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Chapter 9 - Plants Test Review

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
What is botany?   the study of plants  
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What are 3 characteristics of plants?   eukaryotic cells (membrane bound organelles), multicellular, and producers/autotrophs  
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Plants are multicellular. What does this mean?   cells are specialized to perform specific functions for the plant  
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Plants are producers. What are producers?   use an outside source to make food for themselves  
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In what ways does a plant cell differ from and animal cell?   chloroplasts and a cell wall  
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What is the function of the cell wall?   provides support and protection  
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What is the function of the chloroplast?   converts chemical energy into light energy  
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What is another name for "producer"?   autotroph  
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What do Xylem cells do?   move water and minerals UP from the roots  
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What do Phloem cells do?   move sugars from the leaves DOWN to the rest of the plant  
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What is cuticle?   a waxy protective covering on the outside of the plant which slows down evaporation and keeps the plant from losing water  
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What is the cell wall made of?   cellulose  
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What are 3 ways that plant seeds are dispersed (move)?   wind, animals, and water  
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From what other group of organisms did plant evolve?   algae (plant-like protists)  
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What are adaptations?   inherited traits that increase the chance of surviving and reproducing in a certain environment  
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How do plants make food for themselves?   photosynthesis  
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What are the function(s) of a plant's roots?   absorb nutrients and water, hold the plant in place, stores energy  
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What are the function(s) of a plant's stem?   hold the plant upright, provide a transport area between the roots and leaves  
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What are the function(s) of a plant's leaves?   absorb sunlight to make glucose  
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What are the function(s) of a plant's flowers?   reproduction  
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Where are the xylem and phloem cells (vascular tissues) made?   cambium  
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What kinds of advantages did living on land provide to plants?   plenty of sunlight and carbon dioxide for photosynthesis  
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What is the function of vascular tissue?   transports water and nutrients in some plants  
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Instead of phylas, members of the plant kingdom are organized into what kind of groups?   divisions  
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What is the scientific name for red oaks?   Quercus rubra  
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How do seedless reproduce?   spores  
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Seedless plants never have what?   flowers  
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What is another name that scientists often call seedless plants?   bryophytes  
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How do nonvascular plants move materials from cell to cell?   diffusion and osmosis  
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What are rhizoids?   structures that anchor a nonvascular plant to a surface  
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What are some examples of nonvascular plants?   mosses, liverworts, hornworts  
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How do vascular plants move materials from cell to cell?   tubelike structures (xylem and phloem)  
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What are some examples of seedless vascular plants?   ferns, club mosses, horsetails  
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About how many seed plant species are there on Earth?   300,000  
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What are gymnosperms?   cone-bearing seed plants  
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What are angiosperms?   flowering seed plants  
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What kind of tissues do all seed plants contain?   vascular  
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What is the function of the stomata (singular is stoma)?   allow carbon dioxide, oxygen, and water vapor to pass through them.  
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What are some examples of gymnosperms?   spruces, pine, redwoods, ginko  
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What are some examples of angiosperms?   tulip, rose, dandelion, grass  
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What is an annual plants?   live one growing season  
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What are biennial plants?   live two growing seasons  
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What are perennial plants?   live for MORE THAN two growing seasons  
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What is a monocot?   seeds have one cotyledon, narrow leaves with parallel veins, flower parts in multiples of 3  
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What is a dicot?   seeds have two cotyledons, leaves have branched veins, flower parts in multiples of 4 or 5  
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