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WHAT ARE ANGIOSPERMS? 1. Vascular Plants 2. Produce Flowers 3. Develop seeds in fruits which help protect embryos TWO CLASSES OF ANGIOSPERMS: 1. Monocots 2. Dicots Monocots: 1. One seed leaf 2. Includes: Grasses, Orchids, Lilies, and Palms 3. Contains Parallel veins in leaves 4. Flower parts exist in multiples of three Dicots • Two seed leaves • Most are flowering plants • Includes: Shrubs, trees, wildflowers, garden flowers, herbs • Leaves contain netted veins • Flower parts exist in multiples of four or five COMPARISON OF MONOCOTS AND DICOTS COMPARISON OF MONOCOTS AND DICOTS LIFE SPAN OF ANGIOSPERMS Can either be classified as: 1. Annuals 2. Perennials Annuals – Live only one growing season - Examples: Many garden plants (marigolds, petunias, pansies, and zinnias), wheat, and cucumbers. LIFE SPAN OF ANGIOSPERMS Perennials – Live for more than two years. -Examples: Palm trees, sagebrush, maple trees, honeysuckles, asparagus, many grasses GENERAL VASCULAR TISSUE TERMS Xylem - Tubes that transport water and minerals Phloem – Tubes that transport food Cambium - Growth tissue that makes more xylem and phloem ROOT STRUCTURES OF ANGIOSPERMS Two Types of Root Systems: 1. Taproot System- Large central roots (most dicots) 2. Fibrous Root System – Highly branched (most monocots) MORE ABOUT ROOTS Root Hairs - Increase surface area for absorption (tiny little hairs). Root Cap - Covers tip of root and protects it. Meristem – Growth area just behind the root tip. COMPARING MONOCOT AND DICOT ROOT STRUCTURES MORE ABOUT STEMS Two Kinds of Stems: 1. Herbacous - Flexible 2. Woody – Rigid - Have growth rings of vascular tissue that determine the age of the plant MORE ABOUT Simple LEAVES Leaves – One leaf blade attached to stem Compound Leaves – Divided leaf blade attached to stem Petiole – Stalk that attaches leaf to stem CROSS SECTION OF A TYPICAL LEAF The bulk of most leaves consist of a specialized ground tissue full of chloroplasts known as MESOPHYLL. The mesophyll contains two layers: 1. Palisade Layer – Closely packed tall columnar cells; located under the upper epidermis and absorb light that enters the leaf. 2. Spongy Layer – Loose tissue made of spherical cells that contains many air spaces between its cells; the the air spaces connect with the exterior through the stomata (porelike openings that allow gases to enter and leave the leaf ). stomata HOW MATERIALS MOVE THROUGH VASCULAR TISSUE • As water is lost by transpiration (the evaporation of water through leaves), it is pulled upwards through the xylem like a drinking straw. • Sugars move by active transport and osmosis through the phloem from the source to the sink (place that stores or uses sugars).