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How are plants classified?

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Orchids have aerial roots. What are roots? Fibrous roots are thin, branching roots. They do not grow deep, but they often cover a very wide area. (Marigold plants) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How are plants classified?


1
How are plants classified?
  • Lesson 3

2
Vocabulary
  • Gymnosperm a seed plant that does not produce a
    flower. They include pines, firs, and other
    cone-bearing trees.
  • Angiosperm a seed plant that produces flowers.
    All angiosperms have seeds that are covered by
    some kind of fruit.
  • Xylem a series of tubes that move water and
    minerals up the stem. (From the plant roots to
    the leaves)

3
Gymnosperm, Angiosperm, Xylem
4
Vocabulary
  • Phloem moves sugars that are made in the
    plants leaves to other parts of the plant.
    Phloem tissue is a two-way transport route. It
    flows both up and down in a plant.
  • Cambium xylem and phloem cells are produced in
    the cambium, then move inward.
  • Photosynthesis the process of making food.
    Leaves need three raw materials sunlight, water,
    and carbon dioxide from air.

5
Cambium, Phloem
6
Photosynthesis
7
Vocabulary
  • Transpiration the loss of water through a
    plants leaves. Picture on page 58.
  • Cellular respiration energy is released when
    the cells of organisms use oxygen to break down
    the sugars stored as starch.

8
Transpiration, Cellular respiration
9
How are plants classified?
  • Nonvascular plants are small and survive without
    a transport system. (Moss)
  • Vascular plants do not have size limitations.
    Trees can grow to heights of more than 200 feet.
  • Vascular plants are divided into seed plants and
    seedless plants.

10
Nonvascular, Vascular
11
How are plants classified?
  • Two main types of seed plants gymnosperm (does
    not produce a flower), and angiosperm (does
    produce a flower).

12
What are roots?
  • A root is part of the plant.
  • Root hair is a threadlike projection from a plant
    root. Root hair absorbs moisture like a sponge.
  • Root cap covers the tip of the root. It protects
    the root tip while it pushes into the ground.
  • Epidermis is the skin of the root. Just like our
    epidermis is our skin.

13
What are roots?
  • Cortex layer is located just under the epidermis.
    The cortex stores food and nutrients.
  • The vascular system of the root is located in the
    center of the root. Just like our vascular
    system is in the center of our body.
  • Aerial roots are roots that never touch the
    ground. Orchids have aerial roots.

14
What are roots?
  • Fibrous roots are thin, branching roots. They do
    not grow deep, but they often cover a very wide
    area. (Marigold plants)
  • Taproots have a single, main stalk-like root that
    plunge into the ground. (Poplar Tree)
  • Prop roots usually grow at the bottom of a
    plants stem. They prop up and support the plant
    so it cannot be knocked over. (Corn plants and
    mangrove trees)

15
Fibrous roots, Taproots
16
Prop roots
17
What are stems?
  • The plants stem has two functions. First, is a
    support structure. The stem of a tree must
    support the weight of the entire tree. Stems
    must be sturdy enough to support leaves, flowers,
    and branches.
  • Stems come in two basic forms-soft stems and
    woody stems.
  • Soft stems, green, and can bend.
  • Woody stems are often covered with bark and do
    not contain chlorophyll.

18
Plant and Stem
Allows sugar from the leaves of the tree to flow
to the rest of the tree.
Allows water and nutrients from the ground to
flow to the rest of the tree.
19
What are leaves?
  • Many leaves are flat and broad, which allows the
    leaf to collect the most sunlight possible.
  • The top of the leaf is covered with a waxy
    cuticle, or waterproof layer that prevents
    moisture from evaporating.
  • Leaves use stomata, a single pore which opens and
    closes to regulate the amount of water and air
    loss in the plant.

20
Plant leaf
21
What are leaves?
  • As water evaporates from the leaves, more water
    is carried from the bottom of the plant to the
    top.
  • Photosynthesis, the production of sugar and
    oxygen while absorbing carbon dioxide and water.

22
How are photosynthesis and respiration related?
  • Cellular respiration the process of using
    oxygen to break down the sugars stored as starch
    in the process.
  • Cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria
    of the cells.

23
Cellular respiration in plants
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