Regions of active cell division in plants, leading to growth in length (apical meristems) or girth (lateral meristems)
Tissue responsible for transporting water and minerals from roots to other parts of the plant
Tissue that carries sugars and other organic nutrients throughout the plant
Small openings on the surface of leaves that allow gas exchange (CO2 in, O2 out) and transpiration
Organelles in plant cells where photosynthesis occurs, containing chlorophyll
specialized cells surrounding stomata that control their opening and closing
Flowering plants that produce seeds encloesd within a fruit
Non-flowering plants (like conifers) that produce seeds exposed on cones
The transfer of pollen from male to female reproductive organs inplants, facilitating fertilization
The union of male and female gametes to form a zygote, leading to seed development
A nutrient-rich tissue that supports the developing embryo in seeds.
Mature ovary of a flower, typically containing seeds, and aids in thir dispersal.
The movement or transport of seeds away from the parent plant, ensuring species spread
The process by which a seed develops into a new plant under favorable conditions
Non-vascular plants like mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Among the earliest land plants.
Vascular plants like ferns that reproduce via spores and don't produce seeds
Seed-producing plants that do not form flowers (e.g., conifers like pine trees). Seeds are "naked" or not enclosed in fruit.
Flowering plants with seeds enclosed in fruit. They're the most diverse and recent group of plants.
Specialized tissue (xylem and phloem) that transports water, minerals, and nutrients. Vascular plants evolved this tissue to grow taller and survive on land.
Single reproductive cells capable of growing into a new organism without another cell - common in mosses and ferns.
A plant embryo and a food supply encased in a protective covering. A key evolutionary advancement in gymnosperms and angiosperms.
A waxy layer on surfaces that helps prevent water loss - one of the early adaptations to life on land.
thin walled cells, living at maturity, hosts cellular processes to support, growth, and development, and stores carbohydrates, especially starch
Thick walled cells, living at maturity, cellular processes to support, growth, and development, support and protect plant body
Cells with lignin in their cell walls, dead at maturity, support and protect plant body
Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium
seeds: single cotyledon
leaves: parallel veins
flowers: multiples of 3
stems: scattered vein pattern
roots: fibrous
seeds: two cotyledons
leaves: webbed/branched veins
flowers: multiples of 4-5
stems: ring arrangement
roots: taproot
grow on other plants and live entirely above ground
Chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b. yes the names sound dumb.
Photosynthesis, gas exchange, storage, & protection
Dicot has palisade parenchyma!
Keep a plant upright/anchor it, Absorb water and nutrients, potential storage, and erosion control
root system composed of a large, thick root which grows downward, pushes deep into soil. both gymnosperms and angiosperms have taproots.
smaller root that ranches from a large root. tend to be shallower and are present in monocots.
Dicot got a big ahh X in the middle of the vascular bundle!
green, fleshy stemmed plants that have a thinner epidermis and will have the ability to do photosynthesis vs Stems composed of wood w/ zero photosynthesis.
we got a thicker vascular cambium on the woody vs thinner/little to no annual growth on the herbacious.
Dicot! Good rule of thumb: Dicot is usually if not ALWAYS a more complicated structure!
Younger Xylem through which water and minerals are transported to the leaves.
Older xylem layers that no longer conduct water but are rather rigid and help support the tree.
Tracheids!
sieve cells
Tracheids, vessel elements
Sieve tube elements, Companion cells
The net movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration (passive transport)
Is a passive movement of WATER that occurs naturally with the concentration gradient (passive transport)
energy is needed to move articles across the cell membrane - goes against the concentration gradient
The process in which water evaporates from the inside of a leaf to the outside through the stomata
The mechanism by which positive pressure in the roots moves water upward in a plant
Active transport of minerals into the roots causes more water to move in by osmosis. this increases the pressure in the roots as per the name and shoots water up.
hydrogen bonding to evaporating bits aid in the long distance transport: strongest force!
the attraction of one water molecule to another
The attraction of one water molecule to something other than a water molecule
The transport of sucrose and otehr organic molecules through the phloem of a plant
The stalk that joins a leaf to a stem
Rhizomes, Corms, Stolon, tubers/"eyes" of tubers
if favorable traits offspring will carry, less energy usage, only one plant required, plantlets are generally more robust than young seedlings, higher survival rate
reproductive: Stamen/male (Anther = tip, Filament = stalk) Carpel/female (Stigma = tip, Style = stalk, ovary = bottom, ovule = inside ovary, reproductive structure housing)
Non-reproductive: petal, receptacle, peduncle, sepal
primary: length of the plant's shoot/root, apical meristem growth
secondary: addition to girth, lateral meristem, vascular cambium and wood
quality (wavelengths)
intensity (brightness)
length of day (photoperiodism)
Nitrogen - stunned growth,yellowing of the leaves (chlorosis)
Phosphorus - purplish veins, stunted growth, fewer seeds/fruit
Potassium - reduced growth, curled/spotted older leaves, burned leaf edges
if temperature isn't optimal, the plant will slow its growth.
chemical produced by plant cells that regulatese growth and differentiation
a change in direction of growth or movement of a plant in response to a stimulus
Phototropism: change in the direction of growth of a plant in response to light
Gravitropism: change in the direction of growth in response to gravity
Thigmotropism: change in the direction of growth in response to contact
Chemical that stimulates cells to elongate, inhibit/stimulate cell division
play a role in flowering and fruit production
promote cell division and also slow cell aging in certain plant organs by inhibiting protein breaking down and stimulating protein synthesis
influences fruit ripening, shoot and root growth and diffeerntiation, flower opening, leaf and fruit drop, and flower and leaf senescence (development processes that occur between maturity and death)
Inhibits growth and diffuses into the guard cells which causes them to close (minimizes water loss)