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Unit 8 Plant Reproduction Scientific Basis Unit Breakdown This unit examines the processes of plant reproduction, through which the perpetuation of species is achieved. Students have covered the morphology of plants and their classification as trees, bushes and grasses in previous books of the series. This unit focuses on plant reproduction. The study of sexual reproduction is limited to flowering plants. The study centers on the morphology of the organs responsible for plant reproduction—stamen, pistil, and the like—and on ordering the processes involved—pollination, fertilization and germination. In the first lesson, students will investigate the differences between sexual and asexual reproduction. In the second lesson, students will review the parts of a flower and learn characteristics of fruits and seeds. In the final two lessons, students will explore pollination, fertilization and germination—fundamental steps in plant reproduction. Contents Unit Outline Concepts Plant Reproduction Types of plant reproduction. The flower as a reproductive organ. Fruits and seeds: types, functions and dissemination. Types of Plant Reproduction Flowers, Fruit and Seeds From Flower to Fruit Germination and Growth Stages of reproduction. The life cycle of plants. Seasonal changes in plants. Cultivation of plants. Procedures Solution of problems related to plant reproduction. Society/ Investigate Greenhouses/ Animal Pollination Health Education Wash Fruit before You Eat It Interpretation of diagrams, sequences and graphs. Test Your Knowledge Chronological ordering of the processes involved in plant reproduction. Attitudes Interest in learning more about plants. Appreciation of the importance of plants and interest in caring for them. Development of habits associated with the protection and conservation of ecosystems. 100 8 Plant Reproduction LOOK 1. Plants. • How many different types of plants can you see in the photograph? Describe them. • How are they different? • Which of the plants have flowers? 2. This photograph was taken in spring. Imagine the landscape in winter. Draw it. • Would you see the same plants in winter? Would there be any flowers? • What would the trees look like? Notes W H AT D O Y O U K N O W ? 1. Answer the questions. • Why do we plant seeds? • What part of a plant contains seeds? • Is a potato a type of fruit? What about a tomato? 2. Taking care of a plant. Bring a geranium in a flowerpot to class. Answer these questions. • What do plants need to grow? How should we take care of the geranium? Take care of the geranium for a year. Check your answers to the questions. 81 Look Have students look at and describe the photo. In pairs, have them answer the questions. Ask some pairs to report their answers to the class. What do you know? Ask students if they have plants at home and where they keep them. Invite them to describe their plants and to talk about where they came from, who takes care of them, what they need to live, and so on. Have students answer the questions. Encourage them to take care of a geranium or similar plant in the classroom. Answer Key Look: 1. • Two (trees and grasses). The trees are tall with a brown trunk and green leaves. The grasses are short with green stems and leaves and pink flowers. • The trees are taller and have thicker stems. • The grasses. 2. • Yes. No. • The evergreen trees in the background would look the same. The deciduous tree in the foreground would not have leaves. What do you know? 1. • To grow new plants. • The fruit or the cone. • No (the potato is a tuber, or underground stem). Yes. 2. • Soil, water, air and light. We should water it often, fertilize it, put it in a suitable place and replant it in a bigger pot as it grows. 101 1. Types of Plant Reproduction 1. Types of Plant Reproduction tuber Concepts Types of plant reproduction. The flower as a reproductive organ. Vocabulary Asexual reproduction, bud, bulb, cutting, female sex cell, flower, leaf/leaves, male sex cell, seed, sexual reproduction, stem, stolon, tuber. stolons bulb The bulb and leaves of an onion. The tuber and flowers of a potato plant. Materials Photographs of a variety of plants. Types of Plant Reproduction This lesson may be used to review the following language: There are two kinds of plant reproduction: sexual reproduction and asexual reproduction. • The part of the plant responsible for sexual reproduction is the flower. • Asexual reproduction occurs when a new plant grows from the stem or leaves of an existing plant. All plants can reproduce by sexual reproduction. Some plants can reproduce by both methods. Might Sexual Reproduction The fruit of one might be smaller than the fruit of the other. Flowers are responsible for sexual reproduction in plants. A male sex cell and a female sex cell unite inside a flower. The fruit and seeds develop from the flower. Later, a new plant develops from a seed. When a plant reproduces by sexual reproduction, there are differences between the parent plant and the offspring plant. For example, the color of their flowers might be different. The fruit of one might be smaller than the fruit of the other. One might be more resistant to certain illnesses than the other. Some plants, like ferns, do not have flowers. However, these plants also produce sex cells and are capable of sexual reproduction. Expressing Concepts Focus on Science Questions Human and Plant Reproduction 1. How do plants reproduce? Review students’ knowledge of human reproduction: What organs are there in the male and female reproductive systems? What occurs during fertilization? (A male and a female sex cell unite.) How does a baby change as it grows? 