LIFE 103 1st Edition Lecture 10Outline of Last Lecture II. Why so Special? III. Flower Anatomy I. Male II. Female III. Other parts IV. Examples V. Important Reproductive Details VI. Angiosperm Diversity I. MonocotsII. EudicotsOutline of Current Lecture VII. Method for Studying VIII.Main SectionsI. AnatomyII. GrowthIX. Main Plant OrgansI. RootsII. StemsCurrent Lecture: Plant Structure and Development Method for studying: I. Pomodoro Technique I. 25 minutes of work II. 5 minute break III. 25 minutes of work IV. Etc. V. Break it up into activities VI. Link time blocks to specific activities II. Use classic study techniques I. Flashcards for terms II. Draw diagrams yourself III. Copying with notes open IV. Create the notes from memory These notes represent a detailed interpretation of the professor’s lecture. GradeBuddy is best used as a supplement to your own notes, not as a substitute.Main sections I. AnatomyI. StructuresII. Cells II. Growth I. Cells A summary of LifeI. Reproduce (ultimate goal) I. Eat II. GrowIII. Avoid dying II. Fig. 35.2 (a diagram of a dicot) I. Take stuff above ground and call it the shoot systemII. Stuff below ground are the root systems III. Axillary bud- where new branch can come out IV. Leaf: blade plus petiole (holds leaf to the stem) V. Vegetative shoot: structure that comes out, an apical bud is at the end (apex = top)3 Main Plant Organs: Root I. Roots I. Anchors the plant in place II. Absorbs minerals and waterIII. Store carbohydrates II. Taproot: main vertical root I. Present in most gymnosperms and eudicotsII. Deeply penetrates III. Lateral roots: branch off taproot IV. Root hairs: grow off lateral roots I. Finer roots that access water and nutrientsII. Have very high surface area 3 Main Plant Organs: Stem I. Stalk upon which leaves growI. Shoot system: stem + leavesII. Nodes: point on stem where leaves are attached III. Internodes: stem segments between nodes IV. Axillary bud: structure that can form a lateral shoot I. Growth inhibited by proximity to apical bud V. Apical (terminal) bud: elongation point of a growing shoot I. Composed of developing leaves, nodes and
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