Vascular Plants
Multicellularity
Life Cycles
Nonvascular Plants
Angiosperms
100
What chemical is the most central to the structure of vascular plants?

Lignin

100

What is the extent of cell-cell communication in simple multicellular organisms? 

Very limited and mostly a transfer of resources (food, water)

100

Label the greek roots/prefixes with their meanings: 


-phyte      means:_____________


-epi         means:_____________


gameto-  means:_____________


sporo-     means:_____________

-phyte       means: plant/plant-like organism


-epi          means: on/upon, above, over


gameto-   means: gamete


sporo-      means: spore

100

How do vascular plants obtain water?

Direct absorbtion
100

On the blank phylogenetic tree, label where angiosperms are located and explain why. 

See marathon slides

200

What are two examples of vascular seedless plants?

Ferns, horsetails, club mosses, whisk tails

200

What is a key feature of complex multicellularity that allows cells deep within tissues to receive molecules without relying on diffusion alone?

Bulk transport

200

What is the purpose of meiosis?

What is the purpose of mitosis?

Meiosis - to cut ploidy in half in order for cells to undergo genetic recombination, and form genetically diverse offspring. 

Mitosis - to create a pair of genetically identical daughter cells, for repair and/or growth and development. 

200

On the blank phylogenetic tree, circle where nonvascular plants are located.

See slides.

200

The carpel contains all of the following EXCEPT:


A. Stigma
B. Style
C. Ovary
D. Anther

Correct answer: D

300

Which are present within/associated with vascular plants? Select all that apply.

1) Seeds

2) Spores

3) Cellulose

4) Fruits and flowers

5) Lignin

6) Mycorrhizal fungus

1,2,3,4,5,6

300

In this type of multicellularity, nuclei divide but cells do not undergo cytokinesis, producing one large cell with many nuclei. What is it?

Coenocytic organization

300

Label which life cycle is gametophyte dominant and which is sporophyte dominant. (See slides). 

See slides for answer. 

300

Which of the following is required for successful fertilization in nonvascular plants such as mosses?

A. Wind dispersal of sperm
B. Presence of vascular tissues
C. Free-standing water for flagellated sperm to swim
D. Production of seeds


Correct answer: C

300

When do aggregate fruits form?


A. Several flowers fuse
B. A single carpel produces one fruit
C. Multiple carpels from one flower mature into separate units
D. Non-ovary tissue forms the fruit

Correct answer: C

400

Describe...

1) what microspores and megaspores are

2) what they develop into

3) what produces each

4) what kind of plant they are associated with

Microspores - small spores produced by microsporangia, develop into male gametophytes

Megaspores - large spores produced by megasporangia, develop into female gametophytes

Both are associated with heterosporous plants. 

400

Why did complex multicellularity evolve? Give 3 reasons.

1) more specialized body forms (faster, stronger, etc). 

2) more prey

3) fewer predators

4) Greater physiological complexity compared to most organisms

5) Protection from environment

6) Can attain much larger sizes

400

Draw the diploid-dominant life cycle.

See slides.

400

Which paraphyletic group of nonvascular plants are extremely drought tolerant?

Bryophytes

400

Describe the difference between monocots and dicots, then give an example plant of each.

Monocot - one cotyledon (seed leaf), parallel veins. Ex: corn

Dicot - two cotyledons (seed leaf), branched veins. 

Ex: apple tree

500

Describe the difference between tracheids and vessel elements, and then give an example of where each is found.

Tracheids - long, narrow, tapered cells with overlapping ends and pits to slow water flow (found in all vascular plants)

Vessel elements - Shorter, wider cells that are stacked end-to-end to form more open vessels for faster water transport (found in angiosperms and some gymnosperms).

500

Create a Venn diagram of the differences and similarities of simple and complex multicellularity. Include 5 bullet points in simple multicellularity and complex multicellularity, and 3 similarities between the two. 

See slides for example answer. 

500
Draw the haploid-dominant life cycle. 

See slides for the answer. 

500

What is Xylem made of? Draw and describe the two examples. 

See slides - tracheids and vessel elements. 

500

Describe the function of fruits and from what plant anatomy they are formed. 

Form: Formed from the ovary wall, but sometimes the sepal and/or petals, and induced to form by the seed endosperm. 

Function: protect seeds and enhance seed dispersal. 


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