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Botany Basics: Evolution of Plants: Land plants can be informally grouped based on presence or absence of vascular tissue (cells joined into tubes that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant.) A seed is an embryo packaged with a supply of nutrients inside a protective coat. Seed plants can be divided into two groups. Angiosperms and Gymnosperms. Angiosperms: Angion is from the Greek that means covered or container, and sperm means seed. Consists of all flowering plants. Angiosperms seeds develop inside chambers called ovaries. Gymnosperms: From the Greek gymno’s, “naked.” Seeds are not enclosed in chambers. Mostly conifers. More Terms: Some plants, including many garden flowers, are called "annuals," which means they complete their life cycle in one growing season.They die when winter comes, but their seeds remain, ready to sprout again in the spring. "Perennials" live for more than two years. Monocots & Dicots Until the late 1990’s, most scientists divided flowering plants (Angiosperms) into two groups, based partly on the number of cotyledons, or seed leaves. Monocots: One cotyledon. Dicots: Two cotyledon’s. Other features help define the two groups Monocot Leaf: Dicot Leaf: Monocots: – Lilies, grasses, cattails, palms, yuccas, orchids, irises Dicots: – Almost all kinds of trees and shrubs Monocot Stem: Dicot Stem: Monocot Root Dicot Root Vascular Tissues Two types 1. Xylem a) Conducts most of the water and minerals. Includes tracheids (tube shaped cells). Are dead cells that act like water pipes. 2. Phloem b) This tissue includes living sugar- conducting cells arranged into tubes that distribute sugars, amino acids, and other organic products. Phloem Transports sugars and water throughout a plant. Transports under pressure (like a straw) Transports substances in all directions Parts of the Plant Body Leaves Stems Roots Leaves: The leaf is the main photosynthetic organ of most vascular plants. Leaves vary in form but generally consist of a flattened blade, and petiole, which joins the leaf to a node of the stem. Grasses and many other monocots lack petioles. Leaves: Simple vs. Compound Leaves: Simple vs. Compound Leaves: Simple leaves are whole, undivided leaves growing from a bud on the stem. The node is the part of the stem where leaves are attached . Compound: the leaf consists of 3 or more leaflets, each leaflet being attached to a leaf-stalk (note: leaflets are not attached to a twig). Opposite vs. Alternate: Palmate vs. Pinnate: Stomata Stomata: Stomata: Stomata are microscopic pores found on the under side of leaves. Stomata control the amount of carbon dioxide that diffuses into a leaf and the amount of water that evaporates from leaves. The stomata is bounded by two half moon shaped guard cells that function to vary the width of the pore. Each guard cell contains chloroplasts. Stomata: In light the guard cells swell, causing the pore to be at its widest, and CO2 diffuses into the leaf and into the cells to be assimilated in photosynthesis. In the dark or under drought conditions the guard cells are not turgid, the stomata are closed and no photosynthesis takes place. The stomata is situated on the underside of the leaf for the reason that if it were on the top side the plant would lose to much water. Because the guard cells are partially light activated, plants under direct sunlight would constantly have their stomata open and would thus lose much water and the plant dying. a) Cuticle: Waxy layer water proofing upper leaves. b) Upper epidermis: Upper layer of cells. No chloroplasts. Protection. c) Palisade Mesophyll: Tightly packed upper layer of chloroplast containing cells. Most photosynthesis take place here. d) Spongy Mesophyll: Lower layer of chloroplast containing cells. Air spaces around them. e) Lower Epidermis: Lower external layer of cells in leaf. Fall leaves: Why do leaves change color in the fall? Leaves are nature's food factories. Plants take water from the ground through their roots. They take a gas called carbon dioxide from the air. Plants use sunlight to turn water and carbon dioxide into glucose. Glucose is a kind of sugar. Plants use glucose as food for energy and as a building block for growing. The way plants turn water and carbon dioxide into sugar is called photosynthesis. A chemical called chlorophyll helps make photosynthesis happen. Chlorophyll is what gives plants their green color. (Chlorophyll) 6CO2 +7H20+Light C6H12O6 + O2+H2o Why do leaves change color in the fall? Leaf color comes from pigments. Pigments are natural substances produced by leaf cells. The three pigments that color leaves are: 1)Chlorophyll 2)Carotenoid 3)Anthocyanins Chlorophyll 1)Chlorophyll is the most important of the three. Without the chlorophyll in leaves, trees wouldn't be able to use sunlight to produce food. All photosynthetic organisms have Chlorophyll A. This is supplemented by Chlorophyll B and C, which are accessory pigments. Chlorophylls are bound to a protein, which makes it insoluble in water. This is why its difficult to get out grass stains from your clothes. During the summer, the leaves' chlorophyll molecules absorb the other colors in the spectrum and reflect green, so that is what your eye sees. Carotenoid 2)Carotenoid create bright yellows and oranges in familiar fruits and vegetables. Corn, carrots, and bananas are just a few of the many plants colored by carotenoid. Instead of capturing light for photosynthesis, carotenoids protect the tree from the destructive power of chlorophyll. (Electrons may combine with 02, then roam and destroy cells. Anthocyanins 3)Anthocyanins add the color red and blues to plants, including cranberries, red apples, cherries, strawberries and others. Least prevalent, but most colorful pigment. Why do leaves change color in the fall? The color a leaf shows us in the fall is its "real" color. Why do leaves change color in the fall? During summer days, leaves make more glucose than the plant needs for energy and growth. The excess is turned into starch and stored until needed. As the daylight gets shorter in the autumn, plants begin to shut down their food production. Evergreen trees -- pines, spruces, cedars and firs -- don't lose their leaves, or needles, in winter. The needles are covered with a heavy wax coating and the fluids inside the cells contain substances that resist freezing. Evergreen leaves can live for several years before they fall and are replaced by new growth. Evergreens protect their needle-like foliage from freezing with waxy coatings and natural "antifreezes." But broadleaf plants, like sugar maples, birches, and sumacs, have no such protections. As a result, they shed their leaves. Flower Anatomy: Stamen - the male reproductive organ of a flower – Anther - the part of the stamen that contains pollen; usually borne on a stalk – Filament This is the stalk of the Anther Carpel: The female reproductive organ of a flower. – style - (botany) the narrow elongated part of the pistil between the ovary and the stigma – stigma - the apical end of the style where deposited pollen enters the pistil – ovary - the organ that bears the ovules of a flower – ovule - a small body that contains the female germ cell of a plant; develops into a seed after fertilization Sepal: A whorl of modified leaves in angiosperms. It encloses and protects the flower bud before it opens. Self-Fertilization Reduces variability More common among plants in tropical regions Plants prevent self-fertilization by placing the stigma higher than the anther - Ex. magnolia Pollination Pollination is the transfer of pollen from the anther to the stigma Fertilization is the union of the sperm and egg Plants Attract Their Vectors Attractants – Nectar: birds and insects love this sweet taste – Pollen: provides food for the busy bee – Color: birds see red well, butterflies like bright blues – Scent: the smell of decayed meat will attract flies and beetles – Display: Can the flower support it’s pollinator? Bats need large displays to rest on. Vectors A vector is a means to transfer the pollen from one plant to another. Some vectors are birds, beetles, flies, bees, bats and butterflies The End