Course Description
Reproduction, anatomy, physiology, growth, and classification of the various plant groups will be studied. Part of the course will involve a study of local flora.
Prerequisite(s)
BIOL 1514 - Must be completed prior to taking this course.
At the end of this course, students will be able to:
- Be able to identify and explain the function of different plant meristematic tissues - apical, vascular cambium, cork cambium, and intercalary meristems.
- Identify the conduction systems of plants and give the function of each cell component of these systems.
- Distinguish between primary and secondary tissues.
- Contrast the stems of herbaceous and woody dicots with the stems of monocots.
- Understand the composition of wood and its annual rings, sapwood, heartwood, and bark.
- Distinguish among rhizomes, stolons, tubers, bulbs, corms, cladophylls, and tendrils.
- Learn at least 10 human uses of wood and stems in general.
- Know the primary functions of forms of roots.
- Learn the root regions and know the function of each, including root hairs and all tissues.
- Understand the differences among the various types of specialized roots; know at least 10 practical uses of roots.
- Learn the external forms and parts of leaves and know the function of a typical leaf and its specific tissues and cells.
- Understand the differences among pinnate, palmate, and dichotomous venation and also the difference between simple and compound leaves.
- Contrast tendrils, spines, storage leaves, flower pot leaves, window leaves, reproductive leaves, floral leaves, and different types of insect-trapping leaves.
- Explain why deciduous leaves turn various colors in the fall and how such leaves are shed.
- Know at least 15 uses of leaves by humans.
- Explain diffusion, osmosis, turgor, imbibition, and active transport.
- Know the pathway, movement, and utilization of water in plants.
- Understand how a good agricultural soil is developed from raw materials; compare sand, silt, and clay particles.
- Contrast the various forms of soil water with regard to their specific location and availability to plants.
- Know distinctions among growth, differentiation, development, hormones, and vitamins.
- Identify the types of plant hormones, describe the major functions of each, and discuss commercial applications for each.
- Understand photoperiodism and distinguish among short-day, long-day, intermediate-day, and day-neutral plants.
- Know what the binomial system of nomenclature is, how it developed, and how it is currently used.
- Learn several reasons for recognizing more than two kingdoms of living organisms and understand the basis for Whittaker's five-kingdom system.
- Construct a dichotomous key.
- Identify the organisms classified in the Kingdom Monera & Viruses.
- Know the basic forms of bacteria, know at least 10 bacteria useful to humans, and understand how they are useful.
- Explain how prokaryotic cells differ from eukaryotic cells.
- Understand the various ways in which disease bacteria are transmitted, describing how each type of disease bacterium functions in causing disease.
- Understand what cyanobacteriae are and explain how they are useful to humans.
- Know the features that are members of the Kingdom Protista share with one another and identify the basic ways in which they differ.
- Understand how diatoms differ in structure from other members of the division Chrysophyta.
- Learn the different forms of algae and at least two features that distinguish each of them.
- Diagram the life cycles of Chlamydomonas, Ulothrix, Spirogyra, and Oedogonium.
- Know at least 20 economically important uses of algae.
- Know the general features that distinguish Kingdom Fungi from the other kingdoms.
- Distinguish the subkingdoms on the basis of their cells or hyphae, and their reproduction.
- Know five economically important fungi in each of the three different classifications.
- Know the basic structural differences between bryophytes and vascular plants.
- Distinguish the four divisions of seedless vascular plants from one another.
- Know all of the structures involved in Alternation of Generations in a fern.
- Explain what a fossil is and distinguish among the various types of fossils.