Plant Classification Mrs. McIntosh 2014
How are plants classified? 1. By how they transport (move) water 2. By how they reproduce
Kingdom: PLANT (Plantae) Plants are divided into 2 classes: A. Non-vascular B. Vascular
A.Non-Vascular plants Definition: Plants without tubes; grows close to ground; absorbs water & nutrients directly through cells; small; live in damp places. Examples: liverwort, moss, hornwort
B. Vascular Definition: Plants with tubes 2 types: 1. Seedless plants-These plants reproduce by spores; no seeds Examples: fern, horsetail
What is a spore? Definition: A spore is a single cell that can develop into an exact copy of the plant from which it came Size=very small Location=under the leaf area of ferns… Growing requirements=wet environment
Growing Ferns From Spores (courtesy of Sue Olsen) Ferns are reproduced from spores that are gathered in clusters called sori, which are usually on the underside of the fronds. The spores can be yellow, green, brown, or black. The sori are sometimes covered with a membrane called an indusium, which will lift up when the spores are ripe. In the Pacific Northwest, spores ripen from late May through October and will waft off like fine dust.
Fern spores
B. Vascular-plants with tubes (continued) 2. Seed plants-These plants reproduce by seeds.
Seed plants 2 groups of seed plants: 1. One kind is a gymnosperm. These plants do not produce flowers; they have cones; most are evergreens (soft wood) Examples: pine tree and fir tree
Seed plants, continued 2. One kind is an angiosperm. These plants produce flowers Examples: daisy, rose, tulip,…
Photosynthesis: how plants create their own food