Carmela Vergara
Carmela Vergara
Carmela Vergara
Blabagno, Raisa
Cespedes, Donna
Delen, Jeanne
Dumapay, Aleder
Oriarte, Anne
Tesorio, Lordelyn
Experiment #3
General Structure of Plants
1. What are seed plants?
– The spermatophyte, which means "seed plants", are some of the most
important organisms on Earth. Life on land as we know it is shaped largely by
the activities of seed plants. Soils, forests, and food are three of the most
apparent products of this group.
– Seed plants are those plants which are reproduced by means of seeds.
– Seed-producing plants are probably the most familiar plant to most people,
unlike mosses, liverworts, horsetails, and most other seedless plants which
are overlooked because of their size or inconspicuous appearance. Many
seed plants are large or showy. Conifers are seed plants; they include pines,
firs, yew, redwood, and many other large trees. The other major groups of
seed-plants are the flowering plant, including plants whose flowers are showy,
but also many plants with reduced flowers, such as the oaks, grasses, and
palms.
2. Enumerate the 2 types of highly developed plant which produce seeds and briefly
give characteristics of each type.
4. What is the function of each vegetative organ to the plants? Briefly enumerate
them.
Epidermis is a cortical region of ground tissue, and a single solid cylinder of
vascular tissue.
Phloem is near the periphery (edge) of this central disc of vascular tissue.
Monocot is the short for monocotyledon, which means that the seeds of these
plants contain only one cotyledon or seed leaf.
Characteristics:
- Monocots have one cotyledon.
- Roots generally disappear soon. Adventitious roots instead.
- Stems are vascular bundles not arranged.
- Pollen grains often have one pore or furrow.
- Flower parts are in threes of multiples of three.
- Monocots have leaves with parallel-veined, sheathed at the base, sessile,
without stipules.
Dicot is the short for dicotyledon, which means one of the two major divisions of
angiosperms, characterized by a pair of embryonic seed leaves that appear at
germination.
- Dicots have two cotyledons.
- Roots are developing from radical from which secondary roots derive.
- Stems are vascular bundles arranged in rings.
- Pollen grain often has three pores.
- Flower parts in fours or multiples of fours or fives.
- Leaves are reticulated, seldom sheathed at the base, frequently etiolated and
with stipules.