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Plants and Their Adaptations Different Methods of Reproduction Nonvascular Plants • Mosses and liverworts live in damp places so that they can soak in water from cell to cell without xylem and phloem tubes • Nonvascular plants are smaller than vascular because of this • Nonvascular plants do NOT have roots, stems and leaves, but have parts that look similar • Nonvascular plants do NOT have flowers with seed so they must reproduce with spores • Spore = a single reproductive cell that grows into a new plant • Mosses produce male and female cells on separate plants. These cells unite and produce a spore stalk that grows from the female plant. The spore stalk releases spores. (Page A80) Simple Vascular Plants • Ferns and horsetails are simple vascular plants. • Millions of years ago, ferns covered much of the earth but today they are mostly found in the tropics • There are fewer horsetail plants that are small. Years ago, people used dried horsetail plants to scrub pots and pans • Simple vascular plants produce spores similar to nonvascular plants. • The difference is that in simple vascular plants, the united cell is called a zygote and it divides and grows into a separate spore-like producing plant. (Page A81) Cone-Bearing Vascular Plants • Spore-producing plants make many spores, while seed-producing plants make fewer seeds • Seeds have a better chance of growing than spores because the seeds contain food supplies • Most vascular plants produce seeds ▫ ▫ Seeds with no protection Seeds with fruit as protection • Gymnosperms = unprotected seeds that mainly come from cone-bearing plants (pine trees) • Male and female cones are on the same tree. Male cones have pollen • Pollen = structures that contain the male reproductive cells • Female cones can be ¾ inch to 2 ft. in size. They are covered with plates called scales. • Male and female cones reproductive cells unite and form a zygote that divides and grows into seeds. • Dry weather causes the scales to open and the seeds to be released. Flowering Vascular Plants • Angiosperms = flowering plants • Almost all our food comes from angiosperms • Angiosperms are pollinated by the wind like gymnosperms but also by insects and small animals • Colors, shapes, and smell of the flowers causes insects and animals to be attracted to them and allow them to carry the pollen from one flower to another • Angiosperm seeds are protected by the fruit of the plant…apples, oranges, peanuts, tomatoes, etc. • Seed protection happens in many ways ▫ Inside keeps the birds from eating it ▫ Protects the seeds in cold weather ▫ Rotting fruit provides extra food for a new plant Comparing Life Cycles • Animal and plants both have life cycles and stages they go through during their lifetime (page A84) • Some animals look like their parents • Some animals don’t look like their parents • Flowering plants are very different from their parent plants (page A84) ▫ Embryo starts inside the seed ▫ Seed sprouts and the embryo grows into a seedling ▫ As the seedling grows, it looks more and more like the plant it came from