Across
- 3. A reproductive structure containing a plant embryo, a food supply, and a protective coat.
- 5. The vascular tissue that transports sugars (produced in photosynthesis) throughout the plant.
- 6. an angiosperm that has one cotyledon, parallel leaf veins, fibrous roots, and flower parts usually in multiples of 3.
- 9. The male reproductive part of a flower; it includes the anther (produces pollen) and filament.
- 11. The female reproductive part of a flower; includes the stigma, style, and ovary.
- 12. Plants that do not have xylem and phloem; they absorb water and nutrients directly through their tissues. Examples include mosses and liverworts.
- 13. The “seed leaf” inside a seed.
- 14. Plants with xylem and phloem that transport water and nutrients but that reproduce using spores. Examples include ferns and horsetails.
- 15. The vascular tissue in plants that transports water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant.
Down
- 1. Flowering plants that produce seeds inside a fruit. This is the largest and most diverse group of plants.
- 2. Seed plants whose seeds are not enclosed in a fruit; usually produced in cones. Examples include conifers.
- 3. A tiny, single-celled reproductive structure that can grow into a new organism without fertilization.
- 4. an angiosperm that has two cotyledons, branched leaf veins, taproot systems, and flower parts usually in multiples of 4 or 5.
- 7. The structure in a flower that contains the egg cell; after fertilization it develops into a seed.
- 8. The nutritive tissue inside a seed that feeds the developing embryo.
- 10. The powdery structure that contains sperm cells used for fertilization in seed plants.
