Major Plant Groups
Anatomy Pt. 1
Anatomy Pt. 2
Anatomy Pt. 3 (I'm sorry)
Life Cycles
100

_________ are the land plants.

What are Embryophytes?

100

This type of vascular tissue is responsible for moving water within plants.

What is xylem tissue?

100

______ tissue makes up the outermost layer of a plant.

What is dermal tissue?

100

The underside of a leaf.

What is the abaxial side?

100

Unicellular, haploid, produced by mitosis.

What are gametes?

200

This group contains both the seedless and seed-producing vascular plants.

What are Tracheophytes?

200

This kind of tissue carries out photosynthesis, stores photosynthetic products, and helps to support the plant.

What is ground tissue?

200

_________ are plant cells that provide support for growing parts of young plants and herbaceous plants.

What are collenchyma cells?

200

This type of growth takes place in all types of plants, and is growth in length.

What is primary growth?

200

Multicellular, diploid, produced via fertilization.

What is the sporophyte?

300

This group has leaves called microphylls, which are small and have one single unbranched vein.

What are Lycophytes?

300

These cells are involved in photosynthesis and the storage of secondary compounds.

What are parenchyma cells?

300

________ tissue is a type of vascular tissue that moves nutrients within plants.

What is phloem tissue?

300

These take up nutrients and water from the soil and pass them into the vascular system.

What are root hairs?

300

Unicellular, haploid, produced by meiosis.

What are spores?

400

This group exhibits all of the following: seeds, flowers, and fruit.

What are Angiosperms?

400

The stalk that joins a leaf to the stem.

What is a petiole?

400

These type of plants cells make up the majority of vascular tissue, and provide support for woody plants. 

What are sclerenchyma cells?

400

In this type of herbaceous stem, the vascular bundles are arranged in a ring.

What are dicot stems?

400

Multicellular, haploid, produced by mitosis.

What is the gametophyte?

500

This group exhibits both chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b.

What are Viridophytes?

500

These are regions of growth from totipotent cells.


What are meristems?


500

This is a type of meristem that results in secondary growth (which occurs only in woody plants).

What is the vascular cambium?

500

This regulates what compounds pass into the xylem.

What is the endodermis?

500

Special Question (X2 points!):

Describe, in words, the complete plant lifecycle. You may start at whichever stage you like.

A diploid, multicellular sporophyte produces unicellular, haploid spores via meiosis. The spores undergo mitosis to produce the haploid, multicellular gametophyte which then produces haploid, unicellular gametes via mitosis. The gametes fuse (fertilization) to form a zygote, which develops into the sporophyte.

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