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Introduction to Plants

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Introduction to Plants The First Plants The earliest photosynthetic organisms were plant-like protists. Even today about 70% of photosynthesis occurs in the oceans. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Plants


1
Introduction to Plants
2
The First Plants
  • The earliest photosynthetic organisms were
    plant-like protists.
  • Even today about 70 of photosynthesis occurs in
    the oceans.

3
Non-vascular Plants
  • The earliest land plants were non-vascular
    plants.
  • Non-vascular plants have no system of vessels to
    carry nutrients, water or waste.
  • These mosses, liverworts, and hornworts evolved
    about 500 mya from green algae.

4
Non-vascular Plant Reproduction
  • They need a moist surface for gametes to swim
    together for reproduction.
  • Non-vascular plants lack true leaves, roots or
    stems.
  • All water, nutrients and waste move between cells
    by osmosis and diffusion. Their growth is
    limited.

5
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6
Plant Adaptations to Land
  • The major adaptations to life on land included
  • 1. Protection from drying out leaves and stems.

2. A system of vessels to transport water,
nutrients and wastes the roots, stems and
leaves. 3. A system to hold the plant up and
capture energy from light the stem and leaves.
7
Vascular Plants - Ferns
  • As plants adapted to land they evolved more
    complex structures.
  • Ferns were the first vascular plants.
  • Ferns have vascular tissue or vessels that
    transport materials between different parts of
    the plant.

8
  • Ferns have true roots to anchor them and absorb
    water and minerals.
  • Fern leaves are photosynthetic and absorb gases
    from the atmosphere.

9
Plants with Seeds
  • Next plants evolved to have seeds, an
    evolutionary adaptation to improve reproductive
    success.
  • Seeds allow a plant to reproduce sexually without
    needing water for the gametes to swim to each
    other.

10
Gymnosperms
  • Gymnosperms are plants that produce naked
    seeds.
  • Gymnosperms include all the conifers or pine
    trees that produce cones.

11
Angiosperms
  • The most recent evolutionary adaptation for
    plants was to produce flowers, again to improve
    reproductive success.
  • Angiosperms are flowering plants.

12
Parts of a Flower
13
Monocots and Dicots
  • The seeds of angiosperms are protected in the
    body of a fruit, which develops from the ovary .
  • There are two classes of angiosperms - monocots
    and dicots.
  • Monocots have one seed leaf and dicots have two
    seed leaves.
  • There are numerous differences between monocots
    and dicots.

14
Compare Seed leaves
  • Monocot one Dicot two

15
Compare Veins
  • Monocot parallel Dicot network

16
Compare Vascular Bundles
  • Monocot scattered Dicot ring pattern

17
Compare Flower Parts
  • Monocot threes Dicot 4s or 5s

18
Compare Roots
  • Monocot fibrous Dicot tap root
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