1.3.6

Plant Classification

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Plant Classification

Plants can be categorised into ferns and flowering plants. Flowering plants can be further divided into monocotyledons and dicotyledons.

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Ferns

  • Ferns don't have flowers or seeds, and reproduce asexually using spores.
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Flowering plants

  • Flowering plants can reproduce asexually or sexually.
  • They may produce seeds in their ovaries.
  • Flowering plants can be divided further depending on their cotyledons (seed leaves).
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Monocotyledons

  • Monocotyledons have one seed leaf, and long thin leaves, with leaf veins that run parallel to the leaves.
  • Grasses are monocotyledons.
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Dicotyledons

  • Dicotyledons have two seed leaves, and broad flat leaves, with leaf veins that branch across the leaves.
  • Roses are dicotyledons.

Jump to other topics

1Classification of Living Organisms

2Organisation of the Organism

3Movement Into & Out of Cells

4Biological Molecules

5Enzymes

6Plant Nutrition

7Human Nutrition

8Transport in Plants

9Transport in Animals

10Diseases & Immunity

11Gas Exchange in Humans

12Respiration

13Excretion in Humans

14Coordination & Response

15Drugs

16Reproduction

17Inheritance

18Variation & Selection

19Organisms & Their Environment

20Human Influence on Ecosystems

21Biotechnology & Genetic Modification

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