PLANTS

Introduction

PLANTS

by:  JERIC P. RUBI, ATHENA FAYE R. ORTUA, ROSEMARIE F. CELESTIAL, MATILDE A. BUQUID

Plants affect the lives of humans and other organisms. plants are primary sources of their energy.

Plants are critical to other life on this planet because they form the basis of all food webs. Most plants are autotrophic, creating their own food using water, carbon dioxide, and light through a process called photosynthesis. Some of the earliest fossils found have been aged at 3.8 billion years. These fossil deposits show evidence of photosynthesis, so plants, or the plant-like ancestors of plants, have lived on this planet longer that most other groups of organisms. At one time, anything that was green and that wasn’t an animal was considered to be a plant. Now, what were once considered “plants” are divided into several kingdoms: Protista, Fungi, and Plantae. Most aquatic plants occur in the kingdoms Plantae and Protista.

Plants, also called green plants (Viridiplantae in Latin), are multicellular eukaryotes of the kingdom Plantae. They form a clade that includes the flowering plantsconifers and other gymnospermsfernsclubmosseshornwortsliverwortsmosses and the green algae. Plants exclude the red and brown algae, the fungiarchaea and bacteria.

Green plants have cell walls with cellulose and characteristically obtain most of their energy from sunlight via photosynthesis by primary chloroplasts, derived from endosymbiosis with cyanobacteria. Their chloroplasts contain chlorophylls a and b which gives them their green color. Some plants are parasitic and have lost the ability to produce normal amounts of chlorophyll or to photosynthesize. Plants are also characterized by sexual reproductionmodular and indeterminate growth, and an alternation of generations, although asexual reproduction is common.

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