2. How can a new plant grow from an existing plant? Explain that flowers also have male and female organs, which produce male and female sex cells. The offspring of many plants are very similar, but not identical, to the parent plants. The offspring of some plants (those that can reproduce asexually) are identical to the parent plants. Elicit the names of the parts of a plant and the functions they perform (leaves—nutrition and respiration; stem—support for the flower and leaves, transportation of sap; roots— absorption of water and nutrients from the soil; flowers—reproduction). 102 The flowers and stolons of a strawberry plant. 3. What do flowers do? 82 Types of Plant Reproduction Show photos of plants and ask students to identify the parts (root, leaves, stem, flowers). Have students read the text and answer Questions 1 and 2. Sexual Reproduction Ask students how animals and plants are similar (e.g., they grow, feed, breathe, reproduce and die). Then have them review the process of fertilization in humans (a male and a female sex cell unite in a fallopian tube). Explain that plants also have male and female organs that produce male and female sex cells. Unlike most animals, which are either male or female, most plants have both male and female organs in their flowers. Ask students to read the text and answer Question 3. Explain that sexual reproduction is so called because the process involves sex cells. Asexual Reproduction Have students read the text and look at the photos on page 82. Ask them what the main difference between sexual and asexual reproduction is (sex cells are not involved in asexual reproduction). Compare and Analyze Cuttings Asexual Reproduction The stem or leaves of a plant are involved in asexual reproduction. Tubers, bulbs and stolons are types of stem. • Tubers are stems in the soil. Buds sprout from the tubers. The buds produce new plants. • Bulbs are also underground stems. Bulbs have a bud inside them. The bud produces a new plant. • Stolons are stems above the ground. New stolons produce new plants. When a plant reproduces by asexual reproduction, the new plant is identical to the original plant. Plants that reproduce by asexual reproduction can also reproduce by sexual reproduction. Language Skills: Writing Cuttings allow us to grow new plants from existing adult plants. To grow a plant from a cutting, first take an existing plant. Cut off a branch with several leaves. When you plant the branch, roots will grow out of it. The roots take hold in the soil and the branch begins to grow and develop. This kind of asexual reproduction does not happen naturally. It is a technique we use to produce specific plants, like geraniums and roses. Parks and Gardens Have students write a detailed description of a public park they know well, where there are a variety of trees, shrubs, flower beds, and the like. Alternatively, have them write detailed descriptions of the trees and plants in their yards or gardens. Cross-Curricular Connection Geranium Environmental Education: Deforestation and Reforestation • Explain what you must do to grow a geranium from a cutting. • Do plants reproduce from cuttings naturally? Why or why not? Tulips have flowers and bulbs. Materials: Construction paper (1 sheet per pair). Discuss the problem of deforestation in many parts of the world, where trees are cut down for lumber or to make way for road construction or farmland. Deforestation can result in desertification of some areas, causing drought, reduction of food supplies for many animals and destruction of their habitats. Activities 1 Complete the sentences. sexual reproduction asexual reproduction • Bulbs, tubers and stolons are involved in • The potato plant can reproduce by Flowers are responsible for in 2 • involves the sex cells. • involves stems and leaves. . and by . . Which of the following sentences is correct? Explain. a) Some plants can reproduce sexually and asexually. b) If a plant reproduces sexually, it cannot reproduce asexually. 83 In pairs, have students make illustrated charts with the three types of asexual reproduction and their characteristics. Point out that some animal groups also reproduce asexually. A starfish (an echinoderm) can grow from a single arm of an adult starfish. Have students do the Activities in pairs. Have some pairs report their answers to the class. Elicit the meaning of the word reforestation. Discuss how our knowledge of plants and their reproductive processes (e.g., the time of year they are fertilized or if they can reproduce asexually) makes it possible to grow new trees where older trees used to be. In pairs, have students make posters promoting reforestation. Activities Answer Key: 1 • asexual reproduction. • asexual reproduction; sexual reproduction; sexual reproduction. • Sexual reproduction. • Asexual reproduction. 2 Sample answer: Sentence a) is correct. All plants can reproduce sexually; some plants, like the onion, the potato and the strawberry, can also reproduce asexually. Compare and Analyze: Cuttings Ask students what decorative plants they have at home. Have them read the text. In pairs, have them discuss and do the activity. Answer Key: • Take an existing plant and cut off a branch with several leaves on it. Plant the branch. • No. A branch cannot fall off and plant itself voluntarily. 