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Diversity Part 2: Plants

Diversity Part 2: Plants. Chapter 24 and 25. Photosynthesis. Carbon Dioxide + Water  Glucose + Oxygen How does a plant obtain the carbon dioxide it needs for photosynthesis? Pores called stomata. Sunlight. Stomata. Holes in the plant leaves

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Diversity Part 2: Plants

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  1. Diversity Part 2: Plants Chapter 24 and 25

  2. Photosynthesis • Carbon Dioxide + Water  Glucose + Oxygen • How does a plant obtain the carbon dioxide it needs for photosynthesis? • Pores called stomata Sunlight

  3. Stomata • Holes in the plant leaves • Let in carbon dioxide needed for photosynthesis • Lets out the oxygen produced as a byproduct • Also lets water leave

  4. Guard Cells • Surround the stomata • They help control how much water is lost

  5. Anatomy of a Leaf Organ Cuticle Mesophyll (Palisade and Spongy) Chloroplasts Vascular Bundle Stomata Guard Cells

  6. Leaf Structures • Cuticle • Mesophyll (Palisade and Spongy) • Vascular Bundle • Stomata • Guard Cells

  7. Cuticle • A clear, waxy layer that prevents water loss in plants Cuticle

  8. Mesophyll • The mesophyll is packed with cholorplasts, where photosynthesis occurs • Most plants have leaves with 2 layers of mesophyll • Columnar cells = Palisade Layer • Loosely packed cells = Spongy Layer Mesophyll

  9. Palisade and Spongy Mesophyll

  10. Vascular Bundle

  11. Vascular Bundle • 2 Main Types Of Tubes: Xylem and Phloem • Xylem- transports water and minerals from the soil up to the rest of the plant • Phloem- transports sugar from the leaves to the rest of the plant • The plant cells in the roots and stems need sugar from the leaves to perform cellular respiration in the mitochondria

  12. Stomata and Guard Cells • Stomata are holes in the leaves that let carbon dioxide in and oxygen out. • Guard Cells surround the stomata to control water loss Stomata Guard Cells

  13. How does Water move throughout a Plant? • The primary force that pulls water up a plant is evaporation at the leaves, also called transpiration.

  14. How Does Water Move Throughout a Plant? • When water leaves the leaf, it is replaced by water from the stem – water naturally moves from high concentrations toward low concentrations in a type of passive transport called osmosis.

  15. How Does Water Move Throughout a Plant? • The whole column of water from leaf to root is pulled by this force because water molecules stick to each other, a property of water called cohesion.

  16. How does Sugar move throughout a Plant? • Leaf cells move sugar into the phloem using active transport to pack the sugar at a high concentration • This high concentration of sugar solute in the phloem makes the inside the phloem cells very hypertonic • This environment causes water from the xylem to rush in by osmosis . This rush of water creates a bulge, pushing the liquid to its destination.

  17. Dormancy • If the environment is not right, the seed can stay dormant for thousands of years until there are favorable conditions • A plant breaks dormancy and starts to grow in a process called Germination

  18. Conditions Required To Break Dormancy • The seed coat must be damaged or wait until favorable conditions: • Temperature • Soil moisture • Fire • Passing through the digestive system of an animal • Falling onto rocks

  19. Temperature • Example: Dogwoods produce mature seeds in the fall, but conditions are not suitable for seedling survival until spring when conditions are favorable for germination.

  20. Fire or Smoke • Example: Fire poppies germinate immediately following a fire.

  21. Passing through digestive system • Example: Strawberry and Raspberry seed coats pass through the digestive system of the animal still protecting the viable embryo inside, but weakened enough to allow sprouting!

  22. Meristem • A plant grows when meristem cells undergo lots of cell division (mitosis) to make more cells and grow roots / stems / leaves • A plant grows taller in primary growth, so the plant can have access to sunlight quickly

  23. Tropisms • Phototropism • Heliotropism • Thigmotropism • Gravitropism

  24. Phototropism • Directional movements in response to light

  25. Heliotropism • When the leaves of some plants track the sun as it moves across the sky

  26. Thigmotropism • Plants bend when they touch an object

  27. Gravitropism • Responses to gravity, when the stem bends up toward the sun and the roots bend down to the ground

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