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1/30/07 L 1 PLANT DIVERSITY CHAPTER 20
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1/30/07 L2 Warm-up ► Pick up the 3 sheets on your way in 1. What 3 things do all plants need to survive 2. What is the point of photosynthesis? 3. What are the products and reactants of photosynthesis?
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Plant life began in the water and became adapted to land. 1/30/07 L3
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Land plants evolved from green algae. ► Plants and green algae have many common traits. – both are photosynthetic eukaryotes – both have the same types of chlorophyll – both use starch as a storage product – both have cell walls with cellulose 1/30/07 L4
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6 PLANTS 1. M ulticellular (many celled) Eukaryotic (nucleus) 2. A utotrophic (make their own food) contain chlorophyll in chloroplast 3. C ell walls contain cellulose 4. S exual and Asexual reproduction
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1/30/07 L7REVIEW C 6 H 12 O 6 Glucose
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1/30/07 L8 NON-VASCULAR Plants Seedless NON-VASCULAR Plants Seedless 1. Example Moss have No tubes or vessels to carry water etc.
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1/30/07 L9 2. Must live in wet places water passes through cells by osmosis.
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1/30/07 L10 3. No true roots – have rhizoids – anchor plant
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1/30/07 L11 VASCULAR PLANTS 1.Examples are Ferns, Pines, Flowering plants
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1/30/07 L12 2. Have vascular tissue similar to veins 3. Xylem – moves water up (dead cells) 4. Phloem – moves food down (live cells)
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1/30/07 L13 Vascular Tissue
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1/30/07 L14 VASCULAR PLANTS WITHOUT SEEDS 1. Ferns 2. No seeds
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1/30/07 L15 FERNS a. Frond – leaf b. Rhizomes – underground stem
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1/30/07 L16 c. Sorus – produces spores
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1/30/07 L17 d. Fiddleheads – unfurling fern fronds
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1/30/07 L18 VASCULAR PLANTS WITH SEEDS 1. Produce seeds in cones or flowers
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1/30/07 L19 2. Have true roots, stems, leaves 3. Fertilization – pollen enters ovary and combines with ovule (egg)
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1/30/07 L20 4. Oldest Plant Alive – Ginkgo biloba (Have seeds)
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1/30/07 L21 GYMNOSPERMS 1. P ine trees, firs, evergreens 2. H ave cones (no flowers) 3. M ale cone produces pollen 4. F emale cone produces seed after pollination 5. L iterally means “naked seed” male Female
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1/30/07 L22 GYMNOSPERMS
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1/30/07 L23 ANGIOSPERMS 1. F lowering plants, fruit trees 2. M ost abundant type of plants 3. S eeds are contained in and protected by fruit
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Plants have adaptations that allow them to live on land. ► Challenges of living on land have selected for certain plant adaptations. ► A cuticle allows plants to retain moisture. waxy, waterproof layer holds moisture in –
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► Stomata are tiny holes in the cuticle. stoma –can open and close –allow air to move in and out
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► Plants have adaptations that prevent animals from eating them. –defensive chemicals –spines and thorns
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1/30/07 L27 Plant Adaptations ► Aquatic plants have to be able to tolerate mud. To take in enough oxygen, they have tissues with large air space and stomata on the upper side of the leaves. ► Salt tolerant plants can withstand salt concentrations in the soil far greater than normal plants. ► Epiphytes are plants that do not root in the soil, their roots get water from the air. ► Many plants defend themselves against insect attack by making compounds that ward off animals.
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1/30/07 L28 Leaf Modifications ► Cactus spines are modified leaves that help reduce water loss from the plant and provide protection from predators. ► Carnivorous plants, like the pitcher plant have leaves with adaptations that can trap insects or other small animals. ► Leaves often function as water or food storage sites. This adaptation ensures the long-term survival of the plant when water resources are scarce.
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1/30/07 L29 Response to Stimuli - Tropism 1. Phototropism – response of a plant to light
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1/30/07 L30 2. Gravitropism – plant response to gravity
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1/30/07 L31 ► Positive – toward the stimulus ► Negative – away from the stimulus Roots grow toward the earth, positive gravitropism. Roots grow away from light, negative phototropism
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1/30/07 L32 3. Thigmotropism – plant response to touch
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1/30/07 L33 Photoperiodism – plant response to daylight length (time)
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