. Types of Leaves • Simple • One blade per petiole • Compound • More than one blade per petiole. • The entire structure is the leaf.

  8. Leaf Arrangement • Alternate • One blade per node in an alternating pattern. • Opposite • Two leaves grow from each node • Whorled • Three or more leaves grow from the node.

  9. alternate whorled opposite whorled

  10. Types of Leaf Venation • Parallel • Veins in each leaf extend from top to bottom. • Branched • The midvein branches into many numerous veins.

  11. Parallel venation Branched venation

  12. Shoot System • Above the ground • Made up of stems and leaves • Holds up leaves toward the sun • Manufactures food • Provides flowers, fruits, and seeds.

  13. Root System • Typically underground • Made up of the roots • Anchors the plant • Absorbs water and nutrients from the soil.

  14. Vascular System • Made of long tube-like cells • Extends from roots to leaves • Transports nutrients, water, and minerals. • Made of two tissues: 1. xylem- transports water and nutrients from roots; larger than phloem. 2. phloem- transports sugars from leaves to stems and roots

  15. Types of Root Systems • Fibrous • Primary root remains small and has numerous, small hair-like roots extending from it. • Taproot • Primary root grows straight down and is larger than the secondary roots that extend from it. • Often store large amounts of food such as in carrots.

  16. Seedless PlantsPart 3

  17. Nonvascular Seedless Plants • No vascular tissue • Grow small • Do not produce seeds, produce spores instead. • No roots, stems, or leaves • Nutrients move from cell to cell • Example: mosses, hornworts, & liverworts

  18. Seedless Vascular Plants • Have vascular tissue • Produce spores instead of seeds. • Grow larger than mosses • Have roots, stem, and leaves • Example: ferns, club mosses, horsetails

  19. Unit 13 Notes, Part 4 Seed Plants Gymnosperms & Angiosperms

  20. Seed Plants • Divided into two categories: • Angiosperms- “Flowering plants” • Gymnosperms- “Nonflowering plants”

  21. Angiosperms • Plants that produce flowers and produce seeds inside fruit. • Sperm is located inside pollen grains. • Eggs develop into embryos • Flower-reproductive structure • Fruit-ripened ovary of an angiosperm, encloses the seed.

  22. Monocots vs. Dicots • Angiosperms are divided into monocots and dicots • As the zygote grows into the embryo, the first leaves of the young plant develop and are called as cotyledons (seed leaves). • Monocots have one cotyledon (corn, lily, etc). • Dicots have two cotyledons (bean, oak, etc).

  23. Comparing Monocots and Dicots

  24. Summary: Monocots vs. Dicots

  25. Flowers • Male & female parts on same OR separate flower. • Parts of a flower: • Sepals- leaf-like structures that enclose the flower before opening. • Petals- surround pistil, attract animals for pollination • Stamen- male part (produces sperm) • Pistil- female part (produces eggs) • Stigma = sticky tip of the pistil • Style = tube connecting stigma to ovary • Ovary = contains the eggs

  26. The Structure of a Flower

  27. Seeds • When plant eggs are fertilized with sperm, a seed forms. • Seeds contain a young, developing plant embryo. • Inside is stored food that the young plant uses as it begins to sprout or germinate.

  28. Seed Structure Example:

  29. Reproduction of Angiosperms: Pollination = Pollen falls on a stigma when wind, bees, or bats carry it. Fertilization = sperm & egg join together in the flower’s ovule (inside ovary), later forming seed. A fruit is formed around the seed. Dispersal – animals eat the fruit and the seeds come out the other end, where they will grow into mature plants that produce more seeds.

  30. Gymnosperms • Means “naked” seed. • Seeds are not enclosed in fruits. • Do not produce flowers • Examples of gymnosperms: conifers (pine/cedar trees), cycads, ginkgo biloba trees, juniper

  31. Conifers • Conifers are adapted to temperate to cold regions • Narrow leaves (needles) help to conserve water • Covered by resins – for protection from predators, fire, etc.

  32. Reproduction of Gymnosperms Pollen is produced by male cones, and pollen are tiny cells that later become sperm cells. Ovule is a structure containing an egg cell. Pollination= transfer of pollen from male part to female part. (Pollen falls from a male cone to a female cone and fertilizes an ovule, which develops into a seed, with the zygote as the embryo part of the seed. It can take two years for seeds to mature, then the cones open & wind carries the seeds off.)

More Related