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Unit 7: Plants
Wildcats Share
• Brainstorm, with the other person at your table, and make a
list of everything that you use in a day that comes from
plants.
• Brainstorm some characteristics that ALL plants have in
common.
An Overview of Plants
Botany
• The study of plants is __________
Plants
tree
• ________
surround you when you climb a _______,
walk on
nature
nice cool grass, or hike a _________
trail
fruits
flowers
• Plants include trees, _________,
vegetables, _________,
and
field crops
300,000
260,000
• Between __________ and __________ plant species have
been discovered
• Scientists think there are many plant species that have yet to
Tropical ____________
rainforests
be discovered, mostly in _________
An Overview of Plants
microscopic to giant
• Plants range in size from ____________
roots or rootlike structures to hold them in the
• Most have _______
_________
ground or to some other object
adapted to nearly every environment, from
• Plants are _________
_______
polar regions to _________
deserts
• ______
plants need water, but some cannot live unless they
All
are submerged in either ____________
salt water
freshwater or ______
An Overview of Plants
cells
• Plants are made of ______
walls that provide __________
structure and
• Plants cells have cell _______
protection
chlorophyll
• Many plants contain the green pigment ____________,
so
most plants are _______
green
• Plants need chlorophyll to make _______
using a process
food
photosynthesis
called _______________
cell structure called
• Chlorophyll is found in a ______
_____________
chloroplasts
An Overview of Plants
green parts of a plant usually contain
• Plant cells from _______
chloroplasts
many _____________
large
• Most plant cells have a _______,
membrane-bound structure
called the _________
_______ that takes up most of the
Central vacuoles
space inside of the cell
important roll in regulating the
• This structure plays an ___________
_______
water content of the cell
substances
vacuole
• Many ____________
are stored in the _________
An Overview of Plants
first plants that lived on ______
land probably could
• The ______
damp areas
survive only in _______
algae that
ancestors were probably ancient green _______
• Their __________
lived in the ______
sea
organisms that use
• Algae are one-celled or many-celled ___________
food
photosynthesis to make ______
same types of
• Today plants and green algae have the _______
chlorophyll
____________
and carotenoids in their cells
An Overview of Plants
Carotenoids are red, yellow, or orange __________
pigments that
• ____________
also are used for photosynthesis
facts lead scientists to think that plants and
• These ______
green algae have a __________
common ancestor
_______
An Overview of Plants
animals
• The fossil record for plants is not like that for __________
bones or other hard parts that can
• Most animals have ________
fossilize
_________
before they become fossilized
• Plants usually decay ________
fossil plants are about _____
420 million years old
• The oldest _______
early plants are similar to ancient _______
green
• Some fossils of ______
algae
An Overview of Plants
hypothesize that some of these early plants
• Scientists ____________
evolved into the plants that exist today
_________
An Overview of Plants
Cone-bearing
evolved
• ______________
plants, such as pines, probably _________
300 million years
from a group of plants that grew about ______
ago
estimated
• It is ___________that
flowering plants did not exist until
120 million years ago
about ______
origin of flowering plants is _____
not
• However, the exact _______
known
An Overview of Plants
land has some ___________
advantages for plants
• Life on ______
carbon dioxide, needed for
sunlight and _________
• More __________
photosynthesis, are available on land than in ________
water
oxygen
• During photosynthesis, plants give off _________
adapted to life on
• Long ago, as more and more plants _________
atmosphere
_______,
the amount of oxygen in Earth’s _____________
land
increased
organisms that depend on
• This was the beginning of ___________
oxygen
An Overview of Plants
water can perform photosynthesis
• Plants that only live in ________
food
to make their own _______,
and have materials enter and
membrane and cell wall
leave through their cell ____________
everything
survive
• They have ____________
they need to _________,
as long
as they have water
• What do you think would happen to the algae if the pond
dried up?
