Friday, March 11, 2016

Ch. 19-22

Plants


Plants

20.1 Where did they come from ? Plants are thought to have evolved from GREEN ALGEA....Charophyceae

Likely Characteristics that came from these protist are...

a. Multicellular bodies which led to the development of cells and tissue. 
b. Cells with small channels to communicate to other cells.
c. Reproduction that involves sperm fertilizing an egg.  
Image result for algae          Image result for land plants




Earliest plant fossil date back to 450 mya.
Based on the image above, what type of plants evolved most recently? 

Adaptations of Land Plants

1. Retaining Moisture: Plants need to be able to retain moisture. A CUTICLE IS A WAXY, WATERPROOF LAYER THAT HELPS HOLD IN MOISTURE THROUGH TINY HOLES CALLED STOMATA.

2. Transport Resources: Plants must be able to get water and nutrients using a VASCULAR SYSTEM: "pipelines" that carry resources up and down to different parts of the plant.

Composition: Two networks of hollow tubes.
a. xylem: carries water and dissolved minerals UP from the roots to the rest of the plant.

b. phloem: carries the products of photosynthesis food throughout the plant.


 


3. Growing Upright: Plants need structure to support their weight it comes from a material calledLIGNIN: Which is a material that is found in the cell walls of plant tissues.

4. Reproduce on land: Not all plants need free standing water to reproduce Pollen and seeds are adaptations that allow seed plants to reproduce free of water.  Pollen is a sperm forming structure. 

Male reproductive part stamen.
Female reproductive part stigma.






20.2 Classification of Plants  
Seedless Plants and Seed Plants
The first kind are seedless non vascular and vascular plants.(earlistest ones).  
Mosses and their relatives are seedless non-vascular plants.
Like all non-vascular plant,mosses need to live in moist environments. 
Image result for seedless nonvascular plants         Image result for seedless nonvascular plants
Hornworts 1-4 cm                          Thallose Liverworts
Club mosses and ferns are seedless vascular plants.
                 
     Club moss <=20CM                        Fern 10-25M
Still need water for reproduction,can stand off the ground? 
(tropics and subtropics.)
Image result for club moss spores     Image result for club moss spores
 ferns and mosses produce spores instead of seeds to reproduce.

Image result for club moss spores         Image result for club moss spores


Seeded Plants 

The second kind are the plants produce seeds. These are classified on whether or not seeds are enclosed in a fruit. 

A seed is a storage device for a plant embryo.

They include the Cone-bearing plants and Flowering plants and have advantages over their Ancestors

  • Can reproduce without free standing water.
  • Produce pollen which can be carried by wind or animal.
  • Their seeds nourish and protect embryo.
  • Seeds allow plants to disperse to new places.

How are fruits formed from flowers?

Where do pears come from?

Banana Flower


Examples BELOW. 

      Image result for FRUIT PLANT

Pine trees                                              Papaya


 Image result for pinetree with pollen                          Image result for ginkgo biloba tree
Pollen carried by wind.               Ginko Biloba                                      

GYMNOSPERM: seed plant whose seeds are not enclosed in fruit. 

Image result for gymnosperms    

ANGIOSPERM: is a seed plant that has seeds enclosed in some type of fruit. Common name flowering plants.

Image result for avocado plant

Questions

  • What are the habitat requirements for seedless non-vascular plants?
  • What are the evolutionary advantages of vascular system?
  • What are the evolutionary advantages of seeds vs spores?

20.3 Diversity of Flowering Plants  
  • More than 300 species
  • classified as TWO types: 
Monocots: Flowers that part in multiples of three.
Image result for monocots flowers examples 6 Petals


Dicots: Flowers that part in multiples of four and five.
Image result for Dicots  5 Petals

Image result for dicots examples     Image result for monocots     Image result for monocots


Image result for monocots    Image result for dicots
Image result for dicots


Plants can also be identified by their leaf shapes.







Arrangement of leaves





Seed Plants 

22.5 PLANT HORMONES AND RESPONSES
  
What are hormones? 
Hormones are messengers in one part of the organisms that stimulates or suppresses the activity of a cell in another part.

When are they released?
They are released in response to internal or external environments and regulate plant function.

Plants can respond to light, touch, gravity and Seasonal Changes.

Light ) Phototropism: tendency of plant to grow toward light.

Image result for phototropism     
Phototropism Video 

(touchThigmotropism: when a plant moves or grows in response to touch.

     Image result for climbing plants

Venus flytrap can close in less than a second  its native to wet and muddy areas of North and South Carolina.

Image result for climbing plants    

Mimosa Pudica

Thigmotropism Video

(Gravitational pull) Gravitropism: plants  up or down growth in response to gravity. 

Mechanism where the shoot grows up towards soil and the root down towards the soil. Regulated by a hormone called auxins.


Image result for gravitropism picture  



Gravitropism Video 
(lenght of day and nightsPhotoperiodism: A response to the changing lengths of day and night .
Plants react to shorter days and longer nights by hibernating.
Plants, like animals, want to save energy when possible. Ex: In winter months they react by shutting down to use less energy.
Ex: LEAVES FALLING during the shorter days in the winter.



Photoperiodism Video

Plant Growth BrainPop

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