Introduction to Plants

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What makes a Plant a Plant?
Advertisements

Introduction to the Plant Kingdom
Kingdom Plantae Characteristics: Eukaryotic (has a nucleus)
Biology 11. Transition onto Land Advantages of living in the water included… 1.Prevents drying out. 2.Gives structural support (less affected by gravity)
The Bryophytes Mosses, Liverworts, & Hornworts
Ch 22- Plant Diversity What is a plant?
Introduction to Plants What is a plant? A multicellular eukaryote that can produce its own food through photosynthesis. Since it can do this, it is an...
PLANTS-A brief introduction of chapters 22 thru 25.
An introduction to plants
Diversity and Adaptations of Plants. Plants became established on land  Probably evolved from multi-cellular aquatic green algae (a protist)  Plants.
What is a plant? Unit 7 Chapter 20. Plant characteristics Eukaryotic Multicellular Autotroph: food made through photosynthesis Cell walls made of cellulose.
Plants Chapter 19 & 20.
1 Introduction to the Plant Kingdom Introduction to the Plant Kingdom PAGE 35.
Section 1: The Plant Kingdom
Mr. Ramos Plant Organs and Tissues. Introduction to Plants There are over 260,000 different species of flowering plants alone! Plants are multicellular,
Plantae. General characteristics multicellular eukaryotes cell walls made of cellulose carry out photosynthesis.
Kingdom Plantae Intro to Plants What is a plant? A member of the kingdom Plantae. Plants are multi-cellular eukaryotes with cell walls composed.
Chapter 22 Plant Diversity.
How do organisms get their energy?
THE PLANT KINGDOM.
Chapter 30: Plant Evolution and Classification 30-1 Overview of Plants 30-2 Nonvascular Plants 30-3 Vascular Plants.
Plant Evolution and Classification. Adapting to Land More exposure to sunlight Increased CO 2 levels Greater supply of inorganic nutrients Susceptible.
The Plant Kingdom Evolution from Water to Land. Primitive Plants Were “aquatic” – lived in water If salt water, we use the term “marine” It is believed.
Kingdom - Plantae.
Chapter 28: Plant Evolution and Classification
PLANTS eukaryotic autotrophic (through photosynthesis) cells have walls made of cellulose.
Plant Diversity: How Plants Colonized Land
Kingdom Plantae.
Chapter 22: Plant Diversity Biology- Kirby. Chapter 22- Plant Diversity Plant- multicellular eukaryotes with cell walls made of cellulose. Plants are.
Plant Evolution and Classification. Adapting to Land  Life flourished in oceans for more than 3 billion years.  No organisms lived on land until about.
Plant Kingdom!!. Characteristics  Eukaryotic  Autotrophic  Multicellular  Sexual reproduction  Cellulose in cell walls.
Evolution of Plants Chapter Ch 21 pp pp. 564 Chap 22: pp ; pp. 581; ; ;
Plant Diversity. General Characteristics of Plants All plants are: Eukaryotic Autotrophic Multicellular Cell Walls with cellulose Chloroplasts w/ chlorophyll.
Plant Diversity Chapter 22. What is a Plant? Members of the Kingdom Plantae They are divided into 4 groups: Bryophytes, Ferns, Gymnosperms, and Angiosperms.
Plants  plants dominate most of the land on Earth  plants and plant products are all around us, in the products we use and the foods we eat.
Plants. Teaching Point #1 Almost all plants are autotrophic, eukaryotic and have cell walls.
PLANT KINGDOM.  What Is a Plant?  Plants are multicellular, autotrophic eukaryotes that have cell walls made of cellulose.  Plants develop from multicellular.
Kingdom Plantae. What Is a Plant? Multicellular eukaryotes that are photosynthetic autotrophs Cell walls made of cellulose Store surplus carbohydrates.
Plants!!!! Multi-cellular eukaryote that produces its own food in the form of glucose through the process of photosynthesis All plants are autotrophic.
Plants Overview of PLANTS Chapter 22 Overview of Plants The plant kingdom’s impact on our lives cannot be overstated. A broad understanding of plants.
Chapter 10: The Structure & Function of Plants. Chapter 10, Section 1 & 2: The Plant Kingdom What is a plant? Nearly all plants produce their own food.
The Plant Kingdom Chapter 4:1 and 2 (Photosynthesis)
1 Introduction to the Plant Kingdom Introduction to the Plant Kingdom.
Plant Diversity. What are Plants? Multicellular (made of many cells) Eukaryotes (cells have nucleus & organelles) Cell Walls made of Cellulose Autotrophs.
Plants Unit. Evidence that plants & green algae shared a common ancestor  They both: Have cell walls containing cellulose Store food as starch Use same.
Introduction to Plants. Five Plant Characteristics   Plants are multicellular eukaryotes.   Plants are autotrophs containing chloroplasts for photosynthesis.
Plant Phyla. Plants  Eukaryotic  Multicellular  Autotrophic  Chloroplasts, cell wall, Vacuoles.
Plant Kingdom. Plants on land Plants are the most dominant group or organisms on Earth by weight Very diverse 2mm across to 100m tall Most are photosynthetic.
Plant Evolution and Classification
What is a Plant?.
Plant Characteristics
Introduction to the Plant Kingdom
What makes a Plant a Plant?
Plant Diversity What to know from Ch 29, 30, 35
Introduction to the Plant Kingdom
Introduction to Plants
Plant Diversity.
Ch. 22 – Plant Diversity.
Chapter 22 Plant Diversity
Nonvascular Plant Characteristics
Introduction to the Plant Kingdom
Plant Diversity.
Plants.
Do Now What do plants need in order to survive?
The Bryophytes Mosses, Liverworts, & Hornworts
Plants.
What makes a Plant a Plant?
Plants.
The Evolution of Land Plants
PLANTS Chapter 22 p. 550.
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Plants