An Overview of Plants
out of the algae cells,
• As the mud dries up water moves ______
because water moves from areas of higher concentrations to
lower
areas of ________
concentrations
die
• Eventually the algae will _____
land have _____________
adaptations
• Plants that live on ______
that allow
them to __________
conserve water, and other differences that make
is possible for hem to survive
An Overview of Plants
Cuticle
secreted
• _________a waxy, protective layer ___________
by cells
surface of a plants. Covers the stems,
onto the _________
_________,
and flowers of many plants.
leaves
slows
• The cuticle ________
the loss of water
Supporting
• ____________
themselves is another problem for land
plants
walls that contain cellulose to address
• Plants have cell _______
this problem
An Overview of Plants
Cellulose
• ___________-is
a chemical compound that plants can make
sugar
out of ________
long chains, that form tangled fibers,
• Cellulose forms _______
that provide ___________
and support
structure
trees
• Some plants, like _______,
can secrete other substances into
the cellulose that make the cell wall even __________
stronger
• What part of trees can be used for building structures?
An Overview of Plants
• Life on land means that each plant cell is not surrounded by
nutrients that can move _________
directly
water and dissolved __________
into the cell
adaptations
• Through ____________,
structures developed in many plants
that distribute water, nutrients, and food to _____
all plant
cells. Like _______
________ in our bodies
Blood vessels
• These structures also help provide _________
for the plant
support
An Overview of Plants
reproduction were necessary if plants were
• Changes in _____________
survive
too _________
on land
spores helped some
• The presence of water-resistant ________
plants reproduce successfully
seeds
• Other plants adapted by producing water-resistant ________
in _______
cones or in flowers that developed into _______
fruits
An Overview of Plants
• Generally members of a kingdom are divided into phylum's,
divisions
in the plant kingdom they are divided into __________
vascular and nonvascular
• Plants can also be grouped into _________
Vascular plants
carry
• _________
_______- have tube-like structures that _______
water, nutrients, and other substances throughout the plant
Nonvascular_______plants
• ___________
do NOT have these tube-like
structures and use ________
other ways to move water and
substances
An Overview of Plants
pecan tree Carya illinoiensis and a
• Why do biologists call a ________
white ______
oak tree Quercus alba?
naming
• They are using words and ____________
accurately and uniquely _______
the plant
simple system for organizing plants that survived
• There was a ________
until the late _____________
eighteenth century
• At that time _________
________ developed a new system
Carolus Linnaeus
characteristics to _________
classify a
• His new system used many ______________
plant
An Overview of Plants
• Linnaeus also developed a way to name plants and other
Binomial nomenclature
organism called ___________
___________
unique
• Under this system every plant species is given a _________
two-word name
animals and other organisms
• This system is also used for _________
An Overview of Plants
• Binomial nomenclature rules:
Latin
• Every name is in _______
italics
• Names are always in ________
capitalized
• The first same is always _____________
and the second
name is always ____________
lowercase
Seedless Plants
Nonvascular
seeds and they
• _____________
plants, don’t grow from ________
parts other plants have
do not have all the _______
hornwort
mosses
liverwort
Seedless Plants
• Nonvascular plants are usually just a ______
few cells thick and
only _____
2-3 cm in height
stalks that look like stems, and green
• Most have ________
leaflike growths
_________
anchor
Rhizoids
• __________threadlike structures that _________
nonvascular plants to the ground
roots
• These plants have rhizoids instead of _______
Seedless Plants
damp
• Most nonvascular plants grow in places that are _______
directly through
absorbed and distributed _________
• Water is __________
their cell membranes and walls
spores
• These plants reproduce by _________
Seedless Plants
• Most nonvascular plants are classified as _________
mosses
growths
• They are green, leaflike _________,
arranged around a
central _______
stalk
many cells
• Their rhizoids are made of _______
caps grow from moss plants
• Sometimes stalks with ______
Spores are produced in these caps
• ________
Seedless Plants
rocks
ground
• Mosses often grow on tree trunks, _______,
or the ________
damp areas
• They are commonly found in _______
deserts
• Some mosses have adapted to living in _________
Seedless Plants
Liverworts are another group of nonvascular and seedless
• ___________
plants
ninth century, liverworts were thought to he useful
• In the _______
in treating diseases of the ______
liver
• The suffix –wort means “______”,
