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Seed Plants
Seed Plants

... Seeds are totally exposed or carried on the scales of cones The ovary wall does not surround the ovule ...
Art Plant Evolution The of
Art Plant Evolution The of

... suggests that these plants are relatively primitive angiosperms. This led some botanists to formerly believe that they were the closest relatives of the monocots, whose flowers are also in whorls of three. The flowers of Aristolochia gigantean are enormous, foulsmelling, and characterised by deep ma ...
Article 141 Updated List Araujia sericifera Moth catcher
Article 141 Updated List Araujia sericifera Moth catcher

... from Gauteng province south-eastwards to the KZN coast as well as pockets of infestation in the coastal regions of the Eastern and Western Cape. Luckily there are very few in evidence around Wilderness. That certainly does not mean that the moth catcher can be ignored locally - plants don’t need leg ...
Activity 29/30
Activity 29/30

... not contain any xylemlike vessels, however, nor do they have roots. This provides evidence for the coevolution of transport systems. In the ocean, a food transport system evolved, and this allowed organisms like the giant kelp to evolve. With efficient food transport systems, photosynthetic parts of ...
Classifying Ornamental Plants
Classifying Ornamental Plants

...  The adaptations that plants have made to survive in different climates allows for them to be classified into one of four major groups: ...
Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land
Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land

... -green & red algae (K. Protista) charyophyceans ...
Lithops (NE Brown) - Central Arizona Cactus and Succulent Society
Lithops (NE Brown) - Central Arizona Cactus and Succulent Society

... Nicholas Edward Brown first separated Lithops (stone plant) from Mesembryanthemum as a genus. They had amazed Europeans since the late 1700s for their resemblance to stones. They are stem less, sometimes clustering, top-shaped paired-leaf plants whose flat leaf tops are normally at soil level, forma ...
Ch. 21
Ch. 21

... broad, or flat structure of a plant that traps light energy for photosynthesis (contain chloroplasts) 3. Putting down roots a. ___________– a plant organ (“anchor”) that absorbs water and minerals from the soil and transports those nutrients to the stem (ex: some are food: carrots, radish…) 4. Trans ...
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... 3) In order for a seed to come out of a dormancy state, conditions have to be ideal. Ideal conditions depend of the seed type but they include factors like moisture, temperature and _________________. 4) A _________________ is the stalk that supports the anther. 5) __________________ means bending t ...
1 -Plant Diversity & Life Cycles I
1 -Plant Diversity & Life Cycles I

... Plants 'breathe' too, but they do it through tiny openings in leaves called stomata (singular: stoma). Stomata open and close to allow the intake of carbon dioxide and the release of oxygen. ...
the plant kingdom
the plant kingdom

... NONFLOWERING VASCULAR PLANTS Example: CONIFERS (CONIFERIPHYTA) VASCULAR TISSUE SEEDS ON CONES NO FLOWERS OR FRUIT ...
Non-seed Plants
Non-seed Plants

... 2. do NOT have supporting structures, they grow close to the ground (what supports them) ___ 3. do NOT have tubes to transport materials, water and minerals move cell to cell because they are so small 4. always live in moist areas – do not worry about water loss 5. DO have “spores” with a water proo ...
Pollination There are two main groups of plants on planet Earth
Pollination There are two main groups of plants on planet Earth

... Spores are microscopic specks of living material. Ferns and mosses are spore-producing plants. A fern, for example, produces spores on the undersides of its leaves. The spores look like brown patches or pads. When spores are scattered on the soil they produce new fern or moss plants. ...
Plants!!!
Plants!!!

... plants!! - Their seeds are surrounded by a fruit. - They make up 90% of all plants alive today ...
Document
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... Flowers – anise flowers (licorice), basil; http://homecooking.about.com/library/weekly/blflowers.htm Good rule of thumb: if you didn’t get it at the store, DON’T EAT IT! ...
Plant Responses: Hormones
Plant Responses: Hormones

... • Includes: mosses, liverworts, hornworts • First land plants; had to overcome obstacles – avoid drying out (desiccation) – live in moist areas – develop a means of support (roots and stems) – develop new reproductive methods – obtaining nutrition – No vascular tissue, so they are close to the groun ...
Chapter21
Chapter21

... • “Naked” seeds gnetophytes, ginkgos, conifers, cycads ...
Plant Book 15-16 -
Plant Book 15-16 -

... • taproot—grow long and deep to reach water below the surface. Ex. Carrots, radishes  fibrous—branched root system that grows close to the surface helps prevent soil from being washed away by rain. *Plants can have taproots, fibrous roots or both* 5) Apical Meristem: area of root where cell divisio ...
Honors - Fulton County Schools
Honors - Fulton County Schools

... http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/anisamples/majorsbiology/moss.html ...
Notes: Plant Diversity
Notes: Plant Diversity

... b. water c. minerals – nutrients in soil d. Gas exchange 1. require carbon dioxide (CO2) for photosynthesis 2. require oxygen (O2) for cellular respiration e. Specialized tissues - carry water and nutrients C. Plant life cycle – Alternation of Generations a. Alternation of generations - 2 alternatin ...
Evolution of plants
Evolution of plants

... Because they could not conduct water, they must have lived only in wet environments. ...
GYMNOSPERMS
GYMNOSPERMS

... • First “real” secondary growth • Reproduced with spores • Upper Devonian until early Carboniferous ...
L A cell is the basic unit of all living things. Life processes are the
L A cell is the basic unit of all living things. Life processes are the

... water to make glucose (sugar) which they use for food. Plants then give off oxygen as a waste gas. Roots absorb water and anchor the plant into the ground. Stems connect the roots to the leaves and keep the plants upright. The leaves are the food-making factory of plants. Leaves take in CO2 and sunl ...
Name__________________________________
Name__________________________________

... _______________ plants in soil o to prevent plant from being blown away by wind or washed away by moving water _______________ all of the plant parts that are above the ground- stem, branches and leaves food _______________ ex. Beets and carrots some absorb oxygen and carry out photosynthesis types: ...
iii. plant classification
iii. plant classification

... E. Stomata – Opening in underside of leaf that allows ______________________ to enter; ____________________ to exit. F. Guard Cells – Control size of ________________________. Work to preserve balance between allowing for gas exchange without losing too much _________________________. “Plant sweat” ...
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Evolutionary history of plants

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