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Plant Cell

Plant Cell. Plants are: Eukaryotic Autotrophic Multicellular Cell walls of cellulose. Vocabulary:

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Plant Cell

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  1. Plant Cell Plants are: Eukaryotic Autotrophic Multicellular Cell walls of cellulose

  2. Vocabulary: - vascular – refers to an internal system of tubes or vessels to transport materials throughout the plant; basis or first major division of plants into bryophytes and tracheophytes; includes: - xylem – transports water and minerals up from the roots to the shoots - phloem – transports sugar (food) down from the leaves to the rest of the plant

  3. Xylem brings water up from the roots to the shoots

  4. Phloem carries sugar (food) down from leaves throughout the plant

  5. Bryophytes – nonvascular plants Examples include: 20 mm Liverworts Hornwort Moss

  6. Bryophytes – nonvascular plants - economically important Ex) sphagnum moss – also called peat or peat moss Grows in boggy areas called peat bogs; extremely absorbant; used in agriculture/horticulture

  7. Seed dispersal by edible fruit, by wind, as well as other means. The picture to the right is of a samara from a maple tree. Vocabulary Seed – adaptation to terrestrial life composed of a plant embryo, stored food, and a protective coat Which is a monocot and which is a dicot? How do you know?

  8. Tracheophytes – vascular plants • Seedless plants –whiskferns, horsetails, and ferns Whisk fern horsetail fern

  9. Seedless vascular plants: Ferns - reproduce with spores - diagram shows spores growing in clusters called sori on the back of the frond of the fern

  10. Seedless vascular plants dominated during the Carboniferous period.

  11. Vocabulary Cone – reproductive structure of gymnosperms; contains pollen in males and ovules in females Flower – reproductive structure of angiosperms composed of 4 sets of modified leaves Fruit – mature ovary of a flower that protects dormant seeds and aids in their dispersal

  12. Ovulate cone from a pinetree (female) Staminate cone from a pinetree (male)

  13. Tracheophytes – vascular plants cont. • Seed plants • Gymnosperms – have seeds in cones; include: ginkgos, cycads, gnetophytes, and conifers Cycad Ginkgo

  14. Welwitschia Gnetum Ephedra Gymnosperms called gnetophytes; only 3 extant species

  15. Conifers: top row: Douglas fir, Sequoia, Cypress; bottom row: juniper, Australian pine tree; not shown: yew, spruce, other pines

  16. Tracheophytes – vascular plants cont • * Seed plants • Angiosperms – flowering plants - have flowers, fruits, and seeds

  17. Grasses are flowering plants, too. So are trees. Grass flowers

  18. Flower (male) (female) pistil

  19. Ovaries with ovules become fruits with seeds after the ovule (egg) is fertilized by sperm from the pollen

  20. Pollen grains contain sperm. They are produced in the anthers of the flowers in angiosperms.

  21. Pollination - by many vectors, including: Wind Water Animals

  22. Fruit or Veggie Humans eat lots of different plant parts. A fruit is the ripened ovary and contains seeds. Therefore, tomatoes, peppers, squash, olives, and cucumbers are fruits, not vegetables.

  23. Vegetables – the vegetative parts of the plants that we eat. Includes: • Roots – carrots, turnips,radishes • Stems – celery, bok choi, rhubarb, garlic, • broccoli, onions, potatoes • Leaves – lettuce, cabbage, parsley • Other plant parts that we eat: • Seeds – pinto beans, peas, sunflower seeds, • corn, pepper corns, rice, pecans, coconut • Flowers – anise flowers (licorice), basil; http://homecooking.about.com/library/weekly/blflowers.htm • Good rule of thumb: if you didn’t get it at the store, DON’T EAT IT!

  24. We don’t just eat plants, we also wear them, build with them, and use them for medicines!

  25. Plant Structure & Function

  26. Each plant part - root, stem, leaf - has a specific role in keeping the plant alive through photosynthesis

  27. Monocots & Dicots

  28. Cotyledons – nonphotosynthetic leaves of an immature plant; provide source of nutrients until plant can produce its own food

  29. Leaves - site of photosynthesis - cross section - epidermis – adaptation for terrestrial life - waxy cuticle - stomata - transpiration

  30. Leaf

  31. Leaf structure supports its function as the primary organ for photosynthesis

  32. Leaves - composed of blade, veins, petiole - simple or compound (see identifying leaves ppt) - pinnately or palmately compound - alternate or opposite if compound - pinnate or palmate venation

  33. Overview of movement of photosynthesis reactants and products through a plant

  34. Stems Support and transport Contains xylem and phloem Modified: Strawberry runners onion potatoes

  35. Stems Define plant type: herbaceous, shrub, vine, tree Herbaceous plant shrub vine

  36. Stems – cross sections through a dicot and a monocot

  37. Roots Function – absorption, storage, anchorage Root hairs – extensions of the epidermis that increase absorption by increasing surface area; see photo Fibrous roots – see monocot information Tap roots – see dicot information

  38. Root Structure

  39. Nitrogen fixation – occurs in the roots and in the soil around the roots of plants; performed by bacteria

  40. Plants that live in nitrogen poor soils trap and break down insects with enzymes to obtain nitrogen Venus fly trap Pitcher plant

  41. Vocabulary Primary growth – increase in length; stems get longer, roots grow deeper Meristem – tissue that is growing Apical meristem – tissue found at the tips of roots and stems that is actively dividing/growing

  42. Plant Responses Plant responses are called tropisms. Tropisms can be positive or negative. They include phototropism, gravitropism, and thigmotropism. Most plant responses involve the action of hormones, including gibberellins, auxins, and ethylene.

  43. Plant Responses Effect of gibberellens on Thompson’s seedless grapes and on growth in a dwarf plant

  44. Auxins make plants bushier by making more branches at nodes when the apical meristem is cut off (the tips of the existing branches)

  45. Positive Phototropism

  46. Effect of ethylene on the ripening of an apple.

  47. NEGATIVE Gravitropism in Stems http://plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/movements/tropism/gravitropism/gravi1/gravitrop.html

  48. Vines Illustrate Positive Thigmotropism

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