Title: Plant%20Diversity%20C9L1
1Plant DiversityC9L1
the study of plants
2What is a plant?
- Living organisms which are eukaryotic and
multicellular - Have organized tissues
- Have plastids (such as chloroplasts - convert
light energy to chemical energy) - Have cell walls containing cellulose - provides
support and protection
3Characteristics of Plants (cont.)
- A mature plant cell has one or two vacuoles that
store a watery liquid called sap.
4Characteristics of Plants (cont.)
- Some plants are microscopic, while others are
some of the largest organisms on Earth.
5Characteristics of Plants (cont.)
- Plants are producersorganisms that use an
outside energy source, such as the Sun, to make
their own food.
producer from Latin producer, means lead or
bring forth, draw out
6Characteristics of Plants (cont.)
- Plants make their own food, a simple sugar called
glucose, during a process called photosynthesis.
7One reason the study of botany is so important to
man is
Because all the food eaten by man comes directly
or indirectly from green plants. About 2/3 of
the food we eat comes directly from plants and
1/3 comes from animals which eat plants.
8Ways Plants are Beneficial
- Provide most of man's food
- Release O2 needed by man and animals
- Plants are raw materials for many manufactured
goods - Plants are a source of beauty
9Misconceptions
- All green things are plants.
- All plants
- are green.
- All plants
- are
- autotrophic.
10Plant Adaptations and Creation
- Evolutionists hypothesize that present-day land
plants and green algae evolved from a common
ancestor. - The first land plants probably lived in moist
areas. - As land plants became more abundant, the amount
of oxygen in the atmosphere increased because
oxygen is a product of photosynthesis.
11Plant Adaptations and Creation
- Evolutionists explain adaptation as the process
where organisms become better suited for their
environment or in other words if an organism
lives in a cold environment they may grow fur or
a thick layer of blubber to combat the cooler
temperatures. Therefore, from this view the
organisms that are better able to survive in a
specific environment will have offspring better
able to survive in that environment
12Plant Adaptations and Creation
- and those that are not as well adapted to
that environment will have offspring that will
be out competed or selected against leaving less
of their genes in the next generation. This view
explains that each proceeding generation is
bigger and better and will eventually evolve and
take the place of the less suitable organisms.
Those that did not develop these characteristics
would freeze to death.
13Plant Adaptations and Creation
- From a purely scientific standpoint, adaptations
are features that suit an organism or species for
its niche and habitat. However, from a
creationists viewpoint we see adaptation as the
natural God given variation that was designed by
him to allow organisms to function effectively in
a differing array of environments. This means
that the creature was designed with plan and
purpose to
14Plant Adaptations and Creation
- function within the given environment.
Creatures that live in cold environments have fur
and blubber because that was part of Gods plan.
From the Biblical view, all organisms were
created with the genetic variability, to produce
all the diversity seen within created kinds.
Post-Flood events that isolated these creatures
in a given environment caused specific traits to
be more prominent due to death of creatures
15Plant Adaptations and Creation
- lacking the God given characteristics to live
in that environment. This is the very reason why
we see creatures all over the world that are
similar, but live in different niches of a given
habitat.
16Plant Diversities/Variations
- Many plants have a waxy, protective layer on
their leaves, stems, and flowers called the
cuticle. - The cuticle slows the evaporation of water from a
plants surface and provides some protection from
insects.
17Plant Diversities/Variations (cont.)
- A rigid cell wall made of cellulose surrounds the
cell membrane in a plant cell.
18Plant Diversities/Variations (cont.)
- Cellulose is an organic compound made of chains
of glucose molecules. - Many land plants also produce a chemical compound
called lignin which strengthens cellulose and
makes it more rigid.
19Plant Diversities/Variations (cont.)
- In some plants such as mosses, water and
nutrients can move from cell to cell by the
processes of osmosis and diffusion.
20Plant Diversities/Variations (cont.)
- Other plants such as grasses and trees have
specialized tissues called vascular tissue. - Vascular tissue is composed of tubelike cells
that transport water and nutrients in some
plants.
Brand X Pictures/PunchStock
21Plant Diversities/Variations (cont.)
- Water carries the reproductive cells of aquatic
plants from plant to plant. - Some plants have water-resistant seeds or spores
that are part of their reproductive process. - Seeds and spores move through environments in
different ways, including animals and
environmental factors such as wind and water.
22Plant Classification
- Members of the plant kingdom are organized into
groups called divisions. - Like all organisms, each plant has a two-word
scientific name.
imagebroker/Alamy
23Plant Classification
One of the traits used in classifying plants is
the presence or absence of vascular tissue.
Xylem and phloem are the most familiar, but there
are others.
24Vascular plants plants that have vascular
tissue. Nonvascular plants plants that do not
have vascular tissue.
Do you think that plants without vascular tissues
are tall or short? Why?
25Another important trait used to classify plants
is whether they produce seeds.
Nonvascular plants seedless and reproduce by
producing gametes in one stage of their life
cycle and spores.
Vascular plants some reproduce by gametes and
spores others by gametes and seeds.
Seedless plants do not have flowers.
26Plant Classification (cont.)
- Some seed plants have flowers that produce fruit
with one or more seeds, but others, such as pine
trees, produce their seeds in cones.
27The 3 Major categories of plants