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Bio preAP/GT F10 Plant Review 1. What type of plant is this? A. moss B. fern C. gymnosperm D. angiosperm Sporophyte (spores) 2. Which group of plants does not have vascular tissue? _bryophytes____________________ 3. Mosses: A. need water to reproduce. B. have no true roots, stems, or leaves. C. show alternation of generations. D. all of these are true. 4. When do seeds and fruits develop? A. before pollination and fertilization B. after pollination and fertilization C. before dormancy D. after dormancy Gametophyte (gametes) 5. The veins found in leaves are made up of: A. pith & cortex. B. epidermis & heartwood. C. cambium & cork. D. xylem & phloem 6. This heart-shaped structure is characteristic of: A. mosses B. fern s C. gymnosperms D. angiosperms 7. In our notes and lab, we discussed why water was necessary for these organisms. What were these reasons? mosses – stay small/no vascular tissue; Ferns: gametes must travel through water. 8. What major groups of organisms produce seeds for reproduction? Gymnosperms (pines) & angiosperms (flowering plants) 9. The development of seeds reduced the need for what during reproduction? water 10. Reproduction involving seeds is: sexual or asexual (circle one) 11. How do you know a flower is a monocot or dicot? Monocot flowers: petals/sepals in groups of 3; dicots: petals/sepals in groups of 4 or 5 12. What do you call the green, leafy structure of a fern that is commonly used in flower arrangements? frond 13. What structures are commonly found on the underside of the structures in #13? Sori containing spores 14. What adaptation in the leaf is observed in the leaves of pine trees? Small thin; thick cuticle – What advantages exist as a result of these types of leaves? reduce water loss & damage from heavy snow 15. Pine trees are classified as what type of plants? Gymnosperms 16. Why are they classified as these types of plants? Means “naked seeds” – seeds are in cones not fruit 17. How can you tell if a root cross section (slide) is a monocot or dicot? Monocot root: ring (fibrous) dicot root: X or star (taproot) 18. What are the layers of the root called and what are their functions? Epidermis: protection, water absorption cambrium: growth Phloem: transport food (glucose) cortex: storage Xylem: transport water 19. What is found at the end of the root tip and what is its function? Root cap: protects growing root 20. What structures increase the surface area of roots? Root hairs 21. How can you tell the cross section (slide) of a monocot and dicot stem apart? Monocot stem: scattered dicot stem: ring 22. What makes up the vascular bundles? Xylem & phloem 23. The purpose of the vascular bundles: transport water & glucose (food) 24. What can tree rings tell you about a tree? Age, how much water was available (drought or rainy) 25. Differentiate between a taproot and fibrous root. Which is a monocot and which is a dicot? Taproot: dicots; one main root with small roots coming off it Fibrous root: monocots; many tangled roots 26. The functions of roots are: water absorption, anchor 27. Does photosynthesis take place in stems? Explain your answer. Yes, if its green, then it has chlorophyll which allows photosynthesis to take place 28. Label the parts of the leaf and their functions. Epidermis (with cuticle) Palisades (photosynthetic) Mesophyll (air spaces) Veins (xylem & phloem) Lower epidermis Stoma (with guard cells) 29. What is the main function of the leaf? Photosynthesis (and transpiration, too) 30. Xylem carries: water; Phloem carries: “food” (glucose) 31. Differentiate a fleshy fruit from a dry fruit: fleshy – soft tissue (berries, apples, etc) Dry – no soft tissue (nuts) 32. Label the parts of the flower and what are their functions? Petal Carpel/pistil (stigma, syle, ovary with ovules) Stamen (anther with pollen, filament) sepals 33. The male part of the flower is called: stamen The male part of the flower is made up of the anther and filament. 34. The female part of the flower is called: carpel or pistil The female part of the flower is made up of the stigma, style and ovary (with ovules). 35. Where does fertilization take place in the flower? In the ovary 36. List some methods of seed dispersal and give an example of each: Wind (dandelions, samaras) Water (coconuts) Animals (edible like apples & berries or stick to fur like burs) 37. Use your book to observe some modified stems. Be able to identify such stems and understand their purpose. Potatoes, onions, corms, bulbs, cactus (for photosynthesis) 40. fertilized ovules develop into seeds. 41. Plants respond to light, touch and gravity. What are these responses called? phototropism, thigmotropism and gravitropism 42. What controls the responses in #41? Auxins (plant hormones)