Question | Answer |
The plant structure that contains a young plant inside a protective covering. | seed |
A vascular tissue through which food moves in some plants. | phloem |
A fertilized egg, produced by the joining of a sperm and an egg. | zygote |
A male reproductive part of a flower. | stamen |
A flowering plant that produces seeds enclosed in a protective structure. | angiosperm |
The reproductive structure of a gymnosperm. | cone |
The proccess by which water is lost through a plants leaves. | transpiration |
The inernal tranporting tissue in some plants that is made up of tubelike structures. | Vascular tissue |
A plant that has true vascular tissue. | vascular plant |
Tiny particals produced by seed plants that contain the cells that later become sperm cells. | Pollen |
A young organism that developes from a zygote; a developing human during the first eight weeks after fertilization. | embryo |
The vascular tissue through which water and nutrients move in some plants. | xylem |
The female reproductive part of a flower. | pistil |
A reproductive structure of an angiosperm. | flower |
A structure that contains an egg cell. | ovule |
Small openings an a leaf through which oxygen and carbon dioxide can move. | stomata |
A low-growing plant that lacks true vascular tissue. | nonvascular plant |
A plant that produces seeds that are not enclosed by a protective fruit. | gymnosperm |
The transfer of pollen from male reproductive structures to female reproductive structures in plants. | pollination |
A leaf like structure that endoses the bud of a flower. | sepal |
A flower structure that encloses and protects ovules and seeds as they develop;organ of the female reproductive system in which eggs and estrogen are produced | ovary |