NOTES #2 Plant Kingdom. 2 Main Categories of Plants: 1. Nonvascular – no conducting tissue (no...

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NOTES #2 Plant Kingdom

Transcript of NOTES #2 Plant Kingdom. 2 Main Categories of Plants: 1. Nonvascular – no conducting tissue (no...

Page 1: NOTES #2 Plant Kingdom. 2 Main Categories of Plants: 1. Nonvascular – no conducting tissue (no veins)

NOTES #2Plant Kingdom

Page 2: NOTES #2 Plant Kingdom. 2 Main Categories of Plants: 1. Nonvascular – no conducting tissue (no veins)

2 Main Categories of Plants:1.Nonvascular – no

conducting tissue (no veins)

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Vascular – have conducting tissue (have veins)

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NONVASCULAR VS. VASCULAR Small Mostly found in

water environment

NO true roots, stems or leaves

Examples: algae, moss & liverworts

Large Land environment True stems, roots

and leaves Examples: club

mosses, ferns, gymnosperms & angiosperms

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NONVASCULAR PLANTS1. Algae

Some unicellular, live in colonies, multicellular, classified by color – red, green & brown

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2. Mosses & LiverwortsMulticellular, first land plants, must live near moist environment

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ALGAE

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ALGAE

No protective covering (no cuticle)

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Use water for support

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Very thin (1-2 cells thick); absorb water by diffusion

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No vascular tissue (veins)

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Reproduction is dependent on water

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Mosses & LiverwortsNo protective covering (no cuticle)

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No supporting tissue (small & low to the ground)

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No conducting tissue (no veins)

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Thin, absorb water directly from environment

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Reproduction is water dependent

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MOSS

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LIVERWORTS

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VASCULAR PLANTS

1. Spore PlantsWater dependent

environmentExamples: Club Mosses,

Horsetails and Ferns

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2. Seed PlantsWater independent environment

Examples: Gymnosperms & Angiosperms

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Club Mosses & Horsetails

Have a cuticle

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Primitive vascular tissue – carries limited amounts of food and water

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Limited size & thickness

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No true stem, roots or leaves

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Reproduction is water dependent; spores and gametes

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CLUB MOSSES

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HORSETAILS

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FERNS

Have a cuticle

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Larger vascular tissue – larger size

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No true stem, roots or leaves

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Reproduction is water dependent – spores and gametes

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FERN

                                                   

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GYMNOSPERMS

Have cuticle and stomata (for gas exchange)

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Improved vascular tissue – greater size & supportive tissue (wood)

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Reproduction is water independent – wind carries the pollen

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Seeds in an open cone

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Leaves are needlelike – most evergreen

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True root, stem and leaves

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These plants reproduction takes place in a cone (Reproductive structure that produces naked seeds – No fruit

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GYMNOSPERMS

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ANGIOSPERMS

Have cuticle and stomata

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Most advanced vascular system

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True stem, roots and leaves

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Leaves are broad and deciduous (fall off during the fall)

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Reproduction in a seed which is protected by a fruit

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Flowers are insect and wind pollinated

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ANGIOSPERMS

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ANGIOSPERMSReproduction of flowering plants takes place within the flower

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SEED – Reproductive structure

made of plant embryo (An egg and a sperm that will grow into a new plant), that is surrounded by its stored food

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FRUIT – Protects the seed and aids in seed dispersal

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PARTS OF A FLOWER

Style

Stigma

Anther

Filament

Ovary

Sepal*

Petal*

Box = Male part

Circle = Female part

Star = Not male or female

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POLLINATION

Most gymnosperms are wind pollinated and most angiosperms are pollinated by wind or insects

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Wind pollinated plants rely on favorable weather and sheer numbers to get pollen from one plant to another

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Insect pollinated plants have bright colors and sweet nectar to attract insects

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SEED DISPERSAL Some seeds are

dispersed by animals

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Animals eat the fruit that surrounds the seeds and then the seeds are released by the animal as waste after the fruit is digested

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Other seeds are dispersed by wind and water

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These seeds are generally lightweight, allowing them to be carried in the air or float on the surface of the water

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MONOCOT VS. DICOT

Parallel veins Complex

arrangement of vascular bundles

Fibrous Root EXAMPLE: Grass

Branched veins Vascular

bundles arranged in a ring

Taproot EXAMPLE: Tree

(Larger Plant)