What is a Plant? Multicellular Eukaryotic Photosynthetic Has cell walls containing cellulose Lacks mobility

What did they evolve from? Green Algae Similarities contain chlorophyll have cell walls made of cellulose store energy as starch

Original Habitat The simplest plants live surrounded by water because water satisfies many of their needs: prevents cells from drying out gives structural support provides nutrients helps with spore dispersal and meeting of sex cells With time, plants adapted to live on land

Adaptations for Land Adaptation Definition Advantage(s) 1. Cuticle waxy coating on the outer surface of plant cells prevents the cell from drying out & acts as a barrier to pathogens 2. Stomata openings in the outer layer of leaves and some stems that allows the exchange of gases enables exchange of gases for photosynthesis

Adaptations for Land Adaptation Definition Advantage(s) 3. Vascular Tissues transport tissues that move nutrients and water throughout the plant faster transport than with osmosis or diffusion & provide structure and support for the plant 4. Reproductive Strategies adaptations that allow sperm to meet egg without water (e.g. spores that have waterproof coverings, seeds) enable plants to reproduce without being surrounded by water

Plant Life Cycle The lives of plants consist of two alternating stages, or generations: a gametophyte generation and a sporophyte generation. The stage that produces gametes (sperm and eggs) is the gametophyte generation. It is haploid. The stage that produces spores is the sporophyte generation. It is diploid.

Plant Life Cycle One generation is dominant over the other. This means that it is larger and lasts longer. In most plants, the diploid sporophyte generation is dominant. In mosses, the gametophyte dominates.

How are Plants Classified?

No phyla, rather plants are organized into 12 divisions.

Non-Vascular Plants Include mosses, liverworts, & hornworts 1. Do not have true roots, stems and leaves - absorb water through cell walls; water moves via osmosis. 2. No vascular tissue - no xylem and phloem to transport water and nutrients

Non-Vascular Plants 3. Small size - no support from vascular tissues 4. Depend on water for reproduction - water is needed for the sperm to swim to the egg

Vascular Plants 1. Have true roots, stems and leaves 2. Contain vascular tissue - xylem transports water - phloem transports food and nutrients - run continuously through the roots, stems and the leaves

Vascular Plants 3. Larger size - vascular tissues provide support against gravity 4. Cuticle - reduces water evaporation from leaves and some stems

Seedless Plants Most plants have vascular tissue but may or may not produce seeds. Ferns, horsetails, and club mosses are seedless vascular plants that reproduce by spores.

Gymnosperms Plants that reproduce by seeds are divided into 2 groups: gymnosperms and angiosperms. Gymnosperms have "naked" seeds usually protected by cones. They include the evergreens.

Angiosperms Angiosperms are flowering plants whose seeds are produced and protected within fruit. Further divided into monocots and dicots.