Parts of the plant and their functions
Importance of plants
• Without plants life on earth would not exist
Plants:
• Primary source of food for people and animals
• Produce oxygen
• help to keep us cool
• renew the air
Plants:
• slow wind speed
• provide a home for wildlife
• beautify surroundings
• perfume the air
• furnish building materials and fuel
• Root system – generally underground and obtains water and dissolved nutrients for the plant
• Shoot system – generally aerial and obtains sunlight and exchanges gases such as carbon dioxide, oxygen, and water vapor.
• Stem
• Leaves
• Reproductive structures
• buds
Parts of a plant
• Three basic parts–leaves
–stems
–roots
Leaves
• the food factory of the plant
• produce the food used by the plant or stored for later use
Shape and size of leaves
• vary among plants
• used for identification of plants
Leaf arrangement
• alternate
• opposite
• whorled–arranged in a circle around the
stem
External leaf structure
• petiole - leaf stalk
• leaf blade (leaf)–has veins
–forms structural framework of the leaf
Midrib
• large center vein from which all other leaf veins extend
Margins
• edges of leaves
• assists in plant identification
Internal leaf structure
• epidermis–skin of the leaf
–single layer of cells
–protects leaf from loss of too much moisture
Guard Cells
• open and close the small pore on the underside of the leaf
Stomates
• allow the plant to breathe and transpire–give off moisture
Chloroplasts
• contain chlorophyll
• located inside the food making cells
Leaf modifications
• succulents (for water storage)
spines (to decrease water loss and reduce herbivore damage)
- tendrils (for climbing)
- food catching (eg. Venus flytrap)
food
• manufactured in the leaves moves downward through the stem to the roots–used by the plant
–stored in stem or root and leaf in the form of sugar, starch or protein.
Stems
• have two main functions–movement of water and minerals
from the roots upward and movement of manufactured food down
Stem functions
• support of leaves and reproductive structures
Stems also
• used for food storage and reproduction of plants involving cuttings
• Green stems manufacture food just as leaves do
External Stem Structure
• lenticels- breathing pores
• bud scale scars-indicate where terminal bud has been located previous year.
Leaf Scars
• shows where leaf was attached
• Distance between the two represents one year of growth.
Internal Stem Structure
• phloem- bark, carries manufactured foods down.
• Xylem- wood, carries water and minerals up.
• Cambium- separates the 2 and produces all new cells.
Economic Importance
• food
• building materials
Roots
• Usually underground• functions:
–anchor plant and hold upright–absorb water and minerals form
soil and conduct to stem–store food, & propagation
Root Structure
• internal
–similar to stems
–older roots have xylem, phloem and cambian
EXTERNAL
external
–root cap
•produces continuous supply of new cells
•protects roots as they push through soil
Structure
• root hairs
–absorb moisture and minerals
Functions other than water and mineral absorption
• cash crops for food
–carrots
–radishes
–sweet potatoes• propagation
Type of root systems
• fibrous-grasses
–easier transplanting
–shorter, smaller, more compact
• tap root-carrot
–longer and fewer roots
Monocot versus Dicot
• END!
Parts of the Flower
• stamens
–male part of flower
–has two parts
•filament-stalk
Anther
• anther- sac-like structure on top of filament, contains pollen
Parts of the Flower
• Pistil - female part
• in the center of flower
• has three parts
Pistil
• three parts
• stigma - top - sticky
• style - tube leading from stigma to ovary
Ovary
• egg cells develop here
• grows to become fruit or seedcoat
Types of Flowers
• complete
–contains 4 main parts
Incomplete
• does not have all 4 main parts
Perfect
• has stamens and pistils
Imperfect
• lacks stamens or pistils
Types of Flowers
• monoecious
–stamens and pistils are found in separate flowers on the same plant
•ex: Corn
dioecious
• male or staminate flowers found on one plant, female or pistilate flowers on another plant
• ex: holly