Plantae
What is a Plant Plants come in many different forms Cactus Water plants Redwood trees Venus Fly Traps So what is the connecting pieces that make them all plants? Plantae
Plant Characteristics All plants have 4 things in common Photosynthesis Cuticles Cell Walls Reproduction Plantae
Photosynthesis All plants produce their own food from sunlight They produce a sugar called “glucose” This happens in the Chloroplast Plantae
Photosynthesis Chloroplasts use pigments to absorb the sun’s light This light is used for energy to drive the photosynthesis Plantae The ingredients that plants need to make glucose are Water (H 2 O) and Carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) The waste after it is over is Oxygen (O 2 )
Cuticles A cuticle is a waxy layer on the outside of plant parts that are exposed to air Plants need water for Photosynthesis in addition to other life processes. Aquatic plants have so much water outside of them that Diffusion brings more in, so they have to worry about extra water Plantae
Cell Walls Since plants make their own food using photosynthesis, so they do not need to move Also plants store large amounts of food particles in them, so they need to protect themselves Cell walls provide good protection Plantae
Cell Walls Since plants make their own food using photosynthesis so they do not need to move Also plants store large amounts of food particles in them, so they need to protect themselves Cell walls provide good protection Plantae
Cell Walls In addition to protection cell walls provide a lot of support This lets plants get very large Some plants also grow a secondary cell wall, for more strength, however once this happens the cells cannot grow any larger Plantae
Reproduction Plants have two stages in their life cycle Sporophyte – plant produces spores that when in the right condition grow into Gametophytes Gametophyte – Female gametophytes produce eggs male gametophytes produce sperm, once an egg is fertilized it grows into a Sporophyte Plantae
Plant Classification Plants are divided into two main groups Nonvascular – Plant that does not have specialized tissues to move water and nutrients through it (like our blood vessels) Vascular – Plant that does have tissue to move materials, so it is not limited to diffusion, can grow to almost any size. Plantae
Plants and seeds Not all plants produce seeds Nonvascular plants do not produce seeds One group of Vascular plants do not produce seeds, They are referred to as “Seedless Vascular Plants” Plantae
Nonvascular Plants Examples Mosses Plantae
Nonvascular Plants Examples Mosses Liverworts Plantae
Nonvascular Plants Examples Mosses Liverworts Hornworts Plantae
Nonvascular Plants Often called Pioneer Species First to enter a new environment Need a lot of moisture in area When they die they form the first soil in an area Their “roots” are very short and called rhizoid Plantae
Seedless Vascular Plants Examples Ferns Plantae
Seedless Vascular Plants Examples Ferns Horsetails Plantae
Seedless Vascular Plants Examples Ferns Horsetails Club Mosses Plantae
Seedless Vascular Plants Have a rhizome which is an underground stem Large leafy version is the sporophyte, spores grow into short flat plants (shaped like hearts with ferns) Often kept as houseplants Huge forests in prehistoric time have now been turned into coal Plantae
Seeds and Vascular Plants Divided into two main groups Gymnosperms Angiosperms However in both cases the seeds work the same way Plantae
Seed Plants Seeds are used to nourish and protect young Sporophytes Gametophytes do not live independently but are formed within the reproductive structures of the sporophyte The sperm is not dependant on water to move like in seedless plants but is instead transported in a tiny structure POLLEN Plantae
Seed Structure Seeds have three parts Young Plant Stored food Seed Coat Plantae
Gymnosperms Plants that have cones, no flowers or fruit 4 groups: Conifers, Cycads, Ginkgoes & Gnetophytes Cones contain Gametophytes When pollen fertilizes an egg called Pollination Fertilized eggs grow into a seed Animals want to eat the seed so they take it and disperse them Plantae
Gymnosperm Advantages of Animal seed dispersion More efficient dispersion pattern Farther distances More fertile areas selected (Animals choose “good” areas to live) Plantae
Angiosperm Flowering plants Most successful type of plant Use flowers to lure organisms (pollinators) to the pollen to carry it from plant to plant Some use fruit to surround their seeds Organisms eat the fruit and discard the seeds Large dispersion area Some fruit like burrs aren’t eaten but stick to something else Plantae
Angiosperm Two classes of Angiosperm Monocots Dicots Based on the number of “cotyledons” or seed leaves Plantae
Angiosperm Plantae
Angiosperm Plantae
Variety of plants Plantae