103 2. Flowers, Fruit and Seeds 2. Flowers, Fruit and Seeds The Parts of a Flower Fleshy Fruits corolla pistil Concepts The flower as a reproductive organ. Fruits and seeds: types, functions and dissemination. stamen stigma anther style filament ovary sepal petal Vocabulary Anther, calyx, corolla, filament, fleshy fruit, nut, ovary, petal, pistil, sepal, stamen, stigma, style, sunflower. calyx Nuts protective casing nut Chickpeas Almond nuts on an almond tree. Chestnut The Parts of a Flower Expressing Concepts This lesson may be used to review the following language: Adverbs of frequency Flowers usually have several stamens. Focus on Science Questions Plant Reproduction 1. Describe flowers. Materials: Flowers, scalpels (per pair); paper. Focus students’ attention on The Parts of a Flower diagram on page 84 of their books. Divide the class into pairs and distribute materials. Have each pair cut a cross section of their flower, draw it and label the parts. Display students’ diagrams around the classroom. Encourage students to compare the parts of different kinds of flowers. The fruit of a blueberry bush. Seeds Materials Photographs of a variety of flowers. Explain that, like all other living things, plants eventually die. To ensure the perpetuation of the species, they have to reproduce themselves. Emphasize that a flower has male and female parts, and that, as in other types of sexual reproduction, both male and female sex cells are necessary to create new plants. The fruit of a strawberry plant. The flower is the reproductive unit of flowering plants. The parts of a flower include the following: corolla, calyx, pistil and stamen. • The corolla is the colorful part of the plant. Petals form the corolla. • The calyx is at the bottom of the flower. Sepals form the calyx. The sepals are small green leaves that protect the flower before it opens. • The pistil has three parts: a stigma, a style and an ovary. The ovary produces the female sex cells, called ovules. The style is usually shaped like a bottle. The tip of the pistil is called the stigma. • The stamen has two parts: a filament and an anther. The anthers produce pollen. The male sex cells, or sperm, are in the pollen. Flowers usually have several stamens. 2. Describe seeds. 3. What kinds of fruit and nuts are there? 84 The Parts of a Flower Show photos of flowers and ask students to identify the different parts, using The Parts of a Flower diagram. Explain that some parts of a flower, such as the pistil and the stamen, are related to reproduction, while others, such as the calyx (the collective term for the sepals) and petals, protect the other parts. Petals also attract animals, which play a role in plant reproduction. Point out that there are a great variety of flowers: some have fused petals, such as the bellflower; some have many stamens, such as the honeysuckle; others have few, such as the orchid. Have students read the text. Encourage them to locate on the diagram the parts mentioned in the text. Then have them answer Question 1. Ask students to copy the diagram in their notebooks and label the parts with short texts describing their functions. Then have them do Activity 1. Seeds Explain that some fruits, such as the strawberry, have their seeds on the outside, but other fruits have their seeds on the inside. Have students read the text and answer Question 2. 104 Look Seeds The Sunflower Is Not a Flower Seeds form inside fruit. Some fruit, like the peach, only have one seed. Other fruit, like the apple, have several. Seeds have a protective covering. The covering of some seeds, such as peas, is very thin. Other seeds are harder, like watermelon seeds. The covering of some seeds is hard and thick, like the apricot seed. Although the sunflower looks like a flower, it is not a single flower. A sunflower is a group of many flowers. Language Skills: Reading The Colon special leaves that protect the flowers Fruits Ask students to find sentences with colons in the text (The parts of a flower include the following: corolla, calyx, pistil and stamen. The pistil has three parts: a stigma, a style and an ovary.). Ask what function the colon has (to introduce a list of related items). stigma After fertilization, part of a flower develops into a fruit. • Fleshy fruits accumulate water. Grapes, cucumbers, apples, oranges, strawberries, peppers, etc. are all fleshy fruits. • Nuts do not accumulate water. Acorns, chestnuts, almonds, peanuts, etc. are all nuts. anthers flowers petals A Single Flower Write the following notes on the board and have students turn them into complete sentences using a colon in each: • Describe a sunflower. What are its flowers like? • What other plant has flowers in groups but looks like a single flower? Activities 1 reproduction—sexual, asexual the stamen—filament, anther Read the key words. Look at the pictures. Put the key words in the correct box. Explain what each part of the flower does. stigma petal anther filament ovary Cross-Curricular Connection Art: Paper Flowers Materials: Paper, construction paper, green paper, tissue paper (various colors), modeling clay, thin and regular wire. 2 Draw the following fruit with their seeds