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Plants

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

PLANTS!!!

BY LIZZIE MURPHREE
Photo by nosha

WHAT IS A PLANT

Photo by @Doug88888

WHAT IS A PLANT

  • Plants are organisms that produce their own food.
Photo by @Doug88888

PLANT ADAPTIONS FOR LAND

  • Must have ways to take in
  • Water from their surroundings
Photo by samcaplat

NONVASCULAR PLANTS

MOSSES

  • There are more than 10,000 species
  • Moss grows in .....
  • Sidewalk cracks, and on tree trunks
Photo by kanegen

LIVERWARTS

  • There are more than 8,000 species of liverwart
  • Often found growing as a thick crust in moist rocks.

HORN WORTS

  • There are fewer than 100 species of hornworts .
  • Unlike mosses or Liverwarts , hornworts live in moist soil.
  • Hornworts are named for the slender...
  • Curved like structures that glow out of the gametophytes

SEEDLESS VASCULAR PLANTS

  • Like mosses, seedless vascular plants need to grow in moist surroundings .
  • Ferns club mosses, and horsetails have true vascular tissue and they don't produce seeds

FERNS

  • There are more than 12000 species of ferns today
  • The stems on most ferns are underground

HORSE TAILS

  • There are few species of horsetails today
  • The stems of horsetails are jointed
  • During colonial times,
  • Americans used the plants to scrub their ,
  • Pots and pans.

CLUB MOSSES

  • Like ferns, club mosses have true stems,roots,and leaves.
  • They also have a familiar life cycle
  • There are only a few hundred species alive today

SEED PLANTS

  • Seed plants share two important characteristics
  • They have vascular tissue .
  • They use pollen and seeds to reproduce.

PHLOEM

  • Vascular tissue through wich food moves
  • When food is Made in the leaves, it enters the phloem
Photo by hartp

XYLEM

  • Water and minerals travel in the vascular tissue called xylem
  • The roots absorbs water and minerals for the soil.
Photo by just.Luc

POLLEN AND SEEDS

  • Pollen tiny structures that can contain the cells that will later be sperm cells
  • A seed is a structure that contains a young plant inside a protective covering
  • Seeds protect the young plant from dying

SEED STRUCTURE

  • A seed has three parts
  • Embryo
  • Stored food
  • And a seed coat
Photo by pfarrell95

SEED DISPERSAL

  • After seeds have formed they are usually scattered
  • Water can disperse seeds that fall into oceans and rivers
Photo by pfarrell95

GERMINATION

  • Once you can see a plants leaves it's called a seedling
  • Germination begins when the seed obsorbs water from the enviroment

ROOTS

  • The root cap protects the root from injury from rocks
  • Root hairs grow out of the roots surface
Photo by p2-r2

STEMS

  • The stem carries substances between the plants roots and leaves
  • The stem also provides support for the plant and holds up the leaves so they are exposed to the sun
Photo by Keoni Cabral

LEAVES

  • Leaves capture the sun's energy and carry out the food making process of photosynthesis
Photo by Werner Kunz

GYMNOSPERMS

  • Seed plant that produces naked seeds
  • Gymnosperms are he oldest type of seed plant.
Photo by born1945

EXAMPLES

  • Gnetophyte
  • Ginkgo
  • Conifers
  • Ginkgoes

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