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Published byKelley Watkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Plants and Their Parts A 6-11
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What do plants have in common? Chlorophyll allows plants to use the Sun’s energy to make their own food –Plants need water and minerals from the soil and carbon dioxide from the air All living things are made of cells –All plant cells have certain things in common that help the plant grow
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Plant cells all have walls that help them from collapsing (it’s what helps trees and flowers stand tall) –Animal cells do not have cell walls or chlorophyll Different kinds of cells do different kinds of jobs –Cells that all have the same job are called tissue (example: the “string” of a celery stalk)
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What are the major plant groups? Classification the science of finding patterns among living things –Ancient scientists used to classify plants based on what they could see –In 350 B.C. Aristotle (Greek scientist) classified all plants into 3 large groups: herbs (little plants), shrubs (bigger plants), and trees (the biggest plants)
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Today technology can look inside plants and that is how they are classified today –vascular and nonvascular Vascular means “composed of or containing vessels”; contains veins or arteries; trees and flowering plants Nonvascular plants that do not have these veins or vessels; mosses
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Vascular Plants
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Nonvascular Plants
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What are the Divisions of the Plant Kingdom? A kingdom in the largest subdivision of living things Scientists figured out that they could divide the vascular and nonvascular plants into smaller and smaller groups –Example: flowering and nonflowering
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