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chapt 22
chapt 22

... a bus ticket, went to the east coast and shipped out in a menial job on a broken down freighter. Twenty-five years later, captain of his own vessel, owner of a small freighter fleet and with a major interest in a few oil tankers, he indulged in a nostalgic whim and returned for the first time ever, ...
Goal 4: Unity and Diversity of Life
Goal 4: Unity and Diversity of Life

... Respiration: CO2, H2O and O2 move in and out of leaf through stomata Synthesis: photosynthesis Reproduction: sperm is now inside a pollen grain ...
Goal 4: Unity and Diversity of Life
Goal 4: Unity and Diversity of Life

... Respiration: CO2, H2O and O2 move in and out of leaf through stomata Synthesis: photosynthesis Reproduction: sperm is now inside a pollen grain ...
Eating plants
Eating plants

... including non-food uses of plants. Get the children to source examples and create a floor book or picture montage. Teacher worksheet 3 offers some examples of uses of plants. ...
1. Outline the angiosperm life cycle.
1. Outline the angiosperm life cycle.

... vegetative reproduction in plants including fragmentation and apomixes. • Fragmentation  the separation of a parent plant into parts that re-form whole plants (one of the most common types) • Apomixes  in dandelions and others - produce seeds without their flowers being fertilized - a diploid cell ...
Review #8 – Chapters 35 – 39
Review #8 – Chapters 35 – 39

... e. gibberellins ...
Pine seed - Cloudfront.net
Pine seed - Cloudfront.net

... Pollen grain burrows into ovule Cell undergoes meiosis to make 4 haploid megaspores; one survives and grows into the multicellular gametophyte 2 or 3 archegonia, each with an egg, develop inside More than a year after pollination, eggs are ready to be fertilized – pollen tube grows through One zygot ...
Warm-Up
Warm-Up

... (by 2 sperm) ...
flower_parts_(p._20_IO)
flower_parts_(p._20_IO)

... Their main job for the plant is: •Develop into seeds & fruits = Sexual reproduction •Reproduce the plant. ...
BIOCHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BIODIVERSITY
BIOCHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BIODIVERSITY

... especially widespread, forming extensive deposits of partially decayed organic material known as peat. Boggy regions dominated by this moss are called peatlands. Sphagnum does not decay readily, in part because of phenolic compounds embedded in its cell walls. The low temperature, pH, and oxygen lev ...
Reproduction
Reproduction

... • Asexually – Basically, the making of genetically identical clones. No exchange of DNA occurs. • Sexually – The fusion of two different gametes (sperm and egg) to create a Zygote (fertilized egg) that has variation. – Remember, variation is the key to survival in changing environments. ...
test 4 - Northern Illinois University
test 4 - Northern Illinois University

... complex multicellular bodies. Two characteristics shared by charophytes and plants but no other groups  are sporopollenin, a tough polymer that protects spores and seeds, and the phragmoplast, a structure  that dividing cells use as a scaffold to build their cell wall on.   ...
Adaptations of Common Daisy (Bellis perrenis)
Adaptations of Common Daisy (Bellis perrenis)

... Small rounded spoon shaped leaves, that grow in a rosette formation are evergreen. Leaves are 2-5cm long. Leaves may be hairy The flower heads are 2-3cm wide, with white petals often with a red tip. They are produced on a leafless stem, 210cm tall. ...
document
document

... 1. The flower is the defining reproductive adaptation of angiosperms. The flower is an angiosperm structure specialized for sexual reproduction. A flower is a specialized shoot with up to four circles of modified leaves: sepals, petals, stamens, and ...
The Ferns - Science 10 With Mr. Francis
The Ferns - Science 10 With Mr. Francis

... • Landscaping, horticulture and the florist industry • Useful in removing heavy metals like arsenic from the soil • Decomposed ferns are a component of coal formation ...
Flower Dissection Lab
Flower Dissection Lab

... the pistil. The ovary contains one or more ovules. Special cells within the ovule undergo meiosis to form ova (eggs). Use the bolded terms above the label the flower structures below ...
Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes)
Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes)

... Water hyacinth ...
Plant Classification (Nonvascular)
Plant Classification (Nonvascular)

... nutrients by photosynthesis. They have plastids which contain chlorophyll A, Chlorophyll B, and carotenoids and the cells have walls consisting of Cellulose. Natural History – Plantae belong to the Supergroup Archaeoplastida whose members engulfed a cyanobacteria. The first plants appear in the foss ...
PPT
PPT

... nutrients by photosynthesis. They have plastids which contain chlorophyll A, Chlorophyll B, and carotenoids and the cells have walls consisting of Cellulose. Natural History – Plantae belong to the Supergroup Archaeoplastida whose members engulfed a cyanobacteria. The first plants appear in the foss ...
Slide 1 - Images
Slide 1 - Images

... • Terrestrial arthropods have internal fertilization. • Aquatic arthropods may have internal or external fertilization. ...
Plants
Plants

... E = tulip ...
Parts of a Plant Labeling Parts of a Flower:
Parts of a Plant Labeling Parts of a Flower:

... The flower is the reproductive unit of some plants (angiosperms). Parts of the flower include petals, sepals, one or more carpels (the female reproductive organs), and stamens (the male reproductive organs). The Female Reproductive Organs: The pistil is the collective term for the carpel(s). Each ca ...
Incomplete - Watermelon.org
Incomplete - Watermelon.org

... 4. Label sepal, anther, filament, stigma, style, and ovary. 5. Write the words - calyx, stamen, and pistil in their correct location on the piece of cardboard with a marker. 6. Look for an ovule and label it. ...
Tuesday January 25, 2005 BIOL L100 Indiana University Southeast
Tuesday January 25, 2005 BIOL L100 Indiana University Southeast

... Hard covering around sperm, light weight allows travel by wind Removes water requirement for fertilization ...
File
File

... – Style- the tube-shaped connection between the stigma and ovule (it elevates the stigma to help catch pollen) – Ovule- the structure that contains the female reproductive cells (after fertilization it will develop into a seed). ...
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Plant reproduction



Plant reproduction is the production of new individuals or offspring in plants, which can be accomplished by sexual or asexual reproduction. Sexual reproduction produces offspring by the fusion of gametes, resulting in offspring genetically different from the parent or parents. Asexual reproduction produces new individuals without the fusion of gametes, genetically identical to the parent plants and each other, except when mutations occur. In seed plants, the offspring can be packaged in a protective seed, which is used as an agent of dispersal.
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