Summative Review Jeopardy Game

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Transcript Summative Review Jeopardy Game

Rules of Jeopardy
Get into teams of 5! – No team stacking !!
Wrong answer means you can’t answer again
until other teams have had a chance.
A new person must answer the question each
time (work together!!)
Bonus questions = risky… you lose money if
you’re wrong; if you don’t wanna answer it, the
question goes to the rest of the class.
1)
Randomz
Give me
The Roots
your Mono
of all evil
or Di…cot
Leaf me
alone
PS I love
you
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
$200 $200 $200 $200 $200
$300 $300 $300 $300 $300
$400 $400 $400 $400 $400
5)
PS I love you
Abbreviated as PS;
the process by which
organisms convert
light NRG to chemical
NRG!
What is
Photosynthesis?
$100!
PS happens here, in
these specialized
cellular organelles
found in plants, some
algae, and
cyanobacteria!
What are
chloroplasts? $200
This green pigment is
responsible for
capturing light energy
and driving PS.
What is chlorophyll? ($300)
Name all the reactants and
products of PS ($50 each)
Reactants:
CO2 + H2O + sunlight
Products:
O2 + Sugar(s)
Total: $450!
These forces describe
water’s attraction to itself,
and allow water to move
through the plant via
transpiration – critical for
efficient PS!!
What are cohesive forces?
$500!
2) Mono or di… cot
Group of angiosperm
plants with parallel leaf
veins.
What is a monocot?
$100
Type of plant with a long,
thick central root with many
lateral branches growing
from it.
What is a dicot? $200
Bonus: $50
What’s the name of this type
of root?
A taproot
Important commercial crops
like rice, corn, and other
grasses are part of this
group of angiosperms:
What are monocots?
$300
The primitive ‘leaf’ of both
monocots and dicots that’s
contained within the seed.
Monocots have one, dicots
have two.
What is the cotyledon?
$400
Edible plant pictured
here:
($50) -- Lettuce
$450
Belongs to a group
of angiosperms
that typically
exhibit secondary
growth!
What are dicots?
Bonus ($200)
What is secondary growth?
Increase in girth / width of the
plant stem and the formation of
bark!
4)
Leaf me alone
This structure is the
‘stalk’ of the leaf that
provides support and
aids vascular
transport.
What is the petiole?
$100
Contains the vascular
bundles that transport
water, minerals and
nutrients throughout
the blade of the leaf.
What are leaf veins? $200
The vascular bundle
of leaf veins contains
these two main
vascular tissues:
($150 each!)
What are the Xylem and
Phloem?
Bonus Q: $200 (all or nothing)
What does each one transport?
Xylem – Water and dissolved
minerals.
Phloem – Sugar and other
nutrients!
The type of plant cells
that make up the
photosynthetic spongy and
pallisade ‘mesophyll’ layer
of leaves.
What are parenchyma
cells?
$400
These 3 materials
compose the cuticle, part
of the epidermis, of most
leaves and photosynthetic
stems.
($200 each!)
What are:
wax,
cutin
and suberin?
$600 total!
3) – Roots!
Structure that protects
the zone of division,
guides the root
downwards and is
made of mostly dead
cells.
What is the root cap? $100
$200 bonus:
Phenomenon where a plant
structure grows in response
to gravity.
Gravitropism ($200!)
Area of the growing root
where cells increase in
length and size before
becoming specialized.
What is
the zone of
elongation? $200
Structure in the zone
of maturation where
most of the water and
minerals are
absorbed.
What are the root
hairs? $400
Type of cells found in the
zone of division; they are
quite delicate, and require
protection from the root cap!
What are the
meristematic cells?
$400
Structure in the mature root
endodermis (layer under the
epidermis) that stops water
from moving between cells;
they are forced to travel
through cells before entering
the vascular cylinder.
What is
the Casparian strip? $500
1) Randomz
The openings on the
leaves and stems of
green / photosynthetic
parts of a plant.
What are stomata?
$100
Surrounds, protects and
sometimes nourishes the
mature seed of flowering
plants; can also attract
animals to help with seed
dispersal.
What is fruit? $200
Term that describes a
plant’s growth in
response to light.
What is
phototropism? $300
Plant growth or movement
in response to contact with
another object (From the
Greek word for ‘touch’)
What is thigmotropism? $400
$100 bonus:
Give an example of a type of
plant that uses this growth
response strategy:
Vines, creepers,
Male reproductive
structures on the flower;
contains the anther
(which holds the pollen)
and filament.
What is the stamen? ($250)
Bonus: $250
What is the female part of
the flower that contains the
stigma, style and ovary?
The carpel (or pistil)!