Transcript Chapter 27

Chapter 27
The Importance of Plants
Plant Cultivation
Fewer than 20 plant species provide more
than 90% of our food supply.
Selective breeding is process by which we
have most of the species of plants we grow.
Cultivars have at least one distinguishing
characteristic that sets them apart from other
member of their species.
Examples: McIntosh apples, Valencia
oranges
Food Crops
Classified by use and family
Many crops fit into more than one
category.
Cereals
Grasses that contain grains (edible, dry
fruits)
Provide about 50% of the calories in the
average human’s diet
Wheat and corn are produced in the
largest amounts
Root Crops
Roots or underground stems that are
rich in carbohydrates
In many parts of the world, they
substitute for cereals in providing the
major part of the diet
Legumes
Members of the pea family and bear
seeds in pods
Soybean is the most important legume
crop
Improve the nitrogen content of the soil
Fruits, Vegetables, Nuts
Fruit - part of flowering plants that
contains seeds
Vegetables - foods derived from the
leaves, stems, seeds, and roots of
nonwoody plants
Nut - dry, hard fruit that does not split
open to release its seed
Spices, Herbs, Flavorings
Spices - add taste to food, in general
come plant parts other than the leaf and
are tropical
Herbs - add taste to food, come from
leaves and can be grown in a home
garden
Flavorings -not spices or herbs
Food Production
Fertilizers supply plants with nutrients
Pesticides kill undesirable organisms
that harm crops
Both of the above have made it
possible to feed the increasing number
of people on the earth
Nonfood Uses of Plants
Medicines - many modern ones still come
from plants or were originally obtained from
plants
Paper, cosmetics, cork, rubber, turpentine,
pesticides
Clothing - most is made of cotton; others are
artificial (rayon, arnel, cellulose acetate),
leather enhanced by tannin
Dyes - were natural plant dyes; now most
dyes are manufactured from coal
Fuels
Fossil fuels - coal, oil, natural gas
Wood
Fermented grains (gasohol)
Other Uses of Plants
Decorations
Prevent soil erosion
Reduce noise
Provide animal habitat
Windbreaks
Shade and moderate temperatures
Mental well-being, hobby, exercise
Tourist attractions, festivals, etc.
Plant Ecology
Study of interactions between plants
and the environment
Photosynthesis
Soil formation
Plant/animal - pollinators
Plant/fungus - mycorrhizae
Plant/human - weeds, diseases, etc.
Harmful Plants
Addictive plant products - tobacco,
cocaine, opium, alcohol
Eaten or touched - poison ivy, poison
oak, holly berries, mistletoe
Hay fever - pollen allergy
The pollen that causes allergies comes
from small, drab flowers that are windpollinated.