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Form and Structure of Plants Botany: the study of plants
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What is a plant? Living organisms which are eukaryotic and multicellular Have organized tissues Have plastids (such as chloroplasts) Have cell walls containing cellulose
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One reason the study of botany is so important to man is … Because all the food eaten by man comes directly or indirectly from green plants. About 2/3 of the food we eat comes directly from plants and 1/3 comes from animals which eat plants.
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Ways Plants are Beneficial: Provide most of man's food Release O2 needed by man and animals Plants are raw materials for many manufactured goods Plants are a source of beauty
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Misconceptions: All green things are plants. All plants are green. All plants are autotrophic.
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morphology the shape or form of an organism
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Anatomy the bodily structure of an organism (deals with how cells and tissues are put together)
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Types of organs in plants Roots Stems Leaves flowers Flower Stem Leaf Root
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Plant organs are determined by their relationships to nodes Node: a region where a leaf is or was attached
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Plant organs are determined by their relationships to nodes Roots do not have nodes. Stems have nodes. Leaves do not have nodes but are attached to stems at nodes.
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Roots Roots are the organs of the root system. A root system is all the roots of a plant.
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Functions of Roots Anchors Absorbs Transports Stores food
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Two Types of Root Systems Taproots Fibrous roots
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Taproots commonly found in dicots penetrates the soil with very little branching often stores food (fleshy roots)
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Taproots has one or a few main roots that are thicker and longer than the other roots of the plant examples: carrots and dandelions
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Fibrous Root System commonly found in monocots have no main section but branch out into the soil in all directions
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Fibrous Root System Has a cluster of roots that are approximately equal in size They branch several times Example: grasses
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Types of stems Herbaceous stems Woody stems
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Herbaceous stems Softer, more flexible type of stem Supported by cell walls and turgor pressure Woody plants often begin as herbaceous and then become woody as the grow older
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Woody stems Hard and not very felxible Capable of supporting a lot of weight Examples: trees and shurbs
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Stem Functions manufacture, support, and display leaves conduct materials
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External Structures of Leaves Blade: the flat portion of a leaf Petiole: the stalk of a leaf; attaches leaf to stem Margin: the edge of a leaf’s blade Veins: the pipelines that carry food & water Node: place on stem where leaves are attached Margin
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Stipule: a small leaflike or scalelike structure on a plant that helps to cover a leaf while it is devleoping External Structures of Leaves
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Leaf Venation Two basic patterns of leaf venation: Parallel Venation Netted Venation
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Parallel Venation A series of veins which originate at the stem and proceeds to the tip of the leaf Occurs in monocots – corn, grass, irises, orchids
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Netted Venation Palmate: two or more main veins coming from a single point Examples: maple, ivy, geraniums Pinnate: if the veins branch off one large central vein called a midrib Examples: oaks, apple trees, African violets
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Classification of Leaves Simple leaves Compound leaves
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Simple or Compound? Simple Leaves: one blade on each petiole
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Simple or Compound? Compound: more than one blade on each petiole Each small blade on a compound leaf is referred to as a leaflet
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Sessile Leaves Sessile leaves lack petioles
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Sessile Leaves Grasses and certain other monocots have sessile leaves that attach to the stem by way of a sheath that seems to wrap around the stem
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Leaf Mosaic AlternateOpposite Whored Leaf mosaic: the arrangement of leaves on a stem
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Leaf Mosaic Alternate Mosaic: leaves alternate from opposite sides of the stem (one petiole per node)
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Leaf Mosaic Opposite Mosaic: two leaves grow from the same point on the stem (two petioles per node)
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Leaf Mosaic Whorled Mosaic: three or more leaves grow from a single point on a stem (3 or more petioles per node)
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Leaf Mosaic
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Leaf Shapes LinearCordateDeltoidLobed Circular
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Linear Leaf Shape long and narrow
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Lobed Leaf Shape
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Cordate Leaf Shape kidney or heart-shaped
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Deltoid Leaf Shape deltoid-shaped
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Circular Leaf Shape
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Leaf Margins EntireSerrateUndulateDentate
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Entire Leaf Margin smooth margin with no teeth
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Serrate Leaf Margin toothed margins
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Undulate Leaf Margin wavy margins
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Dentate Leaf Margin teeth point out
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