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Chapter 2 Lesson 1 Reproduction All living things must reproduce
Chapter 2 Lesson 1 Reproduction All living things must reproduce

... breaks off and continues to grow. Coral reproduce through budding. - Vegetative Propagation – Vegetative propagation happens when a plant produces new plants from leaves, roots, or stems. Runners are plant stems that lie on or under the ground and sprout up as new plants. Strawberries and centipede ...
Cert Bio II - Asexual reproduction Answer
Cert Bio II - Asexual reproduction Answer

... A. The genotype of X and Y are the same B. X and Y will develop into independent plants. C. X and Y are developed from the buds of the potato tuber. D. Food produced by X and Y will be stored in region Z. ...
Plant Reproduction and Breeding
Plant Reproduction and Breeding

... and other animals who will help pollinate the plant while feeding on the plant’s nectar  Flowers may also have strong scents to guide insects and animals at night  Flowers that aren’t as “showy” often depend on the wind to spread their pollen instead ...
Reproduction Notes:
Reproduction Notes:

... 1. ___________ animals (animals that CANNOT move) can reproduce without finding a mate. 2. Allows the production of ___________ offspring in a short period of time b/c all individuals in a population reproduce. Drawback of asexual reproduction: o All of the offspring are _____________ (identical in ...
Seaweed Notes II
Seaweed Notes II

... Part II ...
Ch - ReadingtonScience
Ch - ReadingtonScience

... provides support for the plant, holds up leaves so they are exposed to the sun 12. a seed leaf where food can be stored Sec. 2 Gymnosperms Review and Reinforce 1. needlelike 2. conifer 3. cones 4. pollen 5. ovules or egg cells 6. Answers may vary. Sample: First, pollen falls from a male cone onto a ...
Chapter 5 Vocabulary- From Bacteria to Plants
Chapter 5 Vocabulary- From Bacteria to Plants

... Phloem: the vascular tissue through which food moves in some plants (pg. 141) Xylem: the vascular tissue through which water and nutrients move in some plants (pg. 141) Seed: the plant structure that contains a young plant inside a protective covering (pg. 142) Embryo: the young plant that develops ...
Flower Structure and Function
Flower Structure and Function

... 6. What are the reproductive structures of angiosperms? 7. T or F- Some flowers have male and female parts 8. What are the 4 reproductive parts to flowers? Describe each one. 9. What is fertilization and describe how it occurs? 10. What is pollination? 11. What 2 things attract pollinators? 12. What ...
BIO120 LAB--PLANT DIVERSITY 1-
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... – They are the ultimate/fundamental source of nutrients – Make organic molecules available to other organisms (they fix carbon, make N-available) ...
2. GLE 3.3.A.d: Describe how flowering plants reproduce sexually
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... How does fertilization occur or how is a new seed made? Pollination has to occur before fertilization. Pollination: Pollen that comes from the anther lands on the sticky female stigma. Fertilization is the fusion (coming together) of nuclei from the male pollen grain with nuclei in the female ovule. ...
iii. plant classification
iii. plant classification

... Angiosperms are the most complex and adaptable of all plant groups. They are also the most successful due to two important modifications: A. Fruit - A fruit is a mature _ovary___ that contains one or more seeds. It provides the embryo with greater _protection______ and _protection_________ than foun ...
Kingdom Plantae
Kingdom Plantae

... • Lignin & cellulose in cell Gravity walls Increase in • Vascular Transport Height for Light System Adaptations for • Waxy cuticle & Drier stomata with guard environment cells • Pollen containing sperm Reproduction ...
Plant Adaptations Study Guide
Plant Adaptations Study Guide

... For the seed of a flowering plant to begin to grow, it needs warmth, water, and air. The seed sprouts and becomes a seedling. Animals such as birds and bees feed on its nectar, which helps the plant prepare more seeds. ...
THREE WAYS TO CLASSIFY PLANTS
THREE WAYS TO CLASSIFY PLANTS

... 1. Vascular (all trees, vines, flowers) Non-vascular (moss) 2. Seeds (formed in a cone or fruit) No Seeds (spores in mosses or ferns) 3. Flowers (angiosperms) No Flowers (gymnosperms such as pines, firs, spruces, etc.) ...
Botany 6/16/2014 Kingdom Plantae
Botany 6/16/2014 Kingdom Plantae

... the  cuticle,  then   oxygen  and  carbon   dioxide  cannot   diffuse  either   ii. Stomata  are  small   pores  on  the   underside  of   leaves,  which  open   and  close  to   control   movements  of   water,  carbon   ...
plant-intro-review-b..
plant-intro-review-b..

... 26. One of the first environmental challenges that early land plants had to overcome was finding a way to conserve ____________________. 27. Vascular tissues are specialized cells that move ____________________, nutrients, and other materials through the plant body. 28. True roots, stems, and leave ...
Chapters 23 - 26 - Plant Kingdom
Chapters 23 - 26 - Plant Kingdom

...  3. Plants used as food and non food purposes  Use your textbooks as your main source for this ...
Chapter 24: Evolution and Diversity of Plants
Chapter 24: Evolution and Diversity of Plants

... Multicellular 1n individuals (gametophytes) produce multicellular 2n individuals (sporophytes) Multicellular 2n individuals (sporophytes) produce multicellular 1n individuals (gametophytes) Sporophyte (2n): Multicellular individual that produces spores by meiosis Spore is haploid cell that will beco ...
C3.2 - ruppscience
C3.2 - ruppscience

... 4. Vascular plants such as ferns can grow bigger and taller than nonvascular plants such as mosses. Does this mean they can also capture more sunlight? Explain your response. ...
Plants
Plants

... The leaves use the sunlight to chemically change the carbon dioxide and water into ______________. Sugar This is used as food by the plant and stored for future use. Plants are called Producers _________________ because they do make their own food. ...
Plant Diversity
Plant Diversity

... • Adaptations: – produce their gametes in a "jacket" of protective cells. The protective jacket surrounds a moist chamber where gametes can develop without dehydrating. – Sperm reach the eggs by pollen grains, which are carried by wind or animals ...
ARCTIC PLANT LIFE http://www.aitc.sk.ca/saskschools/arctic
ARCTIC PLANT LIFE http://www.aitc.sk.ca/saskschools/arctic

... to grow in the Arctic? There are ways that plants have adapted. Most of the plants are small, grow close together and close to the ground. This protects them from the cold temperatures and the strong winds. Some flowering plants have fuzzy coverings on the stems, leaves and buds to provide protectio ...
Sexual Reproduction
Sexual Reproduction

... third day. ...
Plant Diversity
Plant Diversity

... 1. seed plants reproduce without water 2. use flowers or cones, pollination, and embryos protected in seeds 3. important evolutionary adaptation ...
The Plant Kingdom
The Plant Kingdom

... – Dicots: Branching veins and petals in multiples of 4 or 5 (draw one) • Ex- Rose ...
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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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