| A | B |
| Phytoplankton | Creates more than half the worlds oxygen supply. |
| Division | The taxon name in the Plant Kingdom instead of Phylum. |
| Vascular Plants | Plants that contain Xylem & Phylum. |
| Nonvascular Plants | Plants that lack tissue to transport |
| Vascular Tissue Controls | The direction of flow of water, nutrients, & sugar. |
| Roots | draw water & nutrients from the soil. |
| Stems | Lift the leaves and help the plant compete for light. |
| Leaves | Designed to capture light and create food in a plant |
| Adaptation | The ability to adjust to all environments. |
| Xylem | Transport tissue that moves water & nutrients upward. |
| Phloem | Transport tissue that speads food & water downward & outward. |
| Shoot | Theparts of the plant that grows towards the surface. |
| Root & Shoot Tip | The parts of the plant that grows rapidly. |
| Stomata | Microscopic openings in the leaves for exchanging gasses. |
| Transpiration | The process that pumps water out of a plant. |
| Chlorophyll | Green pigment found in the Chloroplast. |
| Water, Oxygen, Light, Nutrients, & Carbon Dioxide. | The five needs of a new plant to stay healthly. |
| Nitrogen, Phosphorus, & Sulfur. | The three nutrients roots need to absorb from the soil. |
| Rhizoids | Root-like structure of a nonvascular plant. |
| Leaf-like, root-like, & stem-like structures. | Parts of a nonvascular plant. |
| Celluar Absorption | How nonvascular plants abtain water. |
| Moist or Wet or Rainy or Shady | Environments nonvascular plants are found. |
| What does Vascular tissue, an adaptation, allow a plant to compete for? | Light or Sunlight |
| What do Nonvascular plants lack? | Vascular Tissue (Xylem & Phloem) |
| How do nonvascular plants reproduce asexually? | A piece of leaf-like structure breaks off. |
| Why do nonvascular plants need a wet environment to sexually reproduce? | The sperm must swim to the egg. |