Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMartha Powers Modified over 8 years ago
1
Introduction to Plants
2
Five Plant Characteristics Plants are multicellular eukaryotes. Plants are autotrophs containing chloroplasts for photosynthesis. Plants are non-motile (fixed to one spot). Plants cell walls are made of cellulose. Plants respond to the environment.
3
The First Plants The earliest photosynthetic organisms were plant-like protists that lived in water. Even today about 70% of photosynthesis occurs in the oceans.
4
Plant Adaptations to Land The major adaptations to life on land included: 1. Protection from drying out for leaves and stems. 2. A system of vessels to transport water, nutrients and wastes in the roots, stems and leaves. 3. The use of stems and leaves as a system to hold the plant up and capture energy from light.
5
Non-vascular Plants The earliest land plants were non-vascular. Non-vascular plants have no system of vessels to carry nutrients, water or waste. These mosses, liverworts, and hornworts evolved about 500 mya from green algae.
6
Non-vascular Plant Reproduction They need a moist surface for gametes to swim together for reproduction. Make spores not seeds. Non-vascular plants lack true leaves, roots or stems and are small. All water, nutrients and waste move between cells by osmosis and diffusion. Their growth is limited.
8
Vascular Plants - Ferns As plants adapted to land they evolved more complex structures. Ferns were the first vascular plants. Ferns have vascular tissue or vessels that transport materials between different parts of the plant so they can grow taller.
9
Ferns have true roots to anchor them and absorb water and minerals. Fern leaves are photosynthetic and absorb gases from the atmosphere. Ferns still use spores for reproduction.
10
Plants with Seeds Next plants evolved seeds, an evolutionary adaptation to improve reproductive success. Seeds allow a plant to reproduce sexually without needing water for the gametes to swim to each other. Seeds contain a fully developed embryo, a food supply and a water-proof seed coat.
11
Gymnosperms Gymnosperms are plants that produce “naked seeds”. Gymnosperms include all the conifers or pine trees that produce cones.
12
Angiosperms The most recent evolutionary adaptation for plants was to produce flowers, again to improve reproductive success. Angiosperms are flowering plants. The seeds of angiosperms are protected in the fruit and attract animals to distribute the seeds.
13
Parts of a Flower One pollen fertilizes each seed or ovule. Pollen also fertilizes the ovary which develops into the fruit surrounding and protecting the seeds.
14
Monocots and Dicots There are two classes of angiosperms - monocots and dicots. Monocots have one seed leaf and dicots have two seed leaves. There are numerous differences between monocots and dicots that you will learn about in this unit.
15
Can you remember the missing labels?
16
And these missing labels?
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.