Plant Biology

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257 Terms

1
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What plant structure contains a young dormant sporophyte, storage of nutritive tissue, and an outer protective coat?

seed

2
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What catalyzes a seed to grow?

proper environmental

conditions

3
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Which stages alternate in a plant's alternation of generations?

haploid (n) and

diploid (2n) stages

4
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Meiosis in which structure produces haploid spores?

sporangia

5
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Spores undergo mitosis to become what reproductive unit?

gametophyte

(Note: multicellular)

6
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What stage is a gametophyte?

haploid (n)

(Note: mitosis from

spore still

results in haploid cells)

7
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Vegetative propagation is a form of which type of reproduction in plants?

asexual reproduction

(Note: leads to genetically

identical offspring)

8
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Plant gametes fuse and produce what stage of cell?

diploid cell (2n)

9
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Fused plant gametes undergo what process to become a sporophyte?

mitosis

10
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Cells in the sporangia of the sporophyte undergo which process to produce haploid spores which germinate and repeat the life cycle?

meiosis

11
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What are storage tissues that provide nutrition to developing seedlings in plants?

cotyledons

12
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Dicots have what number of cotyledons?

2

13
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Monocots have what number of cotyledons?

1

14
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What term describes the pattern of veins in leaves

leaf venation

15
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What term describes the number of petals, sepals, stamens, and other parts?

flower parts

16
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What term describes the arrangement of vascular tissues (xylem and phloem) in stems?

vascular bundles

17
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What is the leaf venation in dicots?

netted, branching pattern

18
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What is the leaf venation in monocots?

parallel

19
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What are the flower parts in dicots?

in 4s, 5s, or multiples

20
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What are the flower parts in monocots?

in 3s or multiples

21
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How are the vascular bundles organized in dicots?

circle

22
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How are the vascular bundles organized in monocots?

scattered

23
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What is the root form in dicots?

taproot, which is a large single root

24
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What is the root form in monocots?

fibrous root system with many fine roots

25
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What are the 3 distinct groups of plant tissues?

1. ground tissue

2. dermal tissue

3. vascular tissue

26
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Which plant tissue provides structural support to the plant and thus makes up most of the plant’s mass?

ground tissue

27
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Which plant tissue includes epidermis cells that cover the outside of plant parts?

dermal tissue

28
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Which plant tissue consists of xylem and phloem which together form vascular bundles?

vascular tissue

29
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What are the 3 types of ground tissue?

1. parenchyma

2. collenchyma

3. sclerenchyma

30
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Which ground tissue is the most common?

parenchyma

31
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What is the relative thickness of parenchyma cell walls?

thin cell walls

32
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What are the functions of parenchymal cells?

1. storage

2. photosynthesis

3. secretion

33
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Which cells in leaves are an example of parenchyma tissue?

mesophyll cells

34
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Which ground tissue contains cells with thick but flexible cell walls, and serves mechanical support functions?

collenchyma

35
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Which ground tissue contains cells with thicker walls than collenchyma, and also provides mechanical support?

sclerenchyma

36
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Which strengthening polymer does sclerenchyma tissue produce?

lignin

37
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Which cells in plant dermal tissue surround stomata, hair cells, stinging cells, and glandular cells?

guard cells

38
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In aerial portions of plants, the epidermal cells secrete a waxy protective substance that forms what structure?

cuticle

39
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Why do roots lack a cuticle?

a cuticle would

prevent the roots

from absorbing water

40
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Which plant vascular tissue conducts water and minerals while functioning in mechanical support?

xylem

41
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What cellular structure in xylem provides additional strength?

2nd cell wall

42
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Why do the walls of xylem cells have pits in some places?

absence of 2nd cell wall

43
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Are xylem cells alive or dead at maturity?

dead

(Note: only contain cell walls at maturity, no cellular components)

44
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What are the types of xylem cells?

1. tracheids

2. vessel elements

45
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Which xylem cells are long and tapered allowing water to pass laterally from one to another through pits?

tracheids

46
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Which xylem cells are shorter and wider, and have less or no taper at the ends?

vessel elements

47
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What is a column of vessel elements (members) called?

vessel

48
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Where does water pass from one vessel member to the next?

perforations

49
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vessel elements lack what cellular structure?

first and secondary cell walls

50
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Are perforations (vessel elements) or pits (tracheid) more efficient?

perforations

51
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Which plant tissue transports sugar?

phloem

52
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Which cells compose phloem?

sieve-tube members (elements)

53
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The sieve-tube members in phloem form fluid conducting columns called what?

sieve tubes

54
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Though sieve tube members are alive at maturity, what cellular structures do they lack?

