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Tall Pepperwort/Perennial Pepperweed
Tall Pepperwort/Perennial Pepperweed

... Lepidum latifolium ...
5th and 6th grade Ch 4 test Notes:
5th and 6th grade Ch 4 test Notes:

... 1) Stomata – holes in the epidermis that allows water and gasses pass 2) Guard Cells – open and close Stomata 3) Transpiration – water loss through Stomata 4) Cuticle – Waxy layer – slows water loss D) Photosynthesis 1) Process in which plants make glucose and releases oxygen 2) Takes place in the m ...
Gymnosperms and Angiosperms
Gymnosperms and Angiosperms

... • Sepals are leaf-like structures that protect the flower when it is a bud • Petals are colorful leaf-like structures • Petals vary from plant to plant. In fact, not all flowers have petals! ...
3rd quarter days
3rd quarter days

... moves away from the plant via the wind or other pollinators (birds & bees) ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... -a vegetative cell -its nucleus regulates the enzymes that regulate the gametophyte including pollen tube growth after fertilization -two sperm cells -- function? From Biology of Plants p.266 P. Raven, R. Evert and S.Eichhorn Worth Publishers, New York, 1992 ...
Plant Concept Map.indd
Plant Concept Map.indd

... There may be over a half-million species of plants growing on Earth. Many have not even been identified yet or classified. Scientists have an enormous task as they try to locate, identify, and classify new species. They use a man-made classification system and apply it to nature to gain more organiz ...
PLANTS - Home - Darlington Middle School
PLANTS - Home - Darlington Middle School

... Seed-Producing Plants  Reproduce through seeds  Seeds contain the plant embryo (beginnings new plant)  Seeds also have stored food (cotyledons)  Two major groups are cone-bearing and flowering ...
Reproduction
Reproduction

... by budding ...
Ch 5 Seed Plants
Ch 5 Seed Plants

... • Roots anchor a plant in the ground and absorb water and nutrients from the soil. • The tip of the root is rounded and is covered by a root cap. • The root cap protects the root from injury from rocks as the root grows through the soil. ...
File - Mrs. Roberts` Science Resource Page
File - Mrs. Roberts` Science Resource Page

... And herb-like cone-bearing plants (Gnetophyta) such as Ephedra. ...
Plants
Plants

... • Primary Growth Apical meristems located at the tips of shoots and roots produce primary growth. The tissues that result from primary growth are known as primary tissues. • Secondary Growth Secondary growth increases a plant’s stem and root width. In woody stems, secondary growth is produced by the ...
Name: Period: Date: Lesson 1-6 Study Guide Lesson 1: What are
Name: Period: Date: Lesson 1-6 Study Guide Lesson 1: What are

... develop into a fruit. 6. Germination then begins. 5. Explain what happens inside the flower after pollination. - When the sperm nucleus and egg nucleus unite fertilization occurs causing the ovule to turn into a seed and the ovary to turn into fruit. 6. What do you think will develop as the flowers ...
Vascular Plants •This is the largest group in the Plant Kingdom
Vascular Plants •This is the largest group in the Plant Kingdom

... •Seed-producing plants are plants that reproduce through seeds. Seed plants make their own seeds. •Seeds contain the plant embryo (the beginnings of roots, stems, and leaves) and stored food (cotyledons) and are surrounded by a seed coat. From those seeds, new plants grow. •There are two major group ...
Plant Processes
Plant Processes

... • Some plants, especially hybrids, do not reproduce true to ...
Bio22013Plantae (renee) File
Bio22013Plantae (renee) File

... Plants can be classified according to the presence or absence of vascular tissue. Vascular tissue is the tissue that supplies water and the products of photosynthesis throughout a plant. Plants lacking vascular tissue are called bryophytes. Plants which have vascular tissue are called ...
Biology Plant Classification
Biology Plant Classification

... 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 ...
LECTURE OUTLINE
LECTURE OUTLINE

... evolution of plants is marked by four events: protection of a multicellular embryo, evolution of vascular tissue, evolution of the seed, and evolution of the flower. Alternation of Generations All plants have a life cycle that includes alternation of generations. In this life cycle, two multicellula ...
Chapter 22 Plant Diversity
Chapter 22 Plant Diversity

... Flowering plants have unique adaptations allowing them to dominate in today’s world. •Flowers allow for efficient pollination. The stamen is the male reproductive structure (pollen grains contain the sperm). The pistil or carpal is the female reproductive structure. –animals feed on pollen or nectar ...
May12
May12

... No support because no vascular tissue ...
Plant Study Guide
Plant Study Guide

... water and minerals, which travel to all other parts of the plant; some roots store food. 3. two main types of roots a. taproots-main root that stores food; ex. Carrot and dandelion b. fibrous roots-a system of branching roots; ex. Grass 4. stem- the part of the plant that connects its roots and leav ...
Cell Division and Asexual Reproduction
Cell Division and Asexual Reproduction

... • Only one organism is needed to reproduce • All the offspring are genetically identical to each other and to the parent organism • A single organism can produce large numbers of offspring ...
Chapter 12 Notes
Chapter 12 Notes

... 3. Root cap- roots grow longer at the tip, so the root cap protects the tip of the root and produces a slimy substance that helps it slide through the soil. ...
Plant Kingdom cont.
Plant Kingdom cont.

... corn, seeds can be found everywhere. Seeds are so common that their importance may be overlooked. Over millions of years, plants with a single trait - the ability to form seeds - became the most dominant group of photosynthetic organisms on land." (Levine, 564) ...
1 2006S Bio153 Lab 6: Gymnosperms and Angiosperms July 24th
1 2006S Bio153 Lab 6: Gymnosperms and Angiosperms July 24th

... Coevolution occurs when 2 species exert selective pressures on each other, resulting in evolutionary changes in both species. Certain flower morphs have evolved independently several times in response to the characteristics of the pollinators that visit them. These morphological types are often refe ...
Biology 11
Biology 11

... with is diploid ferns live? • fragile gametophyte ...
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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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