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Monocot vs. Dicot

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Monocot vs Dicot leaves

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Monocot vs. Dicot

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Monocot vs. Dicot roots

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ANNUAL VS. PERENNIAL Plant that

lives, reproduces and dies in 1 year

EXAMPLE: VEGETABLES

Plant that lives, reproduces and grows year after year

EXAMPLE: TREES

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Annuals

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Perennials

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http://johnbokma.com/mexit/2005/01/16/nice-group-of-plants.jpghttp://www.biology4kids.com/extras/show_plants/03.jpghttp://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/vascular/images/mon_del.jpghttp://www.firstscience.com/home/images/legacygallery/leaf.jpgwww.wacona.com/words/organisms/nonvascularalgae.jpghttp://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/img/Red_Algae_m580917.jpghttp://www.seaweed.ie/Algae/Images/Himelo5.jpghttp://www.holencikroofing.com/A-Algae.jpghttp://www.greenhomesbyjr.com/Algae-Hands.jpghttp://www.bioremediate.com/algae1.jpghttp://coris.noaa.gov/glossary/bluegreen_algae_186.jpghttp://www-biology.ucsd.edu/bioresearch/images/initiatives/algal_biofuels.jpghttp://www.junelab.com/Images/Algae.jpghttp://www.sheffield.ac.uk/content/1/c6/05/24/91/liverworts-close-up-web.jpghttp://taggart.glg.msu.edu/bot335/liverw.gifhttp://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/imgnov02/mosses.jpghttp://www.justagroove.net/gallery/photos/mosses.jpghttp://www.rhs.org.uk/Advice/profiles0205/images/liverwort.jpghttp://www.arboretumphotographers.com/photographers/craigeiler/RushingWaterOnMoss_CraigEiler.jpghttp://www.marinebio.net/marinescience/04benthon/arcimg/arc5486.jpghttp://scitec.uwichill.edu.bb/bcs/bl14apl/lycon13.GIFhttp://img.alibaba.com/photo/51381743/Horsetail_Extract_Powder.jpghttp://www.dermaxime.com/images/horsetail.jpghttp://www2.selu.edu/Academics/Faculty/smartin/images/moss.jpghttp://www.biologyjunction.com/images/clubmoss01.JPEGhttp://darcywriter.com/images/Ferns1.JPGhttp://www.iusd.k12.ca.us/uhs/apbiology/images/leafbranch.jpghttp://betterlawns.com/images/peachtree.jpg

Photo sites

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More Photo siteshttp://www.uky.edu/Ag/kpn/pchtree2.jpghttp://www.gl.rhbnc.ac.uk/palaeo/images/Pollen_large.jpghttp://ipm.msu.edu/ctree/images/SpottedKnapweedFlower.jpghttp://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/19/5619-004-06529655.jpghttp://img6.travelblog.org/Photos/31726/281137/t/2372599-Wheat-fields-blowing-in-the-wind-0.jpghttp://farm2.static.flickr.com/1042/1133151198_2c3a434168_m.jpghttp://farm1.static.flickr.com/94/242514074_45be01f653.jpghttp://www.campkawartha.ca/images/seeds.jpghttp://www.natureguystudio.com/images/redsquirrel-nut-150w.jpghttp://www.tfrc.csiro.au/research/SeedDispersal04.jpghttp://bio1903.nicerweb.com/doc/class/bio1903/Locked/media/ch30/30_09FruitDispersal.jpghttp://www.arc.agric.za/uploads/images/4534_seeds_close_s.gifhttp://www.nku.edu/~whitsonma/Bio120LSite/Bio120LReviews/Bio120WebPics/Plant%20Adaptations/Seeds%20&%20fruits/CattailFluff.jpghttp://www.evidencesofcreation.com/images_plants/064a.jpghttp://www.sbs.utexas.edu/mbierner/bio406d/images/pics/poa/Arundo%20donax%20leaf5.jpghttp://wpcontent.answers.com/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/01/Monocot_vs_dicot_crop_Pengo.jpg/180px-Monocot_vs_dicot_crop_Pengo.jpghttp://homepage.smc.edu/hodson_kent/plant_growth/Angiosperms/tissues/dicot_leaf.jpghttp://botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/130/Root/Adventitious_Roots/Coleus/Adventitious_roots_2_MC.low.jpghttp://www.wildmanstevebrill.com/JPEG'S/Plant%20Web%20Images/Carrot.jpghttp://search.live.com/images/results.aspx?q=bluebonnets&form=QBIR#http://www.gardenerspath.com/plantguide/images/pansies_lg.JPGhttp://www.csa.com/discoveryguides/food/images/squash.jpghttp://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/images/news/cornplant.jpghttp://www.mountlehmanllamas.com/col-tomato.jpghttp://www.stargazerperennials.com/images/perennial-front-page-pictur.jpghttp://www.onegreenworld.com/images/categories/blueberry.jpghttp://boldt.us/4728-2/wicked-treeshttp://photos.jibble.org/albums/Flowers/giant_daisies.jpghttp://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/BotanicalSciences/ClassificationPlants/Cryptogamia/Bryophyta/Nonvascular/moss.JPGhttp://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/plant-of-the-week/images/bugonastick/buxvir_habitat.jpghttp://www.mobot.org/education/strc/images/model_germination.jpg