in your notebook. Complete the tables. peach, melon, apricot, plum, tomato, cucumber, apple, pear, green pepper Fruit with One Seed Fruit with Several Seeds Seeds with a Thin Covering Seeds with a Thick Covering 85 Fruits Explain that some seeds are often mistaken for nuts (e.g., brazil nut, almond, pistachio). The term fruit refers to the container for the seeds; this may or may not be edible. Have students read the text, look at the photos of fruits and answer Question 3. In pairs, have students do Activity 2. Ask students to study carefully The Parts of a Flower diagram on page 84 of their books. Then, using the diagram as a guide, have them design and make three-dimensional models of flowers. Show them how to use wire wrapped in green paper for the stem, construction paper for the sepals, tissue paper for the petals, thin wire for the style and the filaments, and small balls of modeling clay for the stigma and anthers. Activities Answer Key: 1 Clockwise from top left: petal, stigma, filament, anther, ovary; petal, stigma, anther, ovary, filament. The stigma is part of the pistil. The petals protect other organs and attract animals. The anthers produce the male sex cells. The filaments support the anthers. The ovary produces the female sex cells. 2 One Seed: peach, apricot, plum. Several Seeds: melon, apple, cucumber, pear. Thin Covering: green pepper, apple, melon, tomato, cucumber, pear. Thick Covering: peach, apricot, plum. Look: The Sunflower Is Not a Flower Explain that sunflowers turn during the day so that their flowers always face the sun. Have students read the text and answer the questions. Answer Key: • It looks like a single flower, but it is made up of many small flowers. The stigma has two parts. The stamens are short. The anthers are joined. • The daisy. 105 3. From Flower to Fruit 3. From Flower to Fruit stigma 1 2 petal pollen grains stamen with pollen Concept Stages of reproduction. stigma Vocabulary Blossom, cross-pollinate, fertilization, fertilize, germinate, pollen grain, pollination, self-pollinate, wind. ovary The pollen grains open and the male sex cells appear. 3 4 fertilization male sex cell Expressing Concepts female sex cells The wind pollinates this bulrush. Pollination Conjunctions: so, because Other plants have small green flowers, so animals do not notice them. This happens because the wind or animals transport the seeds. Focus on Science Pollination Materials: Photos of a variety of flowers. Explain that pollen is a fine powder produced in the anthers (the male parts of the flower). Pollen contains the male sex cells. For fertilization to take place, these male sex cells have to come in contact with the female sex cells of the same or a different flower. Many plants, especially grasses, use wind to transport their pollen. The flowers of these plants often have small green petals. Other plants rely on animals to transport their pollen from one flower to another. The flowers of these plants are usually large and colorful, to attract the animals. Display photos of flowers and have students say if they are windpollinated or animal-pollinated. 106 Parts of the ovary will turn into fruit. Fertilization of a Pea Plant This lesson may be used to review the following language: Ask students if they (or members of their families) are allergic to pollen. Ask at what time of year their sensitivity tends to increase and to explain why (during spring and summer, when flowers produce pollen for fertilization). The fertilized cells will turn into seeds. Questions 1. What is pollination? 2. How are plants fertilized? 3. What do the seeds do? Plants with flowers reproduce sexually. This happens when pollen from the stamen reaches the pistil. Pollination is the transfer of pollen from the male part to the female part of flowers. Some plants self-pollinate. The pollen comes from the stamens of the same plant. Other plants cross-pollinate. The pollen comes from the stamen of another plant of the same species. The wind and certain animals can transfer pollen from one flower to another. • For example, the wind transports the pollen of wheat flowers. The pollen can reach the flowers of many different wheat plants. • Some animals and insects, like hummingbirds and bees, also transport pollen. When bees land on flowers to feed, pollen sticks to their bodies. They then carry the pollen from one flower to another. Bees pollinate rosemary flowers, for example. Plants that rely on animals for pollination have brightly-colored flowers or strong smells to attract the animals. Other plants have small green flowers, so animals do not notice them. The wind transports the pollen of these plants. 