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Published byChristine Lora Allison Modified over 9 years ago
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20.2 Classification of Plants KEY CONCEPT Plants can be classified into nine phyla.
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20.2 Classification of Plants Mosses and their relatives are seedless nonvascular plants. Nonvascular plants grow close to the ground to absorb water and nutrients. Seedless plants rely on free- standing water for reproduction. Liverworts belong to phylum Hepatophyta. –often grow on wet rocks or in greenhouses –can be thallose or leafy
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20.2 Classification of Plants Seed plants include cone-bearing plants and flowering plants. Seed plants have several advantages over their seedless ancestors. –can reproduce without free-standing water, via pollination –pollination occurs when pollen meets female plant parts –seeds nourish and protect plant embryo –seeds allow plants to disperse to new places
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20.2 Classification of Plants Gymnosperms do not have seeds enclosed in fruit. –most gymnosperms are cone-bearing and evergreen. –the cone is reproductive structure of most gymnosperms. –pollen is produced in male cones. –eggs are produced in female cones. –seeds develop on scales of female cones.
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20.2 Classification of Plants Conifers are gymnosperms in phylum Coniferophyta. –most common gymnosperms alive today –includes pines, spruce, cedar, fir, and juniper
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20.2 Classification of Plants Angiosperms have seeds enclosed in some type of fruit. –A flower is the reproductive structure of angiosperms. –A fruit is a mature ovary of a flower. Angiosperms, or flowering plants, belong in phylum Anthophyta.
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