Plant Uses
Roots, Stems, & Leaves
Photosynthesis & Other Processes
Plant Reproduction
Mixed Bag
100

Name 2 ways humans use plants.

Food, fibre, medicine, fuel, construction, transportation

100

What do roots do for a plant?

absorb water/minerals, anchor, store food

100

What gas do plants take in for photosynthesis?

Carbon Dioxide

100

Name the two main types of plant reproduction.

Sexual and asexual (vegetative)

100

What is the male part of a flower called?

Stamen

200

What is the world's most important non-edible plant (used for clothing)?

Cotton

200

Which plant tissue moves water up the stem?

Xylem

200

Fill in the blanks: Sunlight + CO₂ + H₂O → ______ + ______

Sugar & Oxygen

200

Which flower part produces pollen?

Anther

200

What do plants release during photosynthesis that humans need to survive?

Oxygen

300

What plant product was used in Aspirin?

White willow bark

300

What process is it when water moves through a selectively permeable membrane?

Osmosis

300

What is the role of stomata in photosynthesis?

allow CO₂ in and O₂/water vapour out

300

What is pollination?

The transfer of pollen from the stamen to the pistil

300

Give one example of a pollinator other than bees.

butterflies, bats, birds, wind, etc.

400

Name two reasons why plants are important to the environment.

Air, food, soil, water, shelter

400

Explain how transpiration helps water move up tall trees.

water evaporates from leaves, pulling water upward through xylem like a straw

400

How are diffusion and osmosis different?

diffusion = general movement from high to low concentration; osmosis = movement of water across a membrane

400

Name one method of asexual reproduction used by farmers.

Grafting, cuttings, layering

400

Explain one advantage and one disadvantage of asexual reproduction in plants.

Advantage → offspring identical to parent, predictable traits. Disadvantage → no genetic diversity, less adaptability to change

500

In what ways do plants help regulate water in the environment?

Absorb/store water, filter water, regulate flow to prevent flooding/erosion

500

Why would desert plants often have thick stems or reduced leaves?

thick stems store water; reduced leaves/spines reduce water loss

500

Why do plants still need oxygen even though they produce it?

they respire at night to release energy for growth and survival

500

Why is genetic modification of crops sometimes controversial?

health concerns, environmental impacts, corporate control of seeds, ethics

500

Why might farmers prefer selective breeding or cloning plants over sexual reproduction?

consistency in traits, higher yield, predictable characteristics, disease resistance

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