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Plants
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Published on Nov 18, 2015
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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
What is a plant?
Plants are autotrophs
All plants are eukaryotes
All plants have cell walls
Project done by Bailey Phillips
Photo by
WilliamMarlow
2.
Plant adaptions for land:
Most plants have cuticles to keep in water
Some plants have vascular tissue to transport goods and materials
Cell walls keep plants structure so they don't cave in
Photo by
Jason A. Samfield
3.
Nonvascular plants
A nonvascular plant is a plant that lacks a well-developed
System of tubes for transporting water and other materials
Low growing
Cell walls are very thin
4.
Three types of nonvascular plants
Mosses
Liverworts
Hornworts
5.
Mosses
There are more than 10,000 species of mosses
Most mosses use rhizoids to anchor themselves to a surfaces
There are two generations of mosses: sporophyte and gametophyte
Photo by
♦ Peter & Ute Grahlmann ♦
6.
Liverworts
There are more than 8,000 liverwort species
Often found growing as a thick crust on rocks or soil along the side of a stream
Named for their gametophyte leaf shape
Photo by
Bushman.K
7.
Hornworts
Fewer than 100 species of hornworts
Seldom found on rocks and tree trunks
Most of the time found in moist soil mixed in with grass
Named for there shape
Photo by
Ken-ichi
8.
Seedless vascular plants
These are basically vascular plants that
do not produce seeds
9.
Types of seedless vascular plants:
Ferns
Horsetails
Club mosses
Photo by
macrophile
10.
Ferns
More than 12,000 species of ferns
Has true stems, roots, and leaves
Most fern stems are underground
Fern's leaves are divided into small parts
The leaf of a fern is called a frond
11.
Horsetails
Very few species of horsetails
Stems are jointed
Needles grow in a circle around the joint
Another name is scouring rushes
Photo by
Scarygami
12.
Club mosses
Club mosses have true stems, leaves, and roots
Similar life cycle to ferns
Only a few hundred species today
Have vascular tissue
Grow in moist woodlands near streams
13.
Seed plants
A seed plant is a plant that vascular tissue
and reproduces with seeds and pollen
Photo by
nosha
14.
Vascular tissue
Two types do vascular tissue are: phloem and xylem
Phloem is the vascular tissue that food moves through
Xylem is the vascular tissue that water and minerals move through
Photo by
dirtinmypocket
15.
Pollen and seeds
Pollen produced by seed plants
Pollen later becomes sperm cells
Seeds develop when sperm cells come in contact with the egg
A seed is structure that contains a young plant inside
Seeds protect young plants from drying out
Photo by
tanakawho
16.
Seed structure
Three main parts are the: embryo, stored food, and seed coat
Seed coats act as plastic wrap for the seed.
Embryo already has the beginnings of the roots, stems, and leaves
All seeds have at least one cotyledon
When the embryo starts growing again it uses the stored food until it can provide for itself
Photo by
ecstaticist
17.
Seed dispersal
After seeds are formed they are normally dispersed
Seeds disperse in many ways ex. by animals moving them
Another way seeds are dispersed is by water and/or wind
The final way a seed can be dispersed in a popping in many directions
Photo by
arbyreed
18.
Germination
It may take along time after a seed is dispersed to germinate
Germination occurs when the embryo begins to grow again and pushes out of the seed
Occurs when the embryo pulls water from the environment
Embryo uses stored food to begin to grow
The farther away a seed gets from a parent plant the better chance it has of surviving
Photo by
Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens
19.
Roots
Roots have three main purposes: anchor plants, absorb water, and sometimes store food
Two main types: fibrous roots and taproot root
Many roots have root caps
Little hair like structures come out of the root and can go through the soil particles
Materials, food, and water travel trough the phloem and xylem of the root
Photo by
Aaron Escobar
20.
Stems
Two main functions: transports substances between the roots and leaves and...
stems provide support of the leaves
Two main types: herbaceous or woody
Both contain phloem and xylem
Cambium divide to produce phloem and xylem
Photo by
kate e. did
21.
Leaves
These capture sunlight and carry out photosynthesis
Leaves have veins that contain phloem and xylem
Leaves also have stomata that a nostrils like structures
Most of the time the leaves' main purpose is to carry out photosynthesis
Leaves can lose water through a process called transpiration
Photo by
blmiers2
22.
Gymnosperms
Produce naked seeds, this means that they are not enclosed by fruits
Have needle or scale like leaves
Oldest type of seed plant
Four groups exist today: cycads, conifers, ginkgoes, gnetophytes
Photo by
Arthur Chapman
23.
Ex. Of gymnosperms
Welwitschia: gnetophyte
Ginkgo biloba: ginkgo
Sago palm: cycad
Giant sequoia: conifer
Photo by
D.Eickhoff
24.
Angiosperms
Two important traits:
Produce flowers and produce seeds that are enclosed by fruit
Live almost everywhere on Earth
A flower is the reproductive structure of an angiosperm
Photo by
listentoreason
25.
Ex. Of angiosperm
Apples
Tomatoes
Lemons
Peas
Oranges
Photo by
muammerokumus
26.
Monocot vs. dicot
Ex. Of monocot: corn, wheat, rice, lilies, tulips
Ex. Of dicot: roses, violets, dandelions
Monocots normally had a multiples of three petals
Dicots normally have multiples of four or five petals
Monocots normally have long, slender petals that veins that are parallel
Photo by
downhilldom1984
27.
Monocot vs. dicot con.
Dicots normally have leaves that are wide with veins that...
Branch off in many directions
In monocot stems the vascular tissue is scattered through out the stem
In dicot stems the vascular tissue is arranged a circle like structure
Photo by
listentoreason
28.
Plant tropisms
Plant tropism is the plants response the stimuli
The first stimulus is light... Plants grow towards light to got more sun for photosynthesis
The second stimulus is touch... Vines and some other plants grow around anything they touch
The third stimulus is gravity... This stimulus is called gravitropism and plants show positive gravitropism...
But a negative response when they grow upward
Photo by
-nanio-
29.
This is the end of What Is A Plant?
Photo by
Colourless Rainbow
Bailey Phillips
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