86 Pollination Have students look at and describe the photo. Explain that the powder is pollen, which contains the male sex cells. For reproduction to take place, these sex cells have to come in contact with the female sex cells, produced in the ovary. Plants have adapted in different ways to ensure that the male sex cells come in contact with the female sex cells (pollination). Pollination occurs only in plants of the same species. In some species, wind and animals transport the pollen between plants that are far from each other. Have students read the text and answer Question 1. Explain that the appearance of a flower is related to its method of pollination: flowers that rely on animals for pollination are often brightly colored or strong smelling; wind-pollinated flowers often do not have petals and are not immediately recognizable as flowers. Sometimes certain colors attract specific animals, such as yellow and blue for bees, and red and yellow for birds. Fertilization In pairs, have students study the Fertilization of a Pea Plant diagram and describe the process. Have them read the text and answer Questions 2 and 3. Look Traveling Fruit Fertilization Language Skills: Writing The fruit of a dandelion is very light. Its seed is very small. The seed is attached to a stem with a blossom at the top. When the wind blows, it carries the fruit with it. For this reason, dandelion seeds can germinate a long way from the plants they come from. Most plants do not have flowers throughout the year. They flower during their reproductive season, usually in spring. A mature flower produces sex cells: male sex cells, or sperm, in the anthers and female sex cells, or ovules, in the ovary. During reproduction, a female cell unites with a male cell. The reproductive process is as follows: 1. The anther produces a lot of pollen grains. The pollen grains contain the male sex cells. 2. The pollen grains fall on the stigma. 3. The pollen grains open and the male sex cells come out. The male sex cells penetrate the pistil. 4. Fertilization occurs inside the ovary. That is where the male and female sex cells unite. After fertilization, the fertilized cells become seeds and part of the ovary turns into a fruit. The seeds fall to the ground and germinate. This produces new plants. Some seeds germinate a long way from the plants they come from. This happens because the wind or animals transport the seeds. Stages of Fertilization Materials: Paper (1 sheet per group). Divide the class into small groups. Have each group copy the Fertilization of a Pea Plant diagram on a sheet of paper and write captions describing each stage around it. a lot of fruit a single fruit Display students’ diagrams around the classroom. blossom seed stem • Could the fruit be transported by the wind without its blossom? • Could it be transported by the wind if the seeds were big and heavy? Cross-Curricular Connection Health Education: Medicinal Plants Activities 1 Complete the sentences. a) Pollination is b) The Explain that a number of plants can be used for medicinal purposes, such as chamomile, aloe vera, lime, rosemary, willow and arnica. Ask students if they have ever taken medication derived from a plant and, if so, what it was, what it was for and which plant it was derived from. Point out that not all plants are medicinal and that, on the contrary, some are highly poisonous. . and are involved in pollination. c) In self-pollination, the pollen from a flower's stamen falls on the plant. of the d) In cross-pollination, the pollen from a flower's stamen falls on the of a plant. e) During fertilization, a f) Fertilization takes place in the 2 sex cell unite. of a flower. Explain the differences between: a) pollination and fertilization. b) female sex cells and male sex cells. 3 sex cell and a c) pollen and male sex cells. d) seeds and female sex cells. Which parts of a flower are involved in fertilization? 87 Have students look in their homes for medicinal products derived from plants. Ask them to present reports on what the products contain and what ailments they treat. Have students do the Activities in pairs. Have each pair compare answers with another pair. Then have several pairs report their answers to the class. Activities Answer Key: 1 a) the transfer of pollen from the stamen to the pistil. b) wind; animals. c) stigma; same. d) stigma; different. e) male; female. f) ovary. 2 Sample answers: a) Pollination is the transfer of pollen from the stamen to the pistil. Fertilization is the union of a male and female sex cell. b) Female sex cells (ovules) are produced in the ovary and male sex cells (sperm) are produced in the anthers. c) Pollen contains the male sex cells. d) Seeds form after the female sex cells unite with the male sex cells in the ovary. 3 The pistil and the stamens. Look: Traveling Fruit Explain that dandelions have yellow petals; after fertilization, they look like the one pictured in the book. Have students read the text and answer the questions. Answer Key: • No (the blossom allows it to float in the wind). • No. 107 4. Germination and Growth 4. Germination and Growth Bean Germination Concepts Stages of reproduction. The life cycle of plants. Seasonal changes in plants. Vocabulary Cross section, deciduous, evergreen, germinate, germination, life span. 1. The root comes out. 2. The root and the stem grow. 3. The leaves form. Expressing Concepts 4. The root and the stem continue growing. The existing leaves grow. New leaves come out. Germination This lesson may be used to review the following language: A seed produces a new plant through the process of germination. A seed must fall to the ground and have water to germinate. A bean germinates in various stages. First, the bean becomes buried in the soil. Later, a small root grows downward. Then the stem starts to grow. Finally, the leaves grow. Some seeds need special conditions to germinate. For example, some need to spend the cold months of winter in the soil to be able to germinate in spring. Adverbs of sequence First, the bean becomes buried in the soil. Later, a small root grows downward. Growth Focus on Science Germination in Different Seeds Questions Materials: Different seeds (e.g., beans, corn), blotting paper, glass jar, sand. Have students line the inside of a glass jar with wet blotting paper and fill it with sand. Tell them to keep the paper moist throughout the experiment. Have students place different seeds between the paper and the glass and watch them germinate. Ask students to measure the growth of the seeds over a few weeks and draw line graphs of their development. Have students compare how the seeds germinate: Which seed germinates the fastest? Are there differences in the kind or number of leaves? Which appears first, the root or the stem? Are all the leaves the same? 1. What is germination? 