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Anatomy and Physiology

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Title: Anatomy and Physiology


1
Anatomy and Physiology
  • Horticulture 1

2
Why are plants important?
  • Food
  • Shelter
  • Oxygen
  • Protection
  • Habitat
  • Aesthetics

3
The four major parts of the plant are.
  • Leaves
  • Stems
  • Roots
  • Flowers

4
Leaves
  • Food factory for the plant.
  • The leaves are where the process called
    photosynthesis takes place.

5
Leaves are one of the ways we can identify plants.
  • We can use their arrangement on the stem to
    identify plants.
  • We can use their shape or form to identify
    plants.
  • We can also use their margins to identify the
    plants.

6
Arrangement means how the leaves are placed on
the stem.
  • Some of the different leaf arrangements include
  • Opposite arrangement
  • The plant shown has an opposite arrangement

7
Others are
  • Alternate
  • Whorled

8
and
  • Palmate
  • Ternate compound

9
Shape or form is just as it sounds how are they
shaped?
  • Some forms or shapes include
  • Oval
  • Needle
  • Cordate

10
and
  • Linear
  • Lanceolate
  • Round

11
The last identification aid are Margins
  • Margins are the edges of the leaf- just remember
    the margins of a paper!
  • Types of margins include
  • Entire- smooth edges

12
Other margins
  • Undulate
  • Dentate

13
And
  • Incised
  • Crenate

14
Parts of the leaf
  • Parts of the leaf include these plus
  • Tip
  • Veins
  • Blade
  • Margins
  • Can you find where these are?

15
Inside the leaf there are
  • Epidermis. The function of the epidermis is to
    prevent the loss of too much moisture.
  • The guard cells. These cells are on the skin on
    the underside of the leaf. The guard cells open
    and close the stoma, or stomata. When water
    pressure inside the leaf increases, the guard
    cells open the stoma.
  • Stoma or stomata. The function of the stoma is to
    transpire, or give off moisture
  • Chloroplasts. The part of the plant cell that
    manufactures food. In the chloroplasts is
    chlorophyll. This is what makes the plants
    leaves green.

16
Here is a cross section of a leaf
  • Can you find the parts?
  • What is the function of the epidermis?
  • Where are the stoma and guard cells located on
    the leaf?
  • What is the purpose of the chlorophyll?

17
These parts are all needed for the process of
  • PHOTOSYNTHESIS. This word means light making.
  • This process requires carbon dioxide and water
    with light and chlorophyll, to make
  • sugar and oxygen. With additional energy the
    sugar and oxygen revert back to water and carbon
    dioxide. This is what the formula looks like

18
Here it is!
19
So this food
  • Travels down the stem to be stored in the stem or
    the roots as sugars, starch, or proteins.
  • As shown in formula, respiration is a result of
    the process of photosynthesis/. This process of
    respiration occurs 24 hours a day. As you can
    see, plants breathe in oxygen, and breathe out
    carbon dioxide. All parts of the plant need
    oxygen to grow. Water pushes all the air from
    the soil, and roots will suffer the most from an
    inadequate supply of oxygen.
  • Do plants use all the oxygen they make?

20
Stems
  • Stems. What is their function?
  • Movement of water and minerals from the roots to
    the leaves
  • Movement of food from the leaves to the storage
    space, the roots
  • Support of the plant
  • They are used for food storage in some plants,
    and in other plants as a means of propagation.
  • Do stems photosynthesize ???

21
The outside of the stem has
  • Lenticels or breathing pores
  • Bud scales- where the terminal
  • bud once was
  • Leaf scar- where leaves
  • once were

22
Inside the stem
  • There are 2 parts of the stem that are found on
    ALL plants.
  • The XYLEM- water and minerals travel up the stem
    to the leaves
  • The PHLOEM- food made in the leaves travel down
    the stem to be stored in the roots
  • This is how it looks!

23
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24
Plants are classified into 2 groups
  • Dicotyledon (dicots) and monocotyledons
    (monocots).
  • Can you see the differences in the leaves? Are
    there other differences inside the stem?

25
This is a cross section of a dicot stem. Dicots
always have a cambium layer. Dicots can increase
in width because both the xylem and phloem can
add cells. Trees are examples of dicots.
26
Monocot stems are arranged in vascular bundles
and have no cambium layer.
  • Corn is and example of a monocot. These plants
    add vascular bundles of grow.

27
The third part of the plant is ROOTS
  • The function of roots are to
  • Anchor the plant and hold its position
  • Absorb water and minerals from the soil and
    conduct them to the stem
  • Store nutrients
  • For propagation
  • Food- carrots, beets, and sweet potatoes

28
A root cap starts the new growth of the root.
Behind the cap there are lots of root hairs. The
root hairs absorb the water and mineral necessary
for plant growth.
29
There are two different root systems
  • Fibrous -commonly found on moncots
  • Tap- commonly found on dicots

30
The final part of the plant is the FLOWER
31
The purpose of the flower is
  • To attract insects that fertilizer the flower
    through Pollen or nectar which is the beginning
    of fruit and seed production.
  • THIS IS POLLINATION
  • The fruit is spread by mammals and birds the
    seed germinates (sprouts)which reproduces the
    plant.

32
Seeds are the most common way to reproduce plants.
  • This is called sexual reproduction as a male and
    female parent is involved.
  • A COMPLETE FLOWER has both male and female parts,
    and can pollinate itself.
  • These parts include these parts
  • SEPAL
  • PETALS
  • STAMEN
  • PISTIL

33
The sepals
  • A green covering that protects the flower before
    it opens. This part is also known as the calyx.
    It produces food through the process of
    photosynthesis.

34
The petals or corolla
  • The function of the petals is to attract insects
    for POLLINATION.

35
The stamen- male reproductive parts include
  • Anther. The structure that holds the pollen in
    place for insects to pollinate.
  • Filament . The stalk that hold the anther in
    place.

36
The pistil. The female part of the plant
  • Usually in the center of the flower.
  • Produces the female sex cells, the eggs.
  • The eggs or ovules are found in the ovaries.
  • The pollen (male) fertilizes the eggs, and these
    fertilized eggs become seeds.
  • The ovary will become the fruit.

37
The pistil has 3 parts.
  • Stigma- the pollen catcher
  • Style- the tube that carries the pollen to the
    ovule.
  • The ovaries contain the ovules.

38
An incomplete flower
  • An incomplete flower has male or female flower
    parts, but not both.
  • Holly is a plant where the flowers are
    incomplete. Begonias are incomplete flowers as
    well.

39
Images Google
  • Reilly and Shry, Introductory Horticulture.
    Fifth. Delmar. 1996. (p. 21-27)
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