Note Taker Guide for pg. 304-307 Seedless Plants Note Taker Guide for pg. 304-307.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mosses and Liverworts Ferns, Horsetails, and Club Mosses
Advertisements

Plants Without Seeds Chapter 8 Section 2.
Plants without seeds Chapter 8, section 2.
8.2 Mosses, Hornworts, and Liverworts 8.3 Ferns and their Relatives
Structure and Function in Living Things
Jeopardy!!!!! Plants/Bryophytes/Ferns $ $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $500 $400 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100.
SEEDLESS REPRODUCTION
Seedless Plants  Mosses and Liverworts  Ferns and Horsetails.
Continue working on your Cornell notes.
Seedless Plants. Nonvascular Seedless Plants Mosses, liverworts, hornworts Grow on soil, bark of trees, rocks Usually live in places that are damp Are.
Seedless Plant Reproduction
Seedless Reproduction -Compare and contrast the fundamental features of sexual and asexual reproduction. -Classify methods of reproduction as sexual or.
What is a plant? Unit 7 Chapter 20. Plant characteristics Eukaryotic Multicellular Autotroph: food made through photosynthesis Cell walls made of cellulose.
Jeopardy Start Final Jeopardy Question Characteristics of Plants Nonvascular Seedless Plants Vascular Seedless Plants Characteristics of Seed Plants.
PLANTS WITHOUT SEEDS NON VASCULAR. 2 TYPES OF PLANTS  NONVASCULAR:  plants that DO NOT have tubes that carry water and food throughout the plant  VASCULAR.
Review of Plant Diversity
Plants 7 th grade. Types of Plants Common Traits:  Plants make their own food  Plant cells have cell walls outside of their cell membranes  Plants.
Seedless Nonvascular & Vascular Plants
Bryophytes Oldest plants ~400 million years old
PLANTS Nonvascular Vascular Angiosperms Gymnosperm Seedless Seed.
8.2 Plants Without Seeds. Nonvascular Plants Do not grow tall  Do not have roots, stems or leaves Live in moist areas  Absorb water directly from environment.
Seedless Plants. Nonvascular Seedless Plants Mosses, liverworts, hornworts Grow on soil, bark of trees, rocks Usually live in places that are damp Are.
Simple Vascular Plants
Today’s Agenda…  No bellringer or flashback  Review Unit Tests  Discuss homework for this weekend  Review packet from yesterday  Notes on Seedless.
Plants. What is a Plant? Plants are – Autotrophs – Eukaryotes – Multi-cellular.
Ch.8 Plants.
Plants B 3.2 Seedless Plants. Seedless Plants Nonvascular plants are usually just a few cells thick and only 2 cm to 5 cm in height. Nonvascular plants.
Essential Question: How do new plants grow? Look at the sequence below and infer the answer.
Moss and Fern Life Cycles
Seedless Plants Chapter 26. Plant Adaptations to Land  Cuticle  Waxy covering on leaves that helps prevent desiccation  Stomata  Pores on the surface.
How do mosses get water? A
Nonvascular Plants, Mosses and Ferns.
MONOCOT AND DICOT IDENTIFICATION. Dicot Monocot.
Seedless Plants Chapter 9 Section 2.
VASCULARPLANTS. SEEDLESS VASCULAR PLANTS  Vascular plants, such as ferns are much better adapted to life on land than nonvascular plants.  Vascular.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Introduction to Plants Section 1 What Is a Plant? Section 2 Seedless.
Similarities in certain species suggest a common ancestor (cell wall, chlorophyll) Origin of Plants Modern green algae Fern.
Types of Plants Vascular Plants Nonvascular Plants Seedless Plants Nonflowering seed plants Flowering seed plants.
Introduction to plants Chapter 12 Warm up How many types of plants do you know? Can you name them.
Plantae. What is a Plant Plants come in many different forms  Cactus  Water plants  Redwood trees  Venus Fly Traps So what is the connecting pieces.
Seedless Vascular Plants What is a vascular plant? A plant that contains vascular tissues such as xylem and phloem to transport water and minerals throughout.
Ch 12 Plants Ec. I. What is a plant? A. Plant Characteristics 1. Plants make their own food through photosynthesis a. Chloroplasts.
Intro to Plants How are plants broadly classified? Vascular and nonvascular What is the difference between vascular and nonvascular plants? Nonvascular.
Plants All plants have these things in common: – Plants make their own food – Plants have a cuticle, a waxy coating that covers parts exposed to the sun.
GROUPS OF PLANTS. NON-VASCULAR PLANTS Do not have a system to transport water and nutrients Get water through diffusion Small- because they cannot move.
Chapter 9 Section 2. I. Seedless Nonvascular Plants  1. NO seeds and NO vessels for transporting nutrients and water.  2. Usually about 2-5 cm tall.
Introduction to Plants. To Introduce Make a list of five plants you might eat during a typical day Which part of the plant are you eating when you eat.
Today’s Agenda… 3-20 Bellringer: Earth’s Structure BrainPop
Chapter 9.2 Seedless Plants.
Chapter 8 Seedless Plants.
3/16/15 Mr. Faia 6th Grade Science
Plant Characteristics
Mr. Faia 3/4/15 6th Grade Science
Plant Classification.
Mosses and Liverworts Ferns, Horsetails, and Club Mosses
Chapter 12.2 Seedless Plants.
Seedless Vascular Plants
CH 10 SEC 2 PLANTS WITHOUT SEEDS.
Bryophyta Sphagnum moss liverwort moss hornwort
Why were the first land plants so small? NONVASCULAR PLANTS.
Rhizoid A rootlike structure that holds nonvascular plants in a place. Rhizoids help the plants get water and nutrients.
Plant Classification and Reproduction
Plants Chapter 8 Unit # 6.
Pterophytes (Ferns and Relatives)
CHAPTER 10 NOTES Section 1 and 2..
Chapter 12 Science Test Notes.
Mosses and Liverworts Ferns, Horsetails, and Club Mosses
Introduction to Plants
Plant Kingdom T By iTutor.com.
Presentation transcript:

Note Taker Guide for pg. 304-307 Seedless Plants Note Taker Guide for pg. 304-307

Non Vascular Plant Moss Liverworts Hornworts

Where do they get their water?

What is a rhizoid?

How does a rhizoid help?

Nonvascular plants are important First to live in an environment Form a thin layer of soil Reduce soil erosion Food for some animals Nesting material for some animals

Seedless vascular plants

Club mosses Grew to 40 m in ancient forests.

Rhizome- underground stem

Plant Reproduction Plants make spores in the sporophyte stage Fern http://www.deanza.edu/faculty/mccauley/6a-labs-plants-02.htm Plant Reproduction Fern Plants make spores in the sporophyte stage

Plant Reproduction When the spores of some plants grow, the new plants called gametophytes

Plant Classification Fern is an example of a seedless vascular plant Fronds – First fern leaves

Club moss vs. Moss Club moss has vascular tissue moss does not

Height Club mosses Horsetails 20m 8m

Horsetail silica

Horsetails – used to scrub pots

Role of seedless vascular plants Help prevent soil erosion Form communities Add to soil depth House plants Cooked and eaten Shampoo Skin-care products Coal to heat homes