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Published byHoratio Sherman Modified over 9 years ago
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Plant Classification copyright cmassengale
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Life on Land – Adaptations! Problem Drying Out Making Food Reproduction Gravity & Support Getting water & nutrients Solution Waxy cuticle, stomata Formed leaves Develops spores & seeds Bark (cork) & vessels; cell walls (cellulose) Roots & vessels
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Classification VASCULAR: have tube-like structures that carry water, nutrients, and other substances through the plant NONVASCULAR: do not have these tube-like structures and use other ways to move water and substances Binomial Nomenclature: two word system of naming things, e.g., Quercus alba = white oak
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Seedless Nonvascular Plants Don’t grow from seeds; just a few cells thick and only 2 to 5 cm in height; no flowers or cones ~ reproduce by spores –Mosses -Liverworts -Hornworts
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Nonvascular Plants and the Environment Pioneer species: first organisms to grow in new or disturbed areas –As pioneer plant species grow and die, decaying material builds up; this, along with the slow breakdown of rocks, builds soil ~ as a result, other organisms can move into the area!
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Human use – Bedding – Packing material – Decorations – Medicines – Fuel – Popular houseplants Ecological importance – First species to colonize surfaces during primary succession – Maintain humidity levels in bogs and forests – Rhizoids prevent soil runoff after rains Non-Vascular Plants
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Seedless Vascular Plants Reproduce by spores Have long, tube-like cells that carry water, minerals, and food to cells throughout the plant –Can grow bigger and thicker because of this –1,000 species of fern, ground pine, and spike mosses; 12,000 species of ferns! FERNGROUND PINESPIKE MOSSHORSETAIL
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Vascular Tissue Xylem: hollow, tubular cells stacked one on top of the other to form a structure called a vessel; transport water and dissolved substances Phloem: tubular cells that are stacked to form structures called tubes; move food from where it is made to other parts of the plant where it is used or stored
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Specialized transport tissues – Xylem – transports water – Phloem – transports organic material Roots, stems, leaves are possible Reproduce using spores Ferns, whisk ferns, club mosses, and horsetails Horsetail Seedless Vascular Plants Club Moss
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Role in ecosystems – Grow in shady, moist areas – Provide thick ground cover beneath trees Used as shelter and food by other organisms Human use – Decorations – Favorite landscape plant – Young, curled leaves harvested for food – Horsetails used as scouring tool Seedless Vascular Plants
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Seed Plants Have leaves, roots, stems, and vascular tissue; produce seeds Gymnosperms and Angiosperms Leaf made up of different layers of cells –Waxy cuticle –Epidermis (Stomata surrounded by guard cells) –Palisade layer – most food produced here –Spongy layer – veins containing vascular tissue found here –Lower Epidermis
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Gymnosperms Oldest trees alive Produce seeds not protected by fruit; “naked seeds”; do not have flowers Leaves needle-like or scale-like Four divisions: –Coniferophyta: conifers-pines, firs, spruces, redwoods, junipers –Cycads –Gingkoes –Gnetophytes
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Some Products from Gymnosperms Lumber, paper, soap, varnish, paints, waxes, perfumes, edible pine nuts, medicines
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Angiosperms Vascular plant that flowers and has a fruit that contains one or more seeds 80% of plant species –Monocots – one cotyledon used for food storage, e.g., corn, rice, wheat, barley, lilies, orchids, grass –Dicots – two cotyledons; shade trees, fruit trees; petunias; geraniums; snapdragons
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9.1.2 As plants mature, monocots and dicots show several differences in their external structures. Monocots vs. Dicots
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9.1.2
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Monocots vs Dicots
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9.1.2 Monocotyledon – Banana Tree
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Monocotyledons Lilies Irises 9.1.2
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Dicotyledons most trees & shrubs 9.1.2
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Life Cycles of Angiosperms Biennials: complete their life cycles within two years Annuals: complete their life cycles in one year Perennials: take more than two years to grow to maturity
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Some Products from Angiosperms Foods, sugar, chocolate, cotton cloth, linen, rubber, vegetable oils, perfumes, medicines, cinnamon, flavorings (toothpaste, chewing gum, candy, etc.), dyes, lumber FLOWER PARTS SMARTBOARD REVIEW
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copyright cmassengale
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