Prairie Factors Maintaining Prairie 1.Low Rainfall 2.Fire 3.Grazing Each of these factors inhibits the growth of woody plants (trees and such) while.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Vegetative Parts.
Advertisements

Classifying Plants.
Chapter 9 Plants.
Grassland Biomes Chapter 8.
Plant Kingdom NOTES #2.
Forests. Importance Wildlife habitat Soil Erosion Wind block Aesthetics Fuel Climate moderation.
Plant Parts Chapter #3. What are the parts of a plant? Node: swollen part of stem where buds form (leaves or stems grow here) Cotyledons: leaves formed.
Life of a Flowering Plant
21.1 Plant Cells and Tissues TEKS 5B, 10B, 10C The student is expected to: 4B investigate and explain cellular processes, including homeostasis, energy.
Poaceae The Grass Family
Kingdom Plantae Autotrophs (photosynthesis) Eukaryotic Multicellular By Diana L. Duckworth Rustburg High School, Campbell County.
Parts of a Plant. Flower  Reproductive organ of the plant  Flowers are usually both male and female  The male part of the flower is the STAMEN  The.
Unit 7: Plants 7.0 Botany: The study of plants. 7.1 Characteristics of Plants -Multicellular -Nucleus with DNA -Photosynthesis -Cell Wall -Sessile (Do.
Plant Structure Stems Roots Leaves. Review…………………
Honors Biology Chapter 22- Plants
1.What are the main parts of this tree? 2.What is the function of each part?
Standards 3 & 4 Standard 3. Organisms in the Plant Kingdom are classified into groups based on specific structures. All plants are included in this kingdom,
Plant Kingdom.
TAKS Objective 3 Plants: Structures and Adaptations.
UNIT 16: PLANTS Chapters L.14.7.
National Railroad Contractors Association Plant Biology.
9.1 Plant Organs Flowering plants are ________________________ All share common structural features Root system = roots Shoot system = _____________________.
9-1 Honors Biology Chapter 9 Plant Anatomy John Regan Wendy Vermillion Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or.
Structure of Plants Leaves Blade Veins –midrib Petiole.
Gymnosperms vs. Angiosperms
Components of the Plant Body AP Biology Spring 2011.
Plant Unit Mrs. Gerlach
Plant Organs SNC2D.
PLANT KINGDOM. Multicellular Photosynthetic Eukaryotic Tissues (xylem & phloem) Organ systems (leaves, stems, roots, flowers) Alternation of generations-
Plants as Living Organisms Unit 3. Plant Kingdom Thousands of plant species 4 major groups of plants –Mosses –Ferns –Gymnosperms – “naked seed” –Angiosperms.
Plants.
PLANTS.
Aim: What are plants and how are they classified?
Plants Botany = the study of plants. Plant Evolution Mosses and ferns Earliest relatives Cooksonia – 470 MYA Photosynthetic bacteria - as early as 1.5.
PLANT STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Plant Structure.
Plants - Back to Basics ¨ Why are plants important? ¨ Plant structures - from the bottom up ¨ Plant life processes - making food and using energy (respiration,
Plants Botany = the study of plants. Nonvascular plants have no vessels, no roots, no stems or leaves. Examples: Mosses & Liverworts.
Plant Notes:. Plants: Multicellular eukaryotes Cell walls of cellulose Autotrophic (photosynthesis)  Carbon dioxide + water + light Oxygen + glucose.
Plant Structure, Growth, & Development. The Diversity of Angiosperms Angiosperms (flowering plants) can be divided into 2 major categories:  Monocots.
Plants Structure and Reproduction. Characteristics of Plants  Autotrophic  Multicellular  Eukaryotic  Cell wall made of cellulose  Organelles including.
Plant Sex Pollen Grain – male gamete – many forms of distribution – wind, animal, water Ovule – Female gamete – inside flower.
20.3 Diversity of Flowering Plants KEY CONCEPT The largest phylum in the plant kingdom is the flowering plants.
Plants. Plant Organs Roots – Support a plant – Anchor it to the ground – Store food – Absorb water – Dissolve nutrients from soil Stems – Provide support.
Kingdom Plantae Main Characteristics Cells contain a nucleus Make their own food Cells contain a cell wall Multicellular Can not move from place to place.
Introduction to Plants Section 18-3: Multicellular Plants.
Section 6 Dendrology: The Scientific Study of Trees
Plant Form and Function
Plant Structure, Growth, & Development
Range Plants -- OBJ 2: PPT Rangeland Principles (REM 151)
Modified by Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum Office
Plant Parts.
PLANT BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS AND NEEDS
Plant Diversity Ch
Plants as Living Organisms
Structures of Seed Plants
Kingdom Plantae Angiosperms.
Plant Organs SNC2D.
Plants as Living Organisms
Plant Structure, Growth, & Development
Grass Anatomy Family Poaceae.
Range Plants -- OBJ 2: PPT Rangeland Principles (REM 151)
ADAPTATIONS OF PLANTS I. Establishment of Plants on Land
Grasslands Section 1.
Organs: Leaves Leaves – the main photosynthetic organs
Plants as Living Organisms
Plant Parts Chapter #3.
Plant Structure, Growth, & Development
Plant Characteristics and Special Functions
Plant Parts Tuesday, March 13.
Presentation transcript:

