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Chapter 4: Plants
Chapter 4: Plants

... Q. 5: Why are roots important to plants? List three reasons. (page 101) Q. 6: What is the difference between a pistil and a stamen? (page 102) Q. 7: List the eight parts of a flower. Provide a definition of each. Draw a diagram of a flower and label the parts. (pages 102-103) ...
01 - wcusd15
01 - wcusd15

... d. gnetophytes. _____ 17. Three things that conifers are used for are a. building materials, cancer drugs, and gardens and parks. b. paper products, resin, and syrup. c. allergy drugs, leather, and resin. d. building materials, fresh fruit, and gardens and parks. ...
Plant Vocabulary
Plant Vocabulary

... Plant Vocabulary  reproduce: to make more plants of the same kind.  Scientists classify plants into two main groups.  monocot seed: this type of seed has only one part.  A pine tree is a conifer because it makes seeds inside a cone.  dicot seed: this type of seed breaks into two parts.  spore: ...
GYMNOSPERMS
GYMNOSPERMS

... • Embryo • “Wing” in some conifers ...
Ch.24 - Jamestown School District
Ch.24 - Jamestown School District

... consists of an ovary, style, & stigma  Ovary - contains 1/more ovules where eggs are produced  Style - stalk connecting the ovary to the stigma  Stigma - top of the style, where pollen grains land ...
Plant Classification
Plant Classification

... Coniferophyta • Vascular plants that produce seeds on cones • Cone-bearing trees like pine trees • Usually evergreens with needle-like leaves • Produce male and female cones – Male cones produce pollen (contains sperm) – Wind often blows pollen to female cone – Eggs are fertilized in female cone an ...
Reproduction of Seed Plants
Reproduction of Seed Plants

... floral parts. Enclose the bud before it opens, and protect the flower while it is developing. • 2. Petals – brightly colored; attract pollinators to the flower. ...
Word - LangdonBiology.org
Word - LangdonBiology.org

... More advanced organisms spend less time as haploid gametophytes. The pollen tubes that grow down the length of the style are the only haploid gametophyte stages seen in angiosperms. 3. What is the key difference between a bryophyte and a fern (a pteropsida)? The big difference is that ferns evolved ...
Lecture 10, Angiosperms - Cal State LA
Lecture 10, Angiosperms - Cal State LA

... “accessory” parts like the outer tissue of this apple ...
Seed Plant
Seed Plant

... 1. What taxonomic group are bristlecone pines in? 2. What is wood? How is it related to xylem and secondary growth? 3. What are the two major groups of seed plants? Which group most likely evolved first? When? 4. What is meant by the term “living fossil”? Can you provide an example? 5. What does the ...
Plant Growth Jeopardy
Plant Growth Jeopardy

... laying the eggs ...
File
File

... The gametophytes (pollen & ovule) produce gametes (sperm & egg). When gametes fuse, a new sporophyte will develop. ...
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. ...
Seed Plant Notes
Seed Plant Notes

... Seed Plant Notes ...
Plant Kingdom - najicschoolbus
Plant Kingdom - najicschoolbus

... Flowering Plants  There are two groups of flowering plants (Dicots and Monocots)  Groups separated by:  Number of flower parts  Monocots-3’s and 4’s  Dicots- 4’s and 5’s ...
Plant Reproduction
Plant Reproduction

... • Plants have a double life cycle with two distinct forms: • Sporophyte: diploid, produce haploid spores by meiosis. • Gametophyte: haploid, produce gametes by mitosis. ...
Chapter21
Chapter21

... filament anther ...
File - Biology with Ms. Murillo
File - Biology with Ms. Murillo

... •Flowers are reproductive organs that are composed of four kinds of specialized leaves: 1. Petals 2. Sepals 3. Stamens 4. Carpels (also called Pistils) ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... All (well, the vast majority of!) flowering plants fall neatly into two categories the Monocotyledons and the Dicotyledons. These names come from the number of seed leaves or cotyledons (1 or 2) on the embryo in the seed but there are other major differences: Monocotyledons Flower parts in 3's or mu ...
Ch44a-Plant_reproduction
Ch44a-Plant_reproduction

... • Haploid: having a single set of chromosomes in each cell. • Diploid: having two sets of chromosomes in each cell. • Mitosis: cell division, which produces two genetically identical cells. • Meiosis: reduction division, which produces four haploid reproductive cells. ...
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants

... – style is tube leading from stigma to ovary – ovary produces female gametophyte ...
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants

... – style is tube leading from stigma to ovary – ovary produces female gametophyte ...
flowers
flowers

... • “Angiosperm” is Greek for “________ ___________________” ….angiosperms produce their seeds enclosed within a fruit • Diverse group….corn, oaks, water lilies, cacti, and buttercups ...
flowering plants.
flowering plants.

... • Fruit allows for efficient seed dispersal. – Fruit is flower’s ripened ovary – Surrounds and protects seed(s) – Inside the seed is a plant embryo and endosperm (food for the embryo) – Many forms, but each function in seed dispersal ...
Lesson 3 | Plant Reproduction - Kapuk`s E
Lesson 3 | Plant Reproduction - Kapuk`s E

... a. Pollen grains produce sperm b. Pollination ...
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Flowering plant



The flowering plants (angiosperms), also known as Angiospermae or Magnoliophyta, are the most diverse group of land plants. Angiosperms are seed-producing plants like the gymnosperms and can be distinguished from the gymnosperms by characteristics including flowers, endosperm within the seeds, and the production of fruits that contain the seeds. Etymologically, angiosperm means a plant that produces seeds within an enclosure, in other words, a fruiting plant.The ancestors of flowering plants diverged from gymnosperms around 245–202 million years ago, and the first flowering plants known to exist are from 160 million years ago. They diversified enormously during the Lower Cretaceous and became widespread around 120 million years ago, but replaced conifers as the dominant trees only around 60–100 million years ago.
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