2. How does germination happen? 3. How long do plants live? 4. How do trees change during the year? A plant grows gradually after germinating. It keeps growing until it becomes an adult plant. Some plants, like trees, keep growing throughout their lives. The life span of plants varies a lot. In general, trees can live for many years. Other plants, like poppies, live for only one year. The seasons of the year affect the life of plants. Plants flower in spring. Their fruit and seeds grow and mature in summer. Some plants lose their leaves in autumn. Their branches are bare during winter. 88 Germination Ask students what plant parts are involved in asexual reproduction (tubers, bulbs, stolons). Clarify that seeds are produced only in sexual reproduction. Explain that some seeds require special conditions to germinate. The case of a mistletoe seed needs to be cracked inside a bird’s digestive system and then fertilized by its excrement in order to germinate. Have students study the Bean Germination diagram and read the text. Then have them answer Questions 1 and 2 and do Activity 1. Growth Ask students what plants need to live (nutrients, water, suitable light, soil and temperature). Mention that annual plants grow from seeds and die in the same year, biennial plants in two years and perennial plants in many years. Some plants live much longer than the longest-living animals. For example, there are bristlecone pine trees in the western United States that are nearly 5,000 years old. Ask students to read the text and answer Question 3. 108 Look and Compare How Can We Measure the Age of a Tree? Trees throughout the Year Trees change throughout the year. For example, trees flower in spring. Reproduction also takes place in spring. The leaves on trees also change. Evergreen trees have leaves all year long. For example, pine trees are evergreen. Deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn. For example, apple trees are deciduous. Language Skills: Speaking We can calculate how old a tree is by counting the rings on a cross section of its trunk. Each ring represents one year of growth. The rings generally vary in color and thickness because tree growth varies from year to year. The longest-living plant is believed to be a species of pine tree called the bristlecone pine. Some bristlecone pines are 4,850 years old. This means that they were alive when the Egyptians were building the pyramids. If Trees Could Talk Invite students to imagine that trees are able to talk and recount all the things they have seen in their long lives. Divide the class into pairs and have each pair choose a local tree. Then have each pair write an interview in which the tree describes how it looked when young, how it grew over the years and the changes it has seen throughout its life. Have pairs act out their interviews. A lot of plants have lost their leaves by winter. Cross-Curricular Connection Growth Rings of a Tree • Why does the number of rings on a trunk tell us how old the tree is? • Which live longest, plants or animals? Discuss. These plants grow new leaves in spring. Language Arts: The Changing Seasons Ask students what season it is. Have them describe the landscape, focusing on the stages of life of the plants. Activities 1 Elicit observations about how the trees change throughout the year. Have students describe the trees around the school and ask them to predict what changes they will undergo in subsequent seasons. Remind them that not all trees lose their leaves in autumn. Complete the sentences. Stages of Germination 1. A 2. The 2 is buried in the soil. grows 3. Then, the . 4. Finally, the grows. grow. Explain how plants change throughout the year. Give examples. 89 Trees throughout the Year Explain that many plants flower in spring. The fertilized flowers produce fruits in the summer, the fruit falls to the ground in autumn and the seeds germinate the following spring. Have students read the text and answer Question 4. Ask students to name evergreen and deciduous trees (e.g., evergreen—pine, spruce, cypress; deciduous—oak, maple, beech). In pairs, have them do Activity 2. Activities Answer Key: 1 1. seed. 2. root; downward. 3. stem. 4. leaves. 2 Sample answer: Apple trees flower in spring. The fruit ripens in summer. In autumn, the fruit falls to the ground and is eaten by animals or rots. The seeds are exposed. The seeds germinate the following spring, producing a new plant. Look and Compare: How Can We Measure the Age of a Tree? In small groups, ask students to read the text and to discuss and answer the questions. Clarify that one year’s ring comprises a dark and a light ring. Answer Key: • Because a new ring appears every year. • In general, plants live longer. Invite students to write poems on the subject of the changing seasons. Worksheet 15 Stages of Plant Reproduction Preparation: Photocopy page 140 (1 per student). Answer Key: 1. 