What are the 4 main organs of Angiosperms?
stems, leaves, roots, and flowers
What is the function of the vacuole?
water storage
Why did you wash your hands thoroughly and spray your skin with ethanol before beginning the experiment?
Limit contamination
What is the outermost tissue called?
Epidermis
How are monocot and dicot leaves different?
Dicots- have blade and petiole, pinnate or palmate venation
Monocots- have blade and sheath, parallel venation
What is the protective outer covering of a seed called?
Teste
What effect do Rhaphides have on predators?
Deter predators because they are sharp and taste bad.
What is the name of the instrument used to measure diameter/thickness of your plants?
Calipers
The Vascular Bundles are made up of what two tissue types?
What is is called when veins originate from a central point?
palmate venation
What is the pore through which sperm gains access to the egg?
Micropyle
What is the difference/similarities between osmosis and diffusion?
similarities- travel from high concentration to low concentration
differences- diffusion is the movement of solutes, and osmosis is the movement of liquid (usually water)
From what other organ do the roots originate?
Stem
What type of cells have simple pits and tapered ends?
Fiber cells
What are the 3 types of leaf arrangements in dicots?
Alternate, opposite, and whorled
What is a meristem?
Group of externally juvenile cells; produce new cells and growth of the plant
What is an amyloplast?
a plastid specialized for storing starch in a plant.
What plant hormone initiates root formation?
Auxin (IAA)
What kind of cells contributes to the gritty texture of fruits?
Sclereids (AKA: stone cells)
What is one (of many) features of Gymnosperm leaves that enable it to live in low-moisture environments?
- reduced leaf size
- thick cuticle
- veins in center of leaf (better insulation)
-fewer stomates (decrease water loss)
What is a node?
Site on a stem where leaves attach.
Using the people in your group, act out Brownian Motion and then describe what it is.
Random movement of molecules due to kinetic energy in the molecule
Where is Agrobacterium tumefaciens found in nature?
Soils
What function does the Cladode stem modification serve? What is an example that has a cladode?
- Photosynthesis
-Cactus or Starfish flower
What leaf type is this( ____phytic)? What type of environment has it adapted to live in?

-Hydrophytic leaf
-adapted for submerged/inundated environments