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Published byEzra Owens Modified over 9 years ago
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Plants make up more than 98% of total biomass on Earth They produce oxygen, produce food for all living things, and remove large amounts of CO2 from atmosphere Life would not exist without plants If all plants on Earth were wiped out, the oxygen in our atmosphere would run out within 11 years
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Plants belong to Kingdom Plantae Multicellular eukaryotes Cell walls made of cellulose Carry out photosynthesis using green pigments chlorophyll a and b Include trees, shrubs, grasses, mosses, and ferns Most are autotrophs
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Because plants are stationary, living on land can be challenging Plants must have: Sunlight (photosynthesis) Water and Minerals (photosynthesis and growth) Gas exchange (bring in oxygen, dispose of CO2) Transport of water and nutrients
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The first plants evolved from an organism much like the multicellular green algae living today. Green algae are protists not plants DNA sequences show that plants came from these green algaes Oldest plant fossils ~ 450 mya Similar to today’s mosses Simple and grew in damp places
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Four main groups : Bryophytes (mosses and relatives) Seedless Vascular Plants (ferns and relatives) Cone-bearing plants (gymnosperms) Flowering plants (angiosperms) Groups based on three important features: Water-conducting tissues? Seeds? Flowers?
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Human and Animal Dependence on Plants Oxygen production Food products Lumber, paper, clothing Coal, oil Methane gas from decomposed plants and animal manures Gasohol
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Cultivation of food plants Use of plants in cleaning polluted water Algae and space exploration Identification and preservation of medicinal plants
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Botany: the study of plants Science: “a search for knowledge of the natural world” Botanists: scientists who study plants Scientific Method: Observations and testing hypotheses Principles and theories
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Hypothesis: tentative, unproven explanation for something that has been observed Controlled experiment: an experiment in which only one variable is changed Variable: specific aspect of an experiment Independent: variable that you control Dependent: variable that changes in response to independent (what you measure)
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Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723) Development of primitive microscopes First to describe bacteria, sperm, and other microbes Primitive microscopes Led to the discovery of plant cells (1665)
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Plant Anatomy: internal structure of plants Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694) Discovered various tissues in stems and roots Nehemiah Grew (1628-1711) Structure of wood
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Plant Physiology: plant function J. B. van Helmont (1577-1644) Flemish physician and chemist Famous willow branch experiment
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Plant Taxonomy: identifying, naming, and classifying plants Oldest branch of plant study Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778) Wrote Species Plantarum (1753) Pteridologists: study ferns Bryologists: study mosses and other similar plants
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Plant Geography: how and why plants are distributed, 19 th century Sir Joseph Hooker Charles Darwin
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Plant Ecology: interactions of plants with one another and with their environments Rachel Carson Wrote Silent Spring (1962) Increased public awareness of ecology with her publication
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Plant Morphology: form and structure of plants, 19 th century
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Other related sciences: Genetics: heredity studied with plants, plant breeding for crops, genetic engineering for food, medicine, etc. Cell biology: study of cell structure and function Electron microscopy Economic botany and ethnobotany: practical uses of plants and plant products (herbal medicine)
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