Fungi
Fungal Classification
Plant Distinctives
Classification of Plants
Plant Anatomy and Physiology
100

One word to describe fungi in terms of their ability to move

Sessile
100

What allows the spores of Chytrids to move?

Flagella

100

Plants can make their own food through photosynthesis, which is why they are classified as.....

Producers / Autotrophs
100

Non-vascular plants do not have fully-developed roots and instead have ______

Rhizoid

100

Function of root hairs

To increase the surface area for water absorption

200

Mushrooms are only used by fungi as a means of sexual reproduction, which is why it is called the _______ of the fungi.

Fruiting bodies

200

The phylum of bread molds

Zygomycota

200

The life cycle of plants involve changing their genetic make-up from diploid to haploid then to diploid. This process is called ________

Alternation of generations

200

Specific similarity between the hypocotyl and the cotyledon

Both are part of the seed embryo

200

The two terms used to describe the location of buds on a plant and their definitions

At the top of the plant (terminal) or the side of the plant (axial/axillary)

300

How do fungi gain energy as decomposers?

Secrete digestive enzymes into the environment to break down organic matter into nutrients, which are absorbed directly into the cells.

300

How are the hypha of mycorrhizae fungi arranged?

Their hyphae grow in and around plant root cells.

300

The name of the diploid generation of plants

Sporophyte

300

The two vascular tissue in plants and what they transport

Xylem transports water and minerals, phloem transport nutrients

300

Two types of mesophyll and their definitions

  • Palisade mesophyll: cells organized at the top

  • Spongy mesophyll: cells scattered around with pockets of air between them. 

400

Difference between plasmogamy and karyogamy

Plasmogamy: compatible haploid hyphae fuse at the cytoplasm to form a heterokaryotic cell.

Karyogamy: some nuclei on the same mycelium fuse to form a diploid nucleus.

400
Two edible fungi in Phylum Ascomycota

Morel and truffles

400

The name of the haploid generation of plants

Gametophyte

400

The three parts of the carpel and their functions/descriptions

  1. Ovary: produces the ovule

  2. Style: a tube that grows out of the ovary

  3. Stigma: the tip of the carpel with a sticky substance to capture pollen.

400

How does auxin regulate the direction of plant growth toward the sunlight?

Auxin molecules move to the shaded side of the plant, pushing the plant to grow toward the light.

500

How do fungi reproduce asexually?

  1. The mycelium grows sporangia, which are spore-producing structures. 

  2. The sporangia directly produce spores without the need to fuse.

500

Three types of lichens and their descriptions

  1. Crustose: lies flat on its substrate (what it grows on)

  2. Fruticose: produces little fruiting bodies of various shapes and colors. 

  3. Foliose: resembles flat leaf-like structures that layer on top of each other.

500

The three characteristics of plants that Theophrastus used to classify them.

  1. Presence of stem

  2. Number of stems

  3. Distance of branches to the ground.

500

The life cycle of ferns

  1. Leaves are sporophytes, sporangia are on the underside of the fronds in a cluster called sori. 

  2. Spores are produced by meiosis within the sporangia and then released. 

  3. The spores grow into the gametophyte, called prothallus.

  4. The male gametes move across the prothallus to fertilize the female gametes.

500

The process of transpiration

  1. Water moves passively through the roots.

  2. Adhesion: water molecules stick to the sides of the plant vessels. Cohesion: water molecules hold together.

  3. Stomata on the leaves open to let water evaporate out, drawing water through the xylem.

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