What type of cells have plants?
Eukaryotic plant cells
Where can we find stomata?
In the leaves, in the underside part
Explain the function of roots
Absorption, store substances, fix the plant to the soil
Where takes place this process?
In the green part of plants
What type of tropisms has roots?
Positive hydrotropism/geotropism, negative phototropism
What type of nutrition has plants?
Autotrophic
How are the leaves of oak trees?
Non-needle like, smooth edge, lobe edge
Explain the function of leaves
Contain chloroplasts, and chlorophyll, photosynthesis takes place in the leaves. Gas exchange and transpiration also take place here.
What substances needs the plant to do photosynthesis?
What is the raw sap?
Water and mineral salts, carbon dioxide, and solar energy.
The mixture of water and mineral salts
What type of tropism has the stem?
Positive phototropism
Negative hydrotropism /geotropism
Mosses and ferns are...
Non-flowering plants
Say the name of the different parts of a leaf. Go to the blog and say the parts
Explain the function of the stem
Keep the plant upright; transport substances; place to store food reserves
What substances are produced/expel in the process?
Elaborated sap: organic matter (glucose) and oxygen is expelled.
Carnivorous plants such as the Venus flytrap are an example of tropism or nastic movement?
Nastic movement, seismonasty
What type of plants are mosses?
Non-flowering, non vascular
¿En qué nos debemos fijar para saber si una hoja es simple o compuesta?
En la yema axilar, donde esté indica lo que es la hoja
What part of the root protects it as it grows?
The root cap
What is the xylem? What is transported by the xylem vessels? How does it travel?
The raw sap. It travels from the roots to other parts of the plant
Thigmotropism. Say the stimulus and an example of a plant with this type of tropism
Stimulus_ contact
Vines, climbing plants
What type of plants are pine trees?
Flowering, vascular, gymnosperms
Say thing about this leave
Non-needle like, compound. Opposite leaflets
The name given to the part of the roots where water and mineral salts are absorbed
What is the phloem? What is transported by the phloem vessels? How does it travel?
Elaborated sap. It travels from the leaves to other parts of the plant
The main differences between tropisms and nastic movements.
Tropisms are permanent changes in which the plant grows. Nastic movements are temporary changes, reversible without growth.