5 Steps to a 5 AP Biology, 2014-2015 Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Plants ❮ 175

❯ Answers and Explanations


❯ Rapid Review


The following terms and topics are important in this chapter:
Anatomy of plants:tissue systems are divided into ground, vascular,anddermal.
Ground tissue:the body of the plant is divided into three cell types:


  • Collenchyma cells:provide flexible and mechanical support; found in stems and leaves.

  • Parenchyma cells:play a role in storage, secretion, and photosynthesis in cells.

  • Sclerenchyma cells:protect seeds and support the plant.
    Vascular tissue: xylem(transports water and minerals) and phloem(transports sugar).
    Dermal tissue: protective outer coating for plants:epidermis.


Roots
Types:taproot system(dicots)—system that divides into lateral roots that anchor the
plant;fibrous root system(monocots)—anchoring system that does not go deep down
into soil.
Structure:epidermis →endodermis (casparian strip) → vascular cylinder → xylem/
phloem.
Growth:occurs for lifetime of the plant thanks to meristemcells:


  • Primary growth:increasedlengthof a plant (occurs in region of apical meristems).

  • Secondary growth:increasedwidthof a plant (occurs in region of lateral meristems,
    limited in monocots).

  • Three main growth regions: zone of cell division(cells divide), zone of elongation(cells
    elongate), zone of maturation(cells mature to specialized form).



  1. C—When the concentration of water inside the
    plant is low, the stomata close in an effort to
    minimize transpiration.

  2. C

  3. D

  4. A

  5. E

  6. C—Thigmotropism is a plant’s growth in response
    to touch. Phototropism is growth in response to
    light, and gravitropism is growth in response to
    gravitational force. Photoperiodism is the response
    by a plant to the change in the length of days, and


phototaxis is the sad phenomenon whereby moths
fly kamikaze-style into burning hot lights at night.


  1. C

  2. D

  3. B

  4. E

  5. B—Phototropism, a plant’s growth response to
    light, is controlled by auxin. This hormone is
    produced in the apical meristem and sent to the
    zone of elongation to initiate growth toward the
    sun.


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