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PLANTS 6-2.3 How they absorb and circulate fluids How they reproduce Method of seed production Type of seed leaf Plant Kingdom Vascular Nonvascular Mosses, Liverworts Seed producing Spore Producing Ferns, Horsetails Flowering Cone Bearing Pine, spruce, fir trees Monocot Rice, grass, lilies, tulips Dicot Roses, oak & maple trees Plant Kingdom Vascular or Nonvascular How they absorb and circulate fluids – Vascular or Nonvascular? Does the plant have roots, stems, and leaves? Is the plant very small in size? Does it have a way to circulate water and food from one place to another within the plant? Does it obtain its nutrients directly from the environment ? The answers to these questions will help you decide if the plant is either Vascular or Nonvascular. Vascular Plants The largest group of plants Have true roots, stems, & leaves Have a transportation system for nutrients: xylem transports water & minerals up from the roots phloem transports food down from the leaves Vascular Plants EXAMPLES: With hard, woody stems- trees, bushes – grow very tall With soft, herbaceous stems – grasses, dandelions & tomato plants Nonvascular Plants Usually very small in size No true roots, stems, leaves No transportation system for nutrients, absorb them directly from the environment EXAMPLES: Liverwort, Hornwort, & Mosses Seed or Spore-Producing How they reproduce – Plant Kingdom Vascular Nonvascular Mosses, Liverworts Seed producing Spore Producing Ferns, Horsetails Flowering Cone Bearing Pine, spruce, fir trees Monocot Rice, grass, lilies, tulips Dicot Roses, oak & maple trees Seed-Producing Plants Reproduce through seeds Seeds contain the plant embryo (beginnings new plant) Seeds also have stored food (cotyledons) Two major groups are cone-bearing and flowering Spore-Producing Plants Produce spores for reproduction instead of seeds. Spores are much smaller than seeds. Almost all flowerless plants produce spores. Examples include mosses and ferns. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALGDLzWcvnU Flowering or Cone-Bearing Plants Method of seed production – Flowering Plants Seeds grow inside an ovary, which is embedded in a flower. The flower becomes a fruit containing the seeds. Examples include most trees, shrubs, vines, flowers, fruits, vegetables, and legumes. Cone-Bearing Plants Most cone-bearing plants are evergreen with needle-like leaves. Conifers never have flowers but produce seeds in cones. Examples include pine, spruce, juniper, redwood, and cedar trees. Dicot or Monocot Type of seed leaf – Monocot A seed with one food storage area is called a monocotyledon, or monocot. Flowers have either three petals or multiples of three. Leaves are long and slender with veins that are parallel to each other. The vascular tube structures are usually scattered randomly throughout the stem. Examples include grass, corn, rice, lilies, and tulips. Dicot A seed with two food storage areas is called a dicot or dicotyledon. Flowers four or five petals or multiples of these numbers. The leaves are usually wide with branching veins. The vascular tube structures are set in circular bundles. Examples include roses, dandelions, maple, and oak trees.