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Plant Unit Notes
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Plants vs. Animals Plants are very different from animals. They can’t move, they don’t have hearts or brains, can’t seek shelter. So, how do plants live without moving?
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How do plants eat? How do plants breath? How do plants circulate materials? How do plants regulate? How do plants reproduce? How do plants protect themselves?
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Animal eating
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Plant eating
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Before a plant can eat, it has to make its own food by photosynthesis.
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Light and color When light strikes matter, some of the matter’s atoms may absorb photons. Electrons are excited and absorbed light changes into heat. In photosynthesis, the light is used for energy to make chemical bonds.
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Color The color you see is reflected off the object and into your eyes. All other colors are absorbed by the object.
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Photosynthetic Pigments Chlorophyll: –Two varieties… Chlorophyll a Chlorophyll b They are green. They absorb mainly blue and red light.
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Other pigments Carotenes: orange pigment Xanthophylls: yellow pigment
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Chloroplasts
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Plant Structures Outside coverings –Epidermis: skin on leaf –Cork: bark- not living
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Growing Tissue Meristems: –At top of plant –Actively dividing cells –Makes plant grow taller Cambium: –Below bark –New xylem and phloem tissue –Makes plant grow out/wider
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Animal circulation
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How do plants transport materials?
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Vascular Tissue Xylem: –carries water from roots to leaves Phloem: –Carries sugar from leaves to plant
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The blue cells are phloem cells. The large open vessels are xylem
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Roots Primary roots Secondary roots Root hairs
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Stem structure Herbaceous stems: soft Woody stems: hard
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Leaves Simple leaf
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Complex leaves
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Leaf structure Cuticle: waxy covering Upper epidermis: top layer of cells Palisade mesophyll: tall cells, photosynthesis occurs here Spongy mesophyll: many air spaces for gas exchange Veins: contain xylem and phloem
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How do plants breath?
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Guard cells: open and close the stomate Stomate: an opening in the bottom of the leaf that allows gasses to enter or leave.
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How do plants get water from roots to leaves? Capillary action: water sticks to walls of xylem. Root pressure: water can only go up. Transpiration pull: water evaporating out of leaf pulls up more water.
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How do plants regulate? They have no brain…. So how do they communicate with the rest of the plant?
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Plant hormones Auxins tell plants to grow towards the light.
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Gibberellins tell the plants to grow taller and produce fruit. The grapes on the right were treated with more gibberellins
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Cytokinins: stimulate cell division and seed germination Ethylene: ripens fruit (C2H4 … a gas) Abscisic acid: causes leaves to fall off tree.
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Tropisms: Phototropism: grow towards light Geotropism: tells roots to grow down. Thigmotropism: responds to touch… wrap around things. Hydrotropism: growing toward water.
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How do plants reproduce?
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Flower parts Petals: colorful part (usually) Sepals: green (usually) parts under petals Corolla: all petals together Receptacle: attachment point of flower parts.
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Stamen: male reproductive parts –Anther: contains pollen –Filament: holds up anther
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Pistil: Female reproductive parts –Stigma: sticky end that catches pollen –Style: tube that pollen grows down –Ovary : contains eggs –Ovule: eggs
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Pollination Wind, water, or animals carry pollen from one plant to another.
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Fertilization Pollen grain grows down the style to the ovary and fuses with the egg.
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Fruits Ovary fruit Ovule seed
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Seeds Cotyledon –Dicot: two seed leaves –Monocot: one seed leaf
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Epicotyl: becomes the stem Hypocotyl: becomes the roots
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