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PLANTS
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Roots buried under the ground help keeps plants from blowing away
helps keeps plants from being swept away by rainstorms
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Roots also give a plant the water it needs.
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Protects the tip of a root as it grows and moves through soil.
ROOT CAP Protects the tip of a root as it grows and moves through soil.
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There are two main kinds of roots.
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Fibrous roots are thin and have many branches.
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Tap roots are large, thick roots with fine roots called root hairs branching off them.
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STEMS
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Carry water and minerals absorbed by roots to leaves and flowers.
STEMS Carry water and minerals absorbed by roots to leaves and flowers.
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Stems also carry sap, made by leaves, down to all parts of the plant.
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Sap is the sugary food plants make to nourish themselves and stay alive.
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Inside the stem are long bundles of tiny tubes which carry water and food.
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One bundle, the xylem, carries water and minerals from the roots to the leaves. It also supports the great bulk of the plant.
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The phloem bundles carry food (carbohydrates) from the leaves to the rest of the plant.
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VEINS IN STEMS
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LEAVES
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Types of leaf shapes simple and compound
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Simple leaves have 1 blade (or body) attached to a stem.
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A compound leaf has several blades all attached to the same stem.
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Identify the following leaves as:
Simple or Compound A B C D E Simple Compound Compound Simple Simple
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All leaves have a network of veins running through them.
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VEINS carry water and mineral from root and stem to leaves
carry food that the leaves make to the rest of the plant
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2 types of veins Parallel veins run the same direction as the leaf.
Netted veins branch out at all angles to cover the entire leaf.
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS
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Plants can make food just from air, water, and sunlight.
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To make food from air, plants need the carbon dioxide that animals exhale.
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Green plants have a special chemical in their leaves called chlorophyll.
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Chlorophyll lets the plant use the energy from the sun shining on its leaves to make food out of carbon dioxide and water.
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Chlorophyll is what makes leaves green.
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A plant’s way of making food is called photosynthesis.
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During photosynthesis, plants produce a kind of sugar.
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Plants and animals supply the requirements of life to each other.
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Animals breathe in oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide, a gas poisonous to them.
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Plants take carbon dioxide from the air, turn it back into oxygen, which it releases into the air.
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Plants breathe through little microscopic holes on the bottom of the leaves.
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These holes are called stomata
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stomata viewed under an electron microscope
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FLOWERS
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The sepal is the bottom layer of petals, which are colored green like the stem and covered in a stiff, waxy coating to help protect the growing flower bud before it blooms.
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SEPAL SEPAL SEPAL SEPAL
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At the center of the flower is the vase-shaped pistil.
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The pistil is the female part of a flower.
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3 PISTIL PARTS stigma style ovary
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At the bottom of the pistil in the ovary are some ovules.
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These are the seeds that are not developed yet.
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The stamen are arranged around the pistil.
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They are the male part of the plant.
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3 MALE PARTS stamens filaments anthers
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On the end of thin stalks called filaments are the anthers.
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They make a yellow powder called pollen.
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To make seeds, the male pollen has to fall into the female pistil
To make seeds, the male pollen has to fall into the female pistil. This is called pollination.
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When the pollen joins with the ovules to make seeds it is called fertilization.
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Many flowers make the sweet liquid called nectar.
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As insects drink nectar, they become coated with pollen.
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When the pollen from one plant is carried to another plant of the same type, it is called cross-pollination.
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Some plants have flowers that pollinate themselves
Some plants have flowers that pollinate themselves. This is called self-pollination.
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Wind-pollinated plants shed millions of small, male pollen grains into the air. Few will find a female plant to fertilize, however.
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Some plants reproduce by sending out shoots called runners.
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Wherever, runners touch the soil, they develop roots and grow into new plants.
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When no male or female parts are needed to reproduce, it is called vegetative reproduction.
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Gymnosperms plants that do NOT produce flowers
examples: conifers, woody trees, and shrubs
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Angiosperms flowering plants
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2 classes of flowering plants
monocots dicots
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MONOCOTS flowering parts in 3’s or multiples of 3
long, tapering leaves with parallel veins vascular bundles are scattered
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Examples of monocots are grasses, orchids, irises, onions, lilies, and coconut palms.
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DICOTS Floral parts in 4’s or 5’s or multiples of 4 or 5
broad to narrow leaves with netted veins vascular bundles are arranged in a circle
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Examples of dicots are roses, cacti, blueberries, sunflowers, and oaks.
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Plant’s response to stimuli
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The term "tropism" refers to a plant’s movement triggered by stimuli.
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In phototropism the roots, leaves and other parts of a plant growth are affected by a light source.
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Hydrotropism refers to the directional growth of a plant’s parts toward a water source.
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The term geotropic refers to a plant whose roots grow down into the soil as a response to gravity.
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Transpiration is the process by which water evaporates from a leaf.
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TREES
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Green stems die at the end of each growing season
Green stems die at the end of each growing season. Tree stems (trunks) keep growing from year to year.
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The outside of a tree trunk is called the bark
The outside of a tree trunk is called the bark.It protects the growing part of the tree.
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The second layer is the cambium, where the new bark is growing.
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The cambium carries food made by the leaves to all parts of the tree.
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The ring of light and dark wood shows one year of a tree’s growth.
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The next layer in from the cambium is the sapwood.
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The sapwood carries water and minerals up from the roots to the rest of the tree.
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The center of the tree is a hard dead core called heartwood.
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The heartwood no longer carries any food or water, but it makes the tree strong.
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A tree keeps getting larger and larger, adding rings to its trunk, for as long as it lives.
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