Prairie

Factors Maintaining Prairie 1.Low Rainfall 2.Fire 3.Grazing Each of these factors inhibits the growth of woody plants (trees and such) while favoring the growth of grasses and other herbaceous plants

Grasses in a Grassland Grass (Family Poaceae) are monocots and compose between 60% and 80% of plant species in a mature prairie habitats The three most common prairie grasses are: 1) Big Bluestem – Andropogon gerardi 2) Indian Grass – Sorghastrum nutans 3) Little Bluestem – Andropogon scoparius

Fire & Growth

Grass Adaptations: Moisture They reduce their surface area by having narrow leaf blades with parallel veins that allow the leaf to curl further reducing surface area in harsh weather They prevent excessive water loss by having a waxy cuticle covering the leaves, hairy stems reducing wind and evaporation from the surface, small recessed stomata, and the C4 photosynthetic pathway They are also known for having roots that make up at least ½ of the plant that may reach 6 or more feet into the soil

Grass Adaptations: Fire & Grazing The growth tissue in a grass (meristem) is located below ground and is able to generate new tissue after being burnt or eaten They take in and store silica (sand) in their tissue in and effort to wear down the teeth of grazers Their seeds are stimulated to germinate by chemical produced from burning

Grass Adaptations: Other They do not rely on animal pollinators to mediate sexual reproduction. Instead their pollen is transported by the wind, a reliable component of the prairie They often reproduce through asexual means, by modified stem called stolons or roots called rhizomes that radiate, touch the ground, and grow into a new plant

I think the prairies will die without grass finding a voice. Its democracy may be against it. Prairie grass never seems to know anybody. William A. Quayle (1905) The Prairie & The Sea

Compared to trees, shrubs, or forbs, grasses seem unfathomably plain. They fail to inspire interest or stir the imagination. We look at prairie and we see a great emptiness, a void that staggers the psyche and leaves much too much for the mind to wonder. Randy Winter (1987) Nature Notes

Every American has the right as part of his cultural heritage to stand in grass as high as his head in order to feel some small measure of history coursing his veins and personally establish an aesthetic bond with the past. William E. Elder (1961) Needs & Problems of Grassland Presentation

Grass is the most widely distributed of all vegetable beings and is at once the type of our life and the emblem of our mortality…the carpet of the infant becomes the blanket of the dead. John J. Ingalls (1872) In Praise of Blue Grass

Grasses are the greatest single source of wealth in the world. Agnes Chase (1959) 1 st Book of Grasses

The basis of human proliferation is not our own seed but the seed of grasses. Evan Eisenberg (1989) Back to Eden

What a thousand acres of compass plant looked like when they tickled the bellies of the buffalo is a question never again to be answered, and perhaps not even asked. Aldo Leopold (1949) A Sand County Almanac

Grass Roots & Stems 1.Roots Fibrous and good as binding the soil 2.Stems Flowering stems or “Culms” are jointed with hollow internodes. A “Prophyllum” or modified first leaf of a branch that clasps the main culm, may support branching culms

Grass Leaves Grass leaves have parallel-veined blades that are usually narrow. A “Foliage” leaf has a “Sheath” that surrounds the culm, a “Ligule” that stands up at the junction of the sheath and blade, and the leaf “Blade” itself

Grass Flowers Grass flower clusters or inflorescences bear Scaly units called spikelets that are arranged as a: 1.Spike 2.Panicle 3.Spikelike 4.Raceme