This group of plants is classified as nonvascular.
What is Bryophyta (bryophytes)?
This underground root produces ferns.
What is a rhizome?
This word refers to tissues that conduct substances in a plant.
What is vascular?
This vascular tissue transports water and minerals
What is xylem?
Two types of root systems
What are taproot and fibrous root systems?
This classification group contains vascular plants that produce spores.
This odd name for a baby fern does not suggest that ferns are musical.
What is a fiddlehead?
This is the result of water filling the central vacuoles of plant cells.
What is turgor pressure?
This vascular tissue transports food
What is the phloem?
It captures the sun's energy and carry out the food-making process of photosynthesis.
What is a leaf?
This group of plants produces flowers and seeds that enclosed in a fruit.
What are angiosperms?
The leafy branch of a fern
What is a frond?
When dead cork cells dry and split, we call it this.
What is bark?
Most gymnosperms use what structures to store their seeds?
What are cones?
What member of Phylum Pterophyta was used by early American pioneers as a scrubbing brush for pots and pans?
Those are the two main stages of a plant's life cycle.
What are sporophyte and gametophyte?
What are the four primary structures found in plants?
What are stems, leaves, roots, and flowers (also accept nodes)?
This group contains autotrophic organisms that are multicellular and contain plastids.
What is Kingdom Plantae (Plant Kingdom)?
These structures on the underside of a fern leaf contain spores.
What is a sorus (sori)?
This part of a leaf is where most of the chloroplasts are located.
What is the palisade layer