nuclei and ribosomes

55
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What structures on the ends of sieve tube members form sieve plates?

pores

56
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What are sieve plates?

areas where the

cytoplasm of one

cell makes contact

with the next cell

57
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Which cells are sieve tubes associated with?

companion cells

58
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Which type of plant tissue are companion cells?

parenchyma

59
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sieve-tube members are connected by what to maintain physiological support?

plasmodesmata

(Note: necessary

because of the lack

of nuclei)

60
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In many monocots, what is the primary storage tissue?

endosperm

61
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In many monocots, what is the function of cotyledons?

transfer nutrients

from the endosperm

to the embryo

62
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Which part of the plant embryo is at the top portion of the embryo and becomes the shoot tip?

epicotyl

63
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Which part of the plant embryo contains the young leaves often attached to the epicotyl and located underneath the epicotyl?

plumule

(Note: refers to both together)

64
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Which part of the plant embryo is located below the plumule and attached to cotyledons?

hypocotyl

65
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Which part of the plant embryo develops from below the hypocotyls and becomes the roots?

radicles

66
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Which part of the plant embryo is a sheath in monocots that surrounds and protects the epicotyl?

coleoptiles

(Note: in developing

young plants, the coleoptiles

appears first followed by the

true leaves of the plumule)

67
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What plant reproductive structure remains dormant at maturity until specific environmental cues break the dormancy period?

seed

(Note: water, temp,

light, or seed coat damage)

68
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What event begins seed germination?

imbibition (absorption) of water

69
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after the start of germination, what substances are activated to start biochemical processes, beginning respiration?

enzymes

70
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What action causes the seed to swell and for the seed coat to crack?

imbibition of water

71
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During seed germination, what structures produce roots that anchor the seedling?

growing tips of the radicle

72
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How is the young shoot formed during seed germination?

hypocotyl elongates

73
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In young seedlings/plants, where does growth occur?

tips of roots and shoots

74
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In young seedlings/plants, what are the growing tips called?

apical meristems

75
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Which cells are areas of actively dividing, mitotic cells, causing growth?

meristematic cells

76
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Growth at the apical meristems is called what?

primary growth

77
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What does primary growth produce?

primary xylem and

primary phloem

(Note: primary tissues)

78
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Which direction is apical growth?

vertical growth

79
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Most plants, including most monocots, have which type of growth?

apical growth

80
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What structures can be found on the sides of plants which cause growth in thickness and width?

lateral meristems

81
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Which section of root growth protects the apical meristem behind it while secreting polysaccharides to permit root growth?

root cap

(AKA: root tip)

82
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Which section of root growth is formed from the dividing cells of the apical meristem?

zone of cell division

(Note: This zone

is right above the

apical meristem)

83
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Which section of root growth is caused by the absorption of water and resulting elongation of the new cells from the zone of cell division?

zone of elongation

(Note: responsible

for our perception

of plant growth)

84
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Which section of root growth differentiates and matures into the xylem, phloem, parenchyma, or epidermal cells?

zone of maturation

(Note: root hairs may grow here)

85
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Conifers and woody dicots undergo which type of growth in addition to primary growth?

secondary growth

86
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What is the function of secondary growth?

increase girth

(Note: origin of

woody plant tissues)

87
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Where does secondary growth occur?

1. vascular cambium

(secondary xylem and phloem)

2. cork cambium

88
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What structure gives rise to periderm-protective material that lines the outside of woody plants?

cork cambium

89
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Which root structure lines the outside surface of the root?

epidermis

90
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What structures does the epidermis produce in the zone of maturation?

root hairs

91
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What happens to root hairs as the zone of maturation ages?

they die

92
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As the zone of maturation ages, which cells become the new zone of maturation?

new epidermal cells

from the zone of elongation

(Note: become new root

hairs to absorb water)

93
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What is the function of old epidermis?

protect the root

94
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Which root structure makes up the bulk of the root?

cortex

95
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What is the function of the cortex?

1. stores starch

2. contains intercellular

spaces allowing aeration

for respiration

96
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What root structure is a ring of tightly packed cells at the inner-most portion of the cortex?

endodermis

97
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In the endodermis, a band of fatty material (suberin) impregnates endodermal cell walls to form an encircling band called what?

Casparian strip

98
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What is the function of the Casparian strip?

creates a water-impenetrable

barrier between cells

(Note: prevents water from

moving back out of the cortex)

99
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Due to the Casparian strip, what location must water in the endodermis pass through?

cytoplasm of endodermal cells

(Note: water must be filtered)

100
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What root structure is made up of vascular tissue and the pericycle?

vascular cylinder (stele)