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Section 1: The Plant Kingdom

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Section 1: The Plant Kingdom What characteristics do all plants share? What do plants need to live successfully on land? How do nonvascular plants and vascular plants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Section 1: The Plant Kingdom


1
Section 1 The Plant Kingdom
  • What characteristics do all plants share?
  • What do plants need to live successfully on land?
  • How do nonvascular plants and vascular plants
    differ?
  • What are the different stages of a plants life
    cycle?

2
What Is a Plant?
  • Nearly all plants are autotrophs, organisms that
    produce their own food. All plants are eukaryotes
    that contain many cells. In addition, all plant
    cells are surrounded by cell walls.

3
Plant Body Structure
  • The body of a plant is organized into organ
    systems, organs, tissues, and cells.

4
Plant Body Structure
  • The body of a plant is organized into organ
    systems, organs, tissues, and cells.

5
Plant Body Structure
  • The body of a plant is organized into organ
    systems, organs, tissues, and cells.

6
Plant Body Structure
  • The body of a plant is organized into organ
    systems, organs, tissues, and cells.

7
Plant Body Structure
  • The body of a plant is organized into organ
    systems, organs, tissues, and cells.

8
Adaptations for Living on Land
  • Plants lived in the oceans for millions of years
    before they slowly adapted to live on land.
  • In order to successfully live on land, plants
    evolved these 5 adaptations

9
Adaptations for Living on Land
  • 1 Obtaining Water and Nutrients
  • Land plants evolved roots to obtain water and
    nutrients from the soil.

10
Adaptations for Living on Land
  • 2 Retain Water
  • Cuticle (waxy, waterproof layer that covers most
    leaves) helps prevent water loss due to
    evaporation.

11
Adaptations for Living on Land
  • 3 Transport Materials
  • Vascular tissue consists of tube-like structures
    that allow food, minerals, and water to move
    throughout the plant.

12
Adaptations for Living on Land
  • 4 Support
  • Cell walls supply adequate support and strength
    against gravity (and other things).

13
Adaptations for Living on Land
  • 5 Reproduction
  • Plants that lived on land needed a way to spread
    their sex cells without the help of water.

14
Classification of Plants
  • Plants are categorized into 2 major groups
  • Vascular plants
  • Non-vascular plants

15
Classification of Plants
  • Vascular Plants
  • Contain vascular tissue.
  • Are better suited to live on land.
  • Can grow very tall.
  • Can live in any non-arctic environment, even the
    desert.

16
Classification of Plants
  • Non-vascular Plants
  • Lacks vascular tissue.
  • Found in extremely wet environments.
  • Are only a few centimeters tall.
  • Usually found growing low to the ground and in
    damp, shady places.

17
Complex Life Cycles
  • Plants have complex life cycles that include two
    different stages the sporophyte stage and the
    gametophyte stage.

18
End of Section The Plant Kingdom
19
Section 2 Plants Without Seeds
  • What characteristics do the three groups of
    nonvascular plants share?
  • What characteristics do the three groups of
    seedless vascular plants share?

20
Characteristics of Seedless Vascular Plants
  • Ferns, club mosses, and horsetails share two
    characteristics. They have true vascular tissue
    and they do not produce seeds. Instead of seeds,
    these plants reproduce by releasing spores.

21
Mosses
  • A moss gametophyte is low-growing and has
    structures that look like roots, stems, and
    leaves. The stalklike sporophyte generation
    remains attached to the gametophyte.

22
Ferns
  • Most ferns have underground stems in addition to
    roots. The leaves, or fronds, grow above ground.

23
End of Section Plants Without Seeds
24
Section 3 The Characteristics of Seed Plants
  • What characteristics do seed plants share?
  • How do seeds become new plants?

25
What Is a Seed Plant?
  • The stems of vascular plants contain bundles of
    phloem and xylem. In addition, thick cell walls
    and vascular tissue help support the plant.

26
How Seeds Become New Plants
  • A seed has three main partsan embryo, stored
    food, and a seed coat. If a seed lands in an area
    where conditions are favorable, the plant sprouts
    out of the seed and begins to grow.

27
End of Section The Characteristics of Seed
Plants
28
Section 4 Roots, Stems, and Leaves
  • What are the main function of roots, stems, and
    leaves?

29
Root Structure
  • A roots structure is adapted for absorbing water
    and minerals from the soil.

30
Stems
  • The stem produces branches, leaves, and flowers.
    It carries substances between the plants roots
    and leaves, and provides support for the plant.

31
Stems
  • Trees have woody stems. A typical woody stem is
    made up of many layers. The layers of xylem form
    annual rings that can reveal the age of the tree
    and the growing conditions it has experienced.

32
Leaves
  • Leaves capture and use the suns energy to make
    food. The structure of a leaf is well-adapted for
    photosynthesis.

33
End of Section Roots, Stems, and Leaves
34
Section 5 Reproduction in Seed Plants
  • What are the characteristics of gymnosperms and
    how do they reproduce?
  • What are the characteristics of angiosperms?
  • How do angiosperms reproduce?
  • What are the two types of angiosperms?

35
Reproduction in Gymnosperms
  • First, pollen falls from a male cone onto a
    female cone. In time, a sperm cell and an egg
    cell join together in an ovule on the female
    cone. After fertilization occurs, the seed
    develops on the scale of the female cone.

36
The Structure of Flowers
  • Flowers come in all sorts of shapes, sizes, and
    colors. But, despite their differences, all
    flowers have the same functionreproduction.

37
Reproduction in Angiosperms
  • First, pollen falls on a flowers stigma. In
    time, the sperm cell and egg cell join together
    in the flowers ovule. The zygote develops into
    the embryo part of the seed.

38
Types of Angiosperms
  • Angiosperms are divided into two major groups
    monocots and dicots.

39
End of Section Reproduction in Seed Plants
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