4—fruits and seeds; 5—germination; 1—flowers; 3—fertilization; 2—pollination. 2. See preceding answer. 3. 1. flowers; flowers form. 2. pollination; insects and the wind carry pollen from one part of the flower to another or from one plant to another. 3. fertilization; pollen fertilizes the ovules of the same or another plant. 4. fruits and seeds; fruits and seeds develop. 5. germination; new plants form. 109 SOCIETY Society/Investigate Greenhouses What Are Greenhouses? Greenhouses are enclosed areas where we grow plants. We grow plants for food in many greenhouses. We also grow plants to decorate the streets and our homes. A lot of the peppers, green beans, tomatoes, roses and tulips that we see in markets grow in greenhouses. Concept Cultivation of plants. Vocabulary Fertilizer, greenhouse, humidity, nectar, pollen. We grow decorative plants like geraniums in greenhouses. Expressing Concepts Cultivating Plants In greenhouses, we can control everything that affects plant reproduction and growth. We can keep the temperature and humidity at optimum levels. We can give each plant the water and fertilizer it needs. We can also give the plants substances to keep them healthy. Consequently, the plants grow quickly. They produce fruit several times a year. This lesson may be used to review the following language: Could For example, you could only buy cucumbers in summer. Monitoring plants in a greenhouse. The Advantages Growing plants in greenhouses gives us a lot of fruit all year long. Not long ago, each fruit had its season. For example, you could only buy cucumbers in summer. Now you can buy cucumbers at any time of the year. This is because we grow them in greenhouses. Focus on Science Cultivation of Plants Discuss the fact that humans have cultivated plants for food for thousands of years; to learn how to do this, ancient peoples had to observe plants and learn about their methods of reproduction. Divide the class into groups. Set a time limit and have groups make lists of plants that humans can eat. Have them sort the plants into those that grow locally and those that do not. Name different plant foods and have students say if they are available all year round or only at certain times of the year. Ask students if it is possible to cultivate plants not native to an area or out of season and how. Explain that the artificially controlled conditions of a greenhouse permit the cultivation of a large variety of plants all year round. We also grow fruit in greenhouses, like these peppers. 1 Describe the greenhouses in the photographs. • How big are they? • What materials are they made of? • What plants do we grow in them? 2 What are the advantages of growing plants in greenhouses? 3 Find out about the greenhouses in your community. What plants grow in them? 90 Greenhouses In groups, have students brainstorm answers to this question: What are the advantages of growing plants in greenhouses? (Greenhouses provide food at any time of the year, regardless of the environmental conditions outside.) Have students look at and describe the photos. In pairs, have them read the text and do the activities. Answer Key: 1 • They are very big. • They are made of metal and glass. • Fruits, vegetables and flowers. 2 Sample answer: We can control the conditions to make the plants grow quickly. We can grow plants all year round. The plants produce flowers and fruits several times a year. 3 Sample answer: geraniums, pansies, daisies, cacti, peppers, tomatoes, strawberries. Animal Pollination Have students identify the animal in the illustrations. Then have individual students describe the process of pollination orally. Elicit the names of other animals that transport pollen (e.g., hummingbirds, bees, butterflies). Have students do the activities. 110 INVESTIGATE Animal Pollination 1 Look at the pictures. 1 Language Skills: Writing 2 3 4 Class Cookbook Materials: Paper, yarn. 2 Put the sentences in the correct order. Write them in the table. The pollen from the stamen sticks to the bat’s face. The bat drinks the nectar of the cactus flower. The pollen on the bat’s face comes into contact with the stigma of another cactus flower. The bat flies away from the flower with a lot of pollen on its face. HEALTH EDUCATION Divide the class into pairs. Ask students to write recipes for dishes containing fruits or vegetables. Explain that a recipe should begin with a list of ingredients, including the quantity of each, followed by instructions, along with the utensils needed, for preparing the dish. Pollination of a Cactus Flower 1. Bind the finished recipes together with yarn to make a class cookbook. Invite individual students to give their classmates cooking classes. 2. 3. 4. Cross-Curricular Connection Wash Fruit before You Eat It Social Studies: Plant Foods around the World You can eat some fruit, like apples, with the skin still on. The skin contains nutrients too and is good for your teeth. Before you eat fruit, wash it well to remove dirt and other substances. These substances can get on the skin of the fruit while the plant is growing. It can also get on the skin when the fruit is transported or sold. Materials: Reference books on history, computer with Internet access. Grapevine • Why should we wash fruit before eating it? • Make a list of fruits that we can eat with the skin still on. How do you normally eat fruit? 