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Plants Unit Test Study Guide Standard 6-2.1: 1. What 4 things do all living things share? Grow/develop, obtain resources, respond to stimuli, reproduce 2. Autotrophs provide their own food for energy through photosynthesis? 3. Heterotrophs must find an external source for food? 4. This is any change in an organism’s surroundings that will cause the organism to react. stimulus 5. A reaction to a stimulus is called a? response Standard 6-2.2: 6. The 7 levels of classification from biggest to smallest are? Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species 7. The genus is the first word in an organism’s scientific name. 8. The species is the second word in an organism’s scientific name. 9. Organisms from the same species are similar and can breed together to produce a young of the same kind. Standard 6-2.3: 10. These plants have true roots, stems, and leaves. vascular 11. These plants do not have a well-developed system for transporting water and food and get their resources from the environment. Examples are liverworts, mosses, and hornworts. nonvascular 12. The ________ in the stem transports water from the roots to the leaves. xylem 13. The ________ in the stem transport food made in the leaves to the plant. phloem 14. What are the 2 major groups of seed-producing plants called? Flowering and cone-bearing 15. This is the beginnings of roots, stems, and leaves and is found in the seed surrounded by the seed coat. embryo 16. Where do flowering plants grow their seeds? What can the seed become? In ovary, fruit 17. Conifers produce ___________ in cones, not flowers. seeds 18. A seed with one food storage area, petals in 3’s or multiples of 3’s, and long and slender leaves are called? monocot 19. A seed with two food storage areas, petals in 4’s or 5’s, and wide leaves with branching veins are called? Dicot Standard 6-2.4: 20. Name 3 structures for defense plants have. Poisons, thorns, thigmotropism 21. The leaves are the main structure that functions as the food producer for plants. The three things that leaves do are respiration, transpiration, and photosynthesis. 22. What is the function of a stem? Hold the plant up to light 23. These help anchor the plant in the ground, absorb water/nutrients from the soil and store extra food. roots 24. These help to increase the root’s surface area. Root hairs 25. This type of root has several main roots that branch off to form a mass. Fibrous root 26. This type of root has one large main root with smaller roots branching off. taproot 27. These flower parts are colorful or have a scent to attract insects and other animals. petals 28. The male part of a flower that has an anther on a filament is called the? stamen 29. The male part of a flower that makes pollen is called the? anther 30. The female part of a flower is called the? pistil 31. This is the part of the flower that contains the ovules where the egg cells are produced. ovary 32. The sticky top of the flower where pollen grains land is called the? stigma 33. The female stalk down which the pollen tube grows after pollination is called the? Style Standard 6-2.5: 34. What is germination? Seat coat breaks open and roots start to grow 35. This process is when pollen transfers from the stamen to the pistil. fertilization 36. This process happens when pollen enters the ovule, which is located in the ovary of a flower. fertilization 37. What does the ovule develop into once it is fertilized? seed 38. What does the seed develop into? Fruit Standard 6-2.6: 39. This is a reproductive process that involves only one parent. asexual 40. This reproductive process involves two parents. sexual 41. What is produced from plants as a result of sexual reproduction? seeds 42. Process of growing new plants from plant parts is known as asexual. 43. These are all types of underground stems (onions and potatoes). Tubers/bulbs 44. These are all types of stems that run along the ground (ivy and strawberries). runners 45. Roots may form when a piece of cut stem is planted through this. Sugar cane and pineapple are examples of plants grown from this. Stem cuttings 46. What are “suckers”? new shoots from the roots 47. African violets can produce plants from leaves. Standard 6-2.7: 48. In transpiration, water is released from the stomata. 49. What is chlorophyll? Absorbs solar energy 50. Plants release energy during respiration. 51. What three things are needed for photosynthesis? Carbon dioxide, energy, water 52. What are guard cells? Open or close the stomata 53. What is produced during photosynthesis? Sugar and oxygen Standard 6.2.8: 54. Define thigmotropism, gravitropism, hydrotropism, and phototropism. a. Thigmotropism: response to touch b. Gravitropism: response to gravity c. Hydrotropism: response to water d. Phototropism: response to light 55. What is dormancy? Plants become inactive Standard 6-2.9: 56. Name the three fungi. Grain mold, corn smut, wheat rust 57. Fungi cannot produce its own food