so the work liverwort
herb
means “herb for the _______”
liver
• These plants have __________
flattened leaflike bodies
one
• They usually have ______-celled
rhizoids
Seedless Plants
hornworts
• The last group are ___________
2.5 cm in diameter and have a
• These are less than _____
flattened body like liverworts
__________
chloroplast in each of
• Almost all hornworts have only one ___________
their ______
cells
• Hornworts get their name from their spore-producing
structures
____________,
which look like tiny horns of ________
cattle
Seedless Plants
Mosses and liverworts are important in the _________
ecology of
• _________
many areas
moist
• Although they require ________
conditions to grow and
____________,
many of them can withstand long, ______
reproduce
dry
periods
thin soil and in soils where other plants
• They can grow in ______
could ______
not grow
Seedless Plants
Spores of mosses and liverworts are carried by the
• ________
wind
_______
growing
• They will grow into plants if __________
conditions are right
new or
• Mosses often are among the first plants to grow in ______
lava fields or after a
disturbed environments, such as ______
________
forest fire
first to grow
• _________
_______- organisms that are the ______
Pioneer plants
in new or disturbed areas
Seedless Plants
die
• As pioneer plants grow and ______
decaying material
builds up
________
rocks builds _____
soil
• This along with the slow breakdown of _______
organisms can more
• When enough soil has formed, other ___________
into the area
Seedless Plants
vascular
• Seedless __________
plants
ferns and mosses are alike in ______
one way, both
• _______
seeds
reproduce by spores instead of ________
mosses because they have
• Ferns are different from _________
_________
vascular tissue
Seedless Plants
seedless
• The vascular tissue in __________
vascular plants is made up
tube-like
of long __________
cells
nutrients
• These cells carry water, ___________,
and food to cells
throughout the plant
Nonvascular plants are usually only a ______
few cells thick
• _____________
because each cell _________
absorbs water ________
directly from the
environment
large
• As a result these plants cannot grow _______
Seedless Plants
Vascular plants can grow ________
bigger and thicker because
• __________
they vascular tissue ___________
distribute water and nutrients to all
plant cells
1,000 species of ground pines, spike
• Besides ferns about ________
horsetails
mosses and __________are
known to exist
12,000 known
• Ferns are more abundant with at least ________
species
• Many species of seedless vascular plants are known only
from ________
fossils
Seedless Plants
warm moist
• These kinds of plants flourished during a _______,
360
268
period ______-______million
years ago
15 meters
• Fossil records show that some horsetails grew ____
tall, unlike modern species which grow only ______
1-2 meters
tall
• What do you think allowed these plants to get so tall in the
past?
Seedless Plants
ferns
• The largest group of seedless vascular plants is the ________
stems
roots
• They have ________,
leaves, and _______
fronds
• Ferns leaves are called _________
spores
• Ferns produce _________
in structures that are usually
found on the ___________of
their fronds
underside
Seedless Plants
Thousands
• ____________
species of ferns now grow on Earth, but many
long ago
more existed ______
clues left in rock layers, scientists infer that about
• From _______
______
360 million years ago much of Earth was _________
tropical
swamps covered large areas
• Steamy _________
ferns that grew as tall
• The tallest plants were species of _______,
25 meters
as _____
tree ferns are ______
3-5 meters tall and
• Most modern _______
grow in _________
tropical regions of the world
Seedless Plants
• Ground pines and spike mosses are groups of plants that
often are called ______
club mosses
ferns
mosses
• They are more closely related to _______
than to _________
Needle-like
• These plants have _____________
leaves
stems
Spores are produced at the end of the _________
• ________
in
pine cones
structures that look like tiny _______
Ground pines are found from ________
arctic regions to the
• _________
tropics
Seedless Plants
large
• Ground pines are rarely found in ________
numbers
endangered because they have
• In some areas, they are ____________
been over collected to make wreaths and other __________
decorations
Seedless Plants
Spike
• ________
mosses resemble ground pines
resurrection plant, is
species of spike moss, the _____________
• One _________
adapted to desert conditions
water is scarce, the plant curls up and seems
• When ________
________
dead
available
• When water becomes ___________,
the resurrection plant
unfurls and its _________
leaves and begin making _______
green
food
again
Seedless Plants
stem structure of ___________
horsetails
• The _______
is unique among the vascular plants
jointed and has a
• The stems is _________
hallow center surrounded by a ring of
vascular
___________
tissue
• At each joint, leaves grow from
_________
around the stem
Seedless Plants
spores in a cone-like structure at the
• Horsetails produce _________
tips of some of its stems
______
silica
stems contain ________,
• The ________
a gritty substance found in
sand
polishing
• For centuries horsetails have been used for ___________
objects, _____________
tools, and scouring cooking utensils
sharpening
rush
• Another common name is scouring _______
Seedless Plants
seedless
• When many ancient ___________
plants died they became
water
submerged in _________
and mud before they decomposed
built
compacted
• As this plant matter ________
up, it became ____________
and eventually turned into _______
coal
millions
• This process to __________
or years
bogs
• Today a similar proves is taking place in _______,
which are
drained areas of land that contain decaying plants
poorly _________
mosses and
• These plants are mostly seedless plants like __________
ferns
Seedless Plants
waterlogged
• When bog plants die, the _____________
soil slows the
decay
_________
process
decaying
• Over time, these ___________
plants are compressed into a
substance called _______
peat
mined
fuel
• Peat is _________
from bogs and used as a low-cost _______
in places like Ireland and Russia
Seedless Plants
One-third of Ireland’s energy
• Peat supplies about ___________
requirements
layers
• Scientist hypothesize that over time, it additional _________
compact
of soil bury, __________,
and compress the peat, it will
become ______
coal
Seedless Plants
houseplants or use them to
• Many people keep ferns as _____________
shady
landscape _________
areas
weaving
• They also can be used as____________
material for
__________
basketry
mosses are also used for gardening
• Peat and sphagnum _________
conditioner
• Peat is an excellent soil _____________
line
• Sphagnum mosses are often used to _______
hanging
baskets
Seedless Plants
eaten
some seedless vascular plants can be ________
• Parts of ________
• Seedless plants have been used as folk ___________
medicine for
hundreds of years
Seed plants
food
• A lot of our ________
comes from seed plants
seed
• Most of the plants you are familiar with are ________
plants
roots
• Most seed plants have leaves, stems, ________,
and vascular
tissue
embryo
• They produce seeds that usually contain an __________
and
stored ________
food
energy
• The stored food is the source of __________
for the
embryo’s early _________
growth as it develops into a plant
Seed plants
identified in
• Most of the plant species that have been ___________
the world today are ________
plants
seed
• Seed plants are generally classified into two major groups,
gymnosperms
_______________
and _____________
angiosperms
Seed plants
leaves
• Most seed plants have _________
food
organs
• Leaves are the _________
of the plant where the ________
making process usually occurs
shapes
colors
• Leaves come in many _________,
sizes, and ________
Seed plants
Seed plants
leaf
layers
• A typical _______
is made of several different __________
of
cells
lower surface of a leaf is a _______
thin
• On the upper and ________
layer of cells called the ____________,
which covers and
epidermis
__________
protects the leaf
• A waxy _________
coats the epidermis of some leaves
cuticle
Stoma
opening
• _________small ___________
in the epidermis which allow
carbon dioxide, water and __________
to enter and exit the
oxygen
leaf
Seed plants
Guard cells
• ________
_______- open and ________
the stoma
close
palisade
• Just below the upper epidermis is the ___________
layer
long
• It consists of closely packed, _______,
narrow cells that
usually contain many _____________
chloroplasts
• Since this layer contains a lot of chloroplasts what do you
think this layer might make a lot of?
• Why do you think it if beneficial for this layer to be under the
upper epidermis and not closer to the bottom of the leaf?
Seed plants
• Between the palisade layer and the ________
epidermis is
lower
the __________
layer
spongy
cells separated by ______
air
• It is a layer of loosely arranged _______
spaces
veins containing vascular tissue are found in the
• In a leaf, _______
_________
spongy layer
Seed plants
• The ________
of a tree is really the stem of a tree
trunk
above
• Stems are usually located _________
ground and support
the branches, leaves, and _______________
structures
reproductive
• Materials move between leaves and roots through the
__________
tissue in the stem
vascular
Seed plants
• Plant stems are either _____________
or _________
herbaceous
woody
soft and ________
green
• Herbaceous stems usually are _______
• Examples:
rigid
• Woody stems are hard, ________,
and woody
• Examples:
Seed plants
• The ________
system of most plants are as larger or larger
roots
aboveground
than the _______________
stems and leaves
Water
enter
• _________
and other substances _________
a plant through
its roots
• What structure do you think roots have that allows them to
move these substances to other areas?
Seed plants
anchors
• Roots act as __________,
preventing plants from being
wind
blown away by ________
or washed away by moving
water
________
part or all of the root structure are
• Sometimes _______
aboveground
______________
too
food
• Roots can store _______
• Example:
Carrots
Seed plants
growing
• Plants that continue __________
from year to year use this
growth
stored food to begin new __________
in the spring
dry areas often have roots that store
• Plants that grow in ______
__________
water
large
• The root systems of plants must be ________
• How could planting a large tree close to a building cause a
problem?
Seed plants
vascular
• ________
tissues usually make up the ___________system
Three
in a seed plant
Xylem
hollow
• _________-tissue
made up of __________,
tubular cells that
stacked
are __________
one on top of the other to form a structure
called a _________
vessel
dissolved
• These vessels transport water and ____________
substances
from the roots ______________
the plant
throughout
support
• The thick cell walls also help __________
the plant
Seed plants
Phloem
tubular
• __________a plant tissues also made up of __________
tubes
cells that are stacked in form structures called ________
vessels
• Tubes are different from _________
food from where it is made to other
• These move ________
________
stored
parts of the plant where it is used or _________
Seed plants
Cambium
• __________tissue __________
between the xylem and phloem that
cells
produces most of the new xylem and phloem _______
thickness
• This growth increases the____________
the thickness of
stems and ________
roots
Seed plants
• The __________
trees alive are gymnosperms
oldest
Gymnosperms
• _______________vascular plants that produce seeds that
that are not ___________
by _______
protected
fruit
Greek
• The word gymnosperm comes from the _________
language
and means “________
_______”
Naked seed
flowers
• These plants do not have __________
Needle-like
• Leaves are _____________
or scale-like
Seed plants
evergreens
• Many gymnosperms are called ____________
because some
________
green leaves always remain on their branches
• Gymnosperms can be broken up into four divisions:
__________,
cycads, ____________,
and gnetophytes
conifers
ginkgoes
• All conifers produce _______
two types of cones, male and
female
• _______
types usually are found on the _______
same plant
Both
female cone but not on the male
• Seeds develop on the _________
Seed plants
Angiosperms
flowers
• ______________vascular plant that __________
and
seeds
produces fruits with one or more ________
flower
fruit develops from the _________
• The _______
familiar
• Angiosperms are very ___________
because they grow
almost _____________
everywhere
• More than _______
half the known species of plants belong to
this division
Seed plants
size
• The _________
of angiosperms vary in ______,
shape, and
flowers
color
_______
recognized easily
• Some plants have flowers that are not ____________
as flowers
flower
• Some _________
parts develop into a fruit
two groups, the monocots
• Angiosperms are divided into ______
dicots
and the ________
Seed plants
cotyledon
food
• A ___________
is a part of a seed often used for _______
storage
Monocots
one cotyledon inside their seeds
• ____________have ______
• Examples: Rice, corn, wheat, bananas
Mono = one
• ________
two cotyledons inside their seeds
Dicots
• __________have ______
• Examples:
Peanuts, green beans, peas, apples
Seed plants
• The life cycles of angiosperms vary greatly
• Some plants complete their life cycle in less than a
month
________,
others can take as long as a __________
century
• Angiosperms that complete their life cycles within a
annuals
________
are called _________
and must grow from seeds
year
every year
Biennials complete their life cycle within ______years
two
• ___________
• Angiosperms that take more than two years are called
____________
perennials
Seed plants
Seed plants have many uses in our daily lives
• ________
Paper
cotton
• _________,
wood for desks, and __________
for clothes
bread come from seed plants
• Fruits and ________
Milk
• ________,
hamburgers and hot dogs come form animals that
eat
______
seed plants
Seed plants
Conifers
• ___________
are the most economically important
gymnosperm
wood
paper
• Most of the _________
used for construction and ________
production comes from these trees
Resin
• ________,
a waxy substance secreted by conifers, is used to
soap paint, and some medicine
make chemicals found in _______,
Seed plants
• The most economically important plants on Earth are the
angiosperms
_____________
diets
• They form the basis of the ________
of most animals
grew
• First plants that humans ________
fibers used in clothing
• Also a source of many of the ________