91 Answer Key: 2 1. The bat drinks the nectar of the cactus flower. 2. The pollen from the stamen sticks to the bat’s face. 3. The bat flies away from the flower with a lot of pollen on its face. 4. The pollen on the bat’s face comes into contact with the stigma of another cactus flower. Wash Fruit before You Eat It Ask students where the fruit they eat at home comes from. Ask if they grow fruits or vegetables at home. Invite students to talk about their favorite fruits and vegetables. In pairs, have students read the text and answer the questions. Answer Key: • To remove dirt and other substances, which may make us sick. • Sample answer: Apples, pears, peaches, plums, grapes. I normally eat fruit with the skin on. Explain that although some plants are now cultivated virtually all over the world, this was not always the case. In groups, ask students to look for information about fruits and vegetables (e.g., sugarcane, corn, tomatoes, potatoes, pineapples) brought from one part of the world to be cultivated in another, such as from Europe to the Americas. Have each group prepare a presentation on a fruit or vegetable, including maps, illustrations, fruits and vegetables. Worksheet 16 Plants through the Seasons Preparation: Photocopy page 141 (1 per student). Answer Key: 1. 1. Spring. 2. Flowers attract insects and other animals. 3. Fruit develops from the ovary and seeds from the fertilized ovules. 2. 1—It has flowers; Spring. 2—It has fruit and leaves; Summer. 4—It does not have any leaves; Winter. 3—Its leaves are falling; Autumn. 111 Test Your Knowledge Test Your Knowledge 1 Copy and complete the diagram. Plant Reproduction Reinforcement Activities involves Sexual Reproduction in Animals and Plants involves leaves these produce In groups, ask students to explain the similarities and differences between fertilization in animals and plants. Encourage them to use illustrations to aid their explanations. for example sex cells bulbs 2 female Complete and answer. a) Copy the pictures. Label the parts. b) Write these sentences in the correct boxes: • The pollen grains in the stamen fall on the stigma of the pistil. • The female sex cells and the male sex cells unite inside the pistil. • The pollen grains open. The male sex cells appear and move to the inside of the pistil. c) What is this process called? What is the result? Sexual and Asexual Reproduction Ask students to find out how these plants reproduce: potato, apple tree, rose bush, onion, pepper, strawberry. Fruits and Seeds 1 Show photos of different fruits and ask these questions: What plant does it come from? How many seeds does each fruit have? What type of seed coat does it have? 2 3 Seeds Ask students to write an explanation, including diagrams, in answer to the question How do plants make seeds? 3 Garden Centers • Formation of the fruit and seeds. • Fertilization. Take students to a garden center and have them find out how different plant species are propagated. Assessment 8 Flowering Plants Preparation: Photocopy page 113 (1 per student). Answer Key: 1. 1. Petals protect other parts of the flower and attract animals. 2. The stigma is where the pollen from another flower is deposited. 3. The ovary produces the female sex cells (ovules). 4. The anthers produce the male sex cells (pollen). 5. The sepals protect the flower before it opens. 2. 1. When pollen falls on the stigma of the same plant. 2. When pollen falls on the stigma of another plant. 3. When wind carries pollen from the stamen of one plant to the stigma of another. 4. When animals carry pollen from the stamen of one plant to the stigma of another. 5. When a male sex cell and a female sex cell unite in the ovary. 112 Put these stages in the correct order. Complete the diagram. • Development of the plant. • Appearance of the flowers. 1. 2. Pollination. 3. 6. 5. Germination. 4. 92 Have students do the activities in pairs or groups. Encourage them to look back in the unit for information they do not remember. Answer Key: 1 asexual; involves stem, leaves; for example: bulbs, tubers, stolons. sexual; involves flowers; these produce sex cells; female, male. 2 Answers given clockwise from top left: a) 1. petal; pollen grains; style. 2. female sex cells; pollen grain; male sex cell; ovary. 3. female sex cell; ovary; fertilized cell. b) 1. The pollen grains in the stamen fall on the stigma of the pistil. 2. The pollen grains open. The male sex cells appear and move to the inside of the pistil. 3. The female sex cells and the male sex cells unite inside the pistil. c) Pollination. The result of pollination is the production of fertilized cells that will turn into seeds. 3 1. Appearance of the flowers. 2. Pollination. 3. Fertilization. 4. Formation of the fruit and seeds. 5. Germination. 6. Development of the plant. Assessment 8 Name: Date: Flowering Plants 1. Label the parts of the flower with the words in the box and describe their functions. (5 points) petals stigma sepals anthers ovary 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 2. Define the terms. (5 points) 1. Self-pollination: 2. Cross-pollination: 3. Wind pollination: 4. Pollination by animals: 5. Fertilization: PHOTOCOPIABLE Science 5 © 2003 Santillana Educación, S. L./Richmond Publishing 113