Plants and Their Parts

1. The Six Main Parts of a Plant

A plant has SIX main parts. Each part has a SPECIFIC job.

PartWhat It Does
RootAnchors the plant. Absorbs water and minerals from the soil.
StemCarries water and food between roots and leaves. Supports the plant.
LeafMakes FOOD for the plant through PHOTOSYNTHESIS.
FlowerHelps in REPRODUCTION — makes seeds.
FruitProtects the seeds. Helps in seed DISPERSAL.
SeedGrows into a NEW plant.

'A plant is like a factory. Each part has a DIFFERENT job, and they all work together to keep the plant alive.'


2. Roots

Types of Roots:

Taproot:

  • ONE main root that grows STRAIGHT down.
  • Small SIDE roots (lateral roots) grow from it.
  • 'Found in CARROTS, RADISHES, TURNIPS, and MANGO trees.'

Fibrous Root:

  • MANY thin roots of similar size.
  • Spread out like a MOP or a NET.
  • 'Found in WHEAT, RICE, GRASS, and COCONUT trees.'
TaprootFibrous Root
One main thick rootMany thin roots
Goes deep into the soilSpreads near the surface
Carrot, Beetroot, MangoGrass, Wheat, Rice
Can store foodAbsorbs water quickly

Functions of Roots:

  1. Anchor the plant firmly in the soil.
  2. Absorb water and minerals from the soil.
  3. Store food (in some plants — carrot, radish, sweet potato).
  4. Hold the soil together (prevents soil erosion).

3. Stem

Functions of the Stem:

  1. Carries