Plant Parts
Photosynthesis and Respiration
Water Transport
Tropisms
100

Dead cells that transport water and minerals.

Xylem
100

What organelle is required for photosynthesis?

Chloroplasts

100

Plants need water in their cells to maintain pressure and avoid wilting. This pressure is known as...

Turgor pressure.

100

What is a tropism?

A pattern of growth in response to a stimulus.

200

Vascular tissue that transports sugars.

Phloem

200

Do plants undergo cellular respiration?

Yes

200

Name the phenomenon responsible for moving water up the plant.

Transpiration pull.

200

What hormone is responsible for the tropisms we discussed?

Auxin

300

Name the three layers of plant tissue and give one example of each.

Dermal (eg. root hairs), Ground (eg. palisade cells), Vascular (eg. xylem)

300

What are the inputs of photosynthesis?

Carbon dioxide, water, solar energy

300

Name the two sources of pressure that cause water to move up the plant.

Root pressure, transpiration pressure

300

Name and define the three tropisms we discussed.

Phototropism, Gravitropism, Thigmotropism

400

These absorb potassium ions when exposed to sunlight.

Guard cells.

400

What are the outputs of cellular respiration?

Carbon dioxide, water, ATP

400
Roots actively transport minerals inside of them. Why does this help absorb water?

This makes the roots hypertonic to the soil, so water follows the solute.

400

Name the three sets of historically significant scientists regarding tropisms.

Darwin, Boysen-Jensen, Cholodny-Went

500

Name the two types of mesophyll and their function.

Palisade cells under the epidermal layer to photosynthesize. Spongy mesophyll cells below that to help gas exchange. Both found in the leaf.

500

Write the balanced equation for photosynthesis, including everything.

6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Solar Energy -> C6H12O6 + 6O2

500

Describe the process of water moving up the plant, from roots to leaves, using key terms.

I want to hear root pressure, transpiration pull, and transpiration.

500

Explain how auxin would cause a plant to bend away from gravity.

Gravity pulls auxin down, causing the cells on the lower half of the stem to grow longer, and causing the shoot to bend upwards.