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Plants 2:Plant Parts
PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon
SEEDS:
PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon
SEEDS:Activities
•Seed tasting LAB: mango, pomegranite, coconut, avocado, kiwi
•Seed Hunt LAB:
•Seed Dissection LAB:
•Seed Planting:
•Seed Experiments:
•Seeds: seeds are made by the plant so that the plant can reproduce itself (make more.)
•Have lots of stored energy in them for the young plant to start life. That’s why animals eat them.
•Germination: the process of a seed sprouting into a young plant.
•To germinate, some need digestion, some need cold, some need warmth, some need fire, all need water.
•Roots grow down geotropism (following gravity)
•Stem grows up phototropism (following light)
•They travel by wind, sticking to animal fur, in water, and by being eaten by animals/people
•We eat some seeds
•There are two types of angiosperm seeds: Monocots, Dicots
VIDEO: HSW seed dispersal
COTYLEDONS:
1.Monocots have one cotyledon, (corn, rice, wheat, grasses)
2.Dicots have 2 cotyledons (bean plant, roses, cacti)
Seed Parts
1.Seed coat
2.Cotyledons (food)
3.Small plant embryo
Label the type of seed & its 3 parts.
1.Seed coat
2.Cotyledons (food)
3.Small plant embryo
•Gymnosperm seed
•Dicot seed
•Monocot seed
SEED GERMINATION STEPS:
1.Water soaks into the seed coat
2.Seed coat splits
3.Root grows down
4.Small embryo grows up, taking cotyledons with them
5.Cotyledons turn GREEN with sunlight (photosynthesis)
VIDEO: Germination of a Seed 1.5 min
Germination of a Seed
Plant Reproduction
PPT. by, Robin D. Seamon
How does a plant reproduce itself?
1.Asexual Reproduction: (produces exact copies of itself, off of itself)
2.Sexual Reproduction: (sperm & egg combine)
• Flower makes a seed that germinates
SporesCuttingsGraftingBulbs/ Tubers
FLOWERS
FLOWER:
Activity
•Flower dissection
•Petal Dying
•Flower Hunt
http
://en
.wik
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•Flowers make the seed for the plant
•The bright color & good smell attract insects
•Insects drink the sweet nectar for food
•While doing so, they rub the pollen & unknowingly take it to another flower! (pollination)
•After pollination, the plant loses its flower & starts working on the seed
•Angiosperms create a tasty fruit to surround the seed to trick an animal into eating it. The animal will pass the seed later with a little fertilizer…
ADVANCE
BACK
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Pollination:
process by which an insect carries pollen from the male part of the flower to the female part of the flower.
This allows the flower to make a seed.
WATCH ANIMATION LINK
HSW: Video honeybees 4 min
Flower Parts
•Petals: brightly colored to attract insects
•Pistil: female part;
•Stigma: sticky top part of the pistil
•Ovary: inside the pistil; it has the egg (female part of the flower)
•Stamen: filament & anther
•Anther: top of the stamen; has the pollen grains (male part of the flower)
•Sepal: green covering of the bud
DIAGRAM LINK
• Pollen from the anther (male part) is taken to the stigma of the pistil (female part.)
• Pollen creates a pollen tube down the style into the ovary of the pistil where the eggs are located.
• When pollen meets the egg, fertilization has happened and seeds begin to form.
• In angiosperms, the ovaries swell, creating a juicy fruit on the outside of seeds.
http
://en
.wik
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PARTS OF A
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POLLINATION
Play Activity 2
Play Activity 1
Flower fertilization:
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DissectionDissect your flower and label the following parts.
Male parts BLUE
Stamen
Anther
pollen
Female parts RED
Pistil
Stigma
Ovary: Egg
OTHER:
Sepals Petals
Venus Fly Trap
HSW video (2.5 min)
ROOTS:
PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon
ROOTS:Activity
•Root Hunt Lab
•Grow a potato
•Grow seeds in a bag
•Carrot Top growing
•Root a cutting in water
ROOTS:
•hold the plant in the ground (anchor)
•Stop erosion
•Take in water & minerals for the plant
•Parts of a root:
Root cap: thin covering, protects root tip
Root hairs: threadlike parts of cells on surface of root
Phloem: path that food from leaves take down the plant to roots
Xylem: path that water & minerals take up the plant
Cortex: stores food in roots & stems
Taproot
Grows straight down with a few side branches
Fibrous Root
Grows more shallow, ‘hairy’; many fine- branching roots
foxtail
dandelion
Tuber: modified plant structure enlarged to hold nutrients
•stem tuber, (onion)
•root tuber, (sweet potato)
•potato tuber (potato)
•Bulbs: underground shoot that stores food; roots grow underneath (stem tuber)
Buttress Roots grow from the trunk for added support
Epiphyte: strangler
Fig
•Special kinds of ‘roots’: Link
Mangrove roots grow negative geotropism (up!) and then back down.
Prop Roots (adventitious roots) help hold the plant up in wet soils
In the Garden:
(Special roots & stems)
Carrots and BeetrootCarrots and beetroot are thickened tap roots which have very few lateral roots. Both are biennials i.e. they only grow for two years. In the first year they store food manufactured by their leaves in their tap root, and in the second year they use the stored food to produce flowers (called bolting). We harvest the carrots or beetroots before they bolt.
GingerGinger is a rhizome - a type of stem which grows horizontally just under the surface of the ground. Leaves grow from buds at the nodes on the stem. The stem is thick and fleshy and stores reserve food for the plant.
PotatoesThis is likely to trick many people. Potatoes are not roots but underground storage stems which are formed when the growth point of an underground stem, a rhizome, almost stops lengthening and increases greatly in thickness. This forms an underground storage organ which stores large quantities of starch.
Sweet PotatoesSweet potatoes are the greatly thickened roots of the fibrous root system of the sweet potato plant which contain reserves of starch.
Onions and GarlicOnions and garlic are bulbs. A bulb is an underground storage organ which consists of a very short stem on which fleshy bases of the leaves store food for the plant.
STEM:
PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon
STEM:
Activity•Stem Hunt Lab
•Stem Rubbing
•Flower Chains
•Celery Dying
•Tropism experiments
•Woody stems & soft stems
•Carry water & minerals up and food down
•Hold the plant up (leaves & flowers)
•A tree’s stem is called a trunk
•Some grow underground (potato)
TROPISMS: movement of a plant
Positive tropism (moving toward the stimulus)
Negative tropism (moving away from the stimulus)
•Geotropism: all above ground plant parts grow away from gravity (up) roots go down
•Phototropism- all stems bend towards the sunlight-
•thigmotropism: response to physical contact- Vines: special kind of ‘climbing’ stem
•Some grow along the ground (runners) like strawberries ADVANCEHSW Video: creeper plants/vines (1 ½ min)
BACK
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Phototropism
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Thigmotropism
BACK
•Vine:
A special kind of stem that grows up and sideways; it climbs
BACK
Runner
A runner produces an identical plant to the mother
BACK
•Xylem: path that water & minerals take up the plant
•Ploem: path that water & minerals take down the plant.
•Cortex: stores food in roots & stems
LEAVES:
PPt. by, Robin D. Seamon
LEAVES:
Activity
•Leaf Hunt Lab
•Leaf rubbings
•Leaf pressing
•Leaf pounding
PARTS OF A LEAF
•Veins carry water & minerals to the leaf; carry the food the leaf makes away from the leaf
•Blade the main part of the leaf
•Petiole connects the leaf to the branch
Vein
Vein
KINDS OF LEAVES:
•Simple leaves: one leaf blade
•Compound leaves: several symmetrical leaves
•Turn colors in the Fall & fall off-
•deciduous tree leaves will freeze in the winter, so as a precaution, trees take in all of the chlorophyl to store in the trunk & roots until spring
•Leaves without green = color!
•Needles: special kinds of leaves to conserve water
•Make food for the plantADVANCE
Simple Leaves
BACK
BACK
http
://st
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blog
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•Transpiration- process by which plants lose water through the leaves
99% water taken into roots are transpired out the leaves
2. Water through cortex of root to xylem & up stem
1. Water from soil into root hairs
3. Transpiration in leaves helps draw water up stem
4. Water moves up stem to veins to cells
Transpiration film LINK
•Respiration- process by which plants lose air (oxygen) & gain air (CO2) through the leaves
•Guard cells close & open the stomata as needed
•Photosynthesis- process by which plants turn sunlight into energy (food)
http://www.grow-a-head.com/index/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=24&Itemid=62
HSW: video Autotrophs vs. Heterotrophs (1 min)
HSW: Photosynthesis Video 2.5 min
80
Hg200.59
Mercury
Atomic number (electron/proton pairs)
Atomic weight
symbol
Element name
Electron (-)nucleus
Proton (+)
Neutron
1. Chlorophyll absorbs light from the sun
2. Sun’s energy splits water molecule into hydrogen & oxygen
3. Hydrogen joins carbon dioxide to make food (sugar/glucose)
4. Sugar carried through the plant; oxygen is released into the air
6 6 6
H2O O2CO2 =+ + C6 H12 O6
PHOTOSYNTHESIS
MOVE
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C C
C C
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C C
C C
C C
O O O O O
O O O O O
O O O O O
H HH H H H
H HH H H H
PLANT LABS:1. Leaves: Identify & graph your collection into journal; view & draw fern spores;
Answer questions in Plant Journal.
2. Flowers: identify & draw 5 local spring flowers on white paper. Glue into journal.Roots: identify fibrous & taproots; draw 7 label root parts in journal; Answer questions in Plant Journal.
3. Seeds: seed dissection: label 3 parts of the seed into journal; observe pine nuts in pinecones-- sketch into journal; Answer questions in Plant Journal.
4. Stems: Compare three different types of bark. Notice the color & texture. How do the grains run? Is there a pattern? Create a bark rubbing with a dark crayon (rubbed sideways). Sketch the three specimens.
Header:
LAB: LEAVESRULES: BE GENTLE WITH THE LEAVES. They are fragile!
• What kinds of leaves are in your envelope? ___________, ______________, _______________, _______________, ______________
• Write how many of each kind of leaves on the lines above.
• Sketch one of the leaves, labeling the blade, veins, midriff, & petiole
• What are the three processes performed by the leaves for the plant. _______________, ______________, _______________
• What is the difference between a simple leaf and a compound leaf? _____________________________________________________________
Header:
Leaf Bank: oak, maple, dogwood, elm, beech, redbud, sweetgum
GRAPHING:Create a graph showing the numbers of each type of leaf in your packet. Label the x and y axis. Create a key for the leaf types.
TITLE: _______________
Y axis
X axis
(
)
( )
KEY:
VeinVein
LABELINGDIRECTIONS: Use your notes and the definitions below to label the following parts of a leaf.
Vein: ribs that form the vessel system for carrying water and nutrients through the plantMidrib: the center or principle vein of a leafBlade: broad, flat part of the leafPetiole: the small leaf stem that attaches the leaf to the branchesStipules: leaf-like outgrowth at the base of a leafLeaflet: the smaller parts of a whole compound leafAlternate arrangement: arrangement of leaves where the leaves take turns on either side of the branchOpposite arrangement: arrangement of leaves where the leaves are directly opposite each other on the branch
LEAF ARRANGEMENT
LEAF PARTS
Compound Leaf
SimpleLeaf
LAB: SEEDSRULES: BE CAREFUL DISSECTING THE SEEDS.
• What is the purpose of a seed? ______________________________________
• What is the process of a seed sprouting into a young plant? ________________
• How do seeds travel? _____________________________________________
• What is the difference between a monocot & a dicot? ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Sketch the following parts of your dissected lima bean seeds: (seed coat, cotyledon, small embryo)
• Name 5 seeds that we eat. __________________________________________________________________________________________________
Header:
LAB: ROOTSRULES: BE GENTLE WITH THE ROOTS. They are wilting!
• What is the purpose of a root for a plant? ____________________, __________________________________
• What part of the root carries water up the plant? _____________
• What part of the root carries water & nutrients down the plant? _____________
• Sketch & label the roots from your station into your journal. (root hairs, rootcap, fibrous root, taproot)
• What is the difference between a fibrous root and a taproot? _______________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Name some roots that we eat. _________________________________________________________________________
Header:
LABELINGDIRECTIONS: Use your notes and the definitions below to label the following parts of a root.
Lateral root: root coming off the main root
Primary root: main taproot
LAB: STEMRULES: BE GENTLE WITH THE BARK SPECIMENS.
• What is the purpose of a stem for a plant? ______________________________
• Compare three different types of bark. Notice the color & texture. How do the grains run? Is there a pattern? Sketch the three specimens.
• What is a vine?___________________________________
• What is a runner? __________________________________
Header:
LABELINGDIRECTIONS: Use your notes and the definitions below to label the following parts of a stem .
Auxillary bud: a bud coming from the side of a stemTerminal bud: a bud coming from the end of the stemTerminal bud scar: the ringed scar on the stem where last years terminal bud wasNode: point on the stem where a leaf is or was attachedInternode: space on the stem between nodesPetiole: the leaf stem that connects to the plant’s stemBlade: flat part of a leaf
LAB: FLOWERSRULES: BE CAREFUL DISSECTING THE SEEDS.
• What type of plants are classified as having flowers? __________________
• What is the purpose of a flower for a plant? ______________________________
• What type of reproduction uses a seed? (Circle one.) Asexual reproduction OR Sexual reproduction
• Describe the process of fertilization in flowers. Write each step specifically.
• Flower dissection:
Header:
Dissect your flower, sketch and label the following parts.
Male parts BLUE
StamenAntherPollen
Female parts RED
PistilStigmaOvary: Egg
OTHER:
Sepals Petals
FLOWER Dissection
Use the following words to label the parts of the flower:
Sepals petals stigma anther stamen pistil
Pollen grains
Eggs (inside the ovary)
Label the type of seed & its 3 parts.
1. Seed coat
2. Cotyledons (food)
3. Small plant embryo
•Gymnosperm seed
•Dicot seed
•Monocot seed
Sepal
Pistil