Nonvascular and Vascular
Monocots or Dicots
Seedbearing Vascular Plants
Plant Parts
Other
100

Nonvascular Plants

Mosses and Liverworts

100

Has one cotyledon

Monocot

100

A plant that has one growing season

Annual

100

Sticky substance that protects a pine tree when broken

Resin

100

Roots that branch out

Fibrous Roots

200

The grouping of how plants are classified based on how they transport water

Nonvascular and Vascular

200

Has leaves with branching veins

Dicots

200

A plant that has a growing season of MORE than two years

Perrenial

200

Leafy branch of a fern

Frond

200

Plants that have green, leafy stems

Herbaceous plants

300

Mosses and Liverworts have these instead of roots

Rhizoids

300

Has flowers with petals in groups of 3 or 6

Monocots

300

Tiny seed leaves of an embryo

Cotyledon

300

Developing frond

Fiddlehead

300

Tubes that carry sugars and food

Phloem

400

Seedless vascular plants with tall, hollow, jointed stems

Horsetails

400

Has fibrous roots

Monocots

400

First root that emerge from a seed

Primary Root

400

Tubes that carry water and minerals

Xylem

400
Best type of growing environments for nonvascular plants

Any environment near water


(example: rainforest, river)


500

The underground stems of ferns and horsetails

Rhizomes

500
Has vascular tissues arranged in a circle

Dicots

500

Four types of Gymnosperm

Cycad

Ginkgoes

Gnetophytes

Conifers

500

Cell that helps a tree grow wider

Cambium Cell

500

Two main differences between Angiosperms and Gymnosperms

Angiosperms: Flowers and seeds are inside fruit

Gymnosperms: no flowers, seeds are in cone