280 likes | 511 Views
Plants ‘101’ QUIZ!!. Introduction to Plants. Chapter 21. #1) Vascular plants are further divided into what two categories?. seed and non-seed producing mosses and ferns flowering and non-flowering aquatic and land. Introduction to Plants. Chapter 21.
E N D
Introduction to Plants Chapter 21 #1) Vascular plants are further divided into what two categories? seed and non-seed producing mosses and ferns flowering and non-flowering aquatic and land
Introduction to Plants Chapter 21 #2) What plant tissue is specialized for transporting water? arterial tissue sap-carrying tissue thallose tissue xylem tissue
Introduction to Plants Chapter 21 #3) Which plant does not produce ‘seeds’, but rather ‘spores’? fern ginkgo maple pine
Introduction to Plants Chapter 21 #4) What characteristic of nonvascular plants enables them to survive without specialized transport tissues? small size vinelike stems leaflike structures rootlike rhizoids
Introduction to Plants Chapter 21 #5) Which vascular seed plants are the angiosperms? firs pines flowering plants sago palms
Introduction to Plants Chapter 21 #6) Which of the following characteristics is unique to the division of plants known as Conifers ? flowers cones rhizoids runners
Introduction to Plants Chapter 21 #7) Which adaptation enables a plant to conserve water? cuticle stomata seed dispersal vascular tissues
Plant Structure and Function Chapter 22 #8) Which is not an example of a tropism (growth) response for plants? vine climbing a trellis Venus flytrap closing its leaves roots growing down into the soil stems leaning toward a sunny window
Plant Structure and Function Chapter 22 #9) Which component identifies a cell as a plant cell? nucleus Golgi apparatus large central vacuole plasma membrane
Plant Structure and Function Chapter 22 #10) What is the general term for a tissue that transports substances of some kind? apical endoderm tropic vascular
Plant Structure and Function Chapter 22 #11) What type of stem grows along the soil’s surface and can produce a new plant? (Think strawberries and bermuda grass!) bulb rhizome runner tuber
Plant Structure and Function Chapter 22 #12) What is the main function of leaves? photosynthesis protection transpiration water storage
Plant Structure and Function Chapter 22 #13) Identify the main food-carrying tissue of plants. xylem phloem tracheids vessel elements
Plant Structure and Function Chapter 22 #14) Where in the leaf does most of the photosynthesis take place? A B C D
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #15) What term is used to describe the process in which new plants grow from parts of an existing plant? budding regeneration vegetative reproduction / propagation sexual reproduction
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #16) In conifers, how are pollen grains (produced by a male cone) transported to a female cone? animals fire water wind
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #17) Which is the female reproductive structure of a flower?
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #18) From what plant organ does a fruit develop? anther ovary stigma style
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #19) How does the dispersal (spreading) of seeds increase the survival rate of offspring? It increases genetic diversity. It limits the spread of disease. It reduces competition. It results in new adaptations.
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #20) What begins the process of seed germination? absorption of water appearance of the radicle breakdown of the endosperm growth of cotyledons
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #21) Which flower organ is indicated? pistil spore stamen sepal
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #22) What is an adaptation that increases the survival rate of seeds exposed to harsh conditions? dormancy photoperiodism alternation of generations internal germination
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #23) What is the food source for the embryo in a eudicot seed? seed coat endosperm cotyledon radicle
Reproduction in Plants Chapter 23 #24) Get up and go look at microscope #1, which has a male pine cone set up & ready to view. See if you can locate some pollen grains!! What purpose does the pollen grain serve in the reproduction of plants? contains the egg or ovum contains the sperm contains the cotyledon contains the radicle
Chapter 23 #25) Get up and go look at microscope #2, which has the underside of a leaf set up & ready to view. See if you can locate the stomata pores!! What purpose do the stomata pores serve in plants? protects the seed coat allows gases and water vapor to enter or leave the plant waterproofs the top surface of the leaf it doesn’t do anything for the plant
1) Turn in your completed QUIZ answers (on N.B. paper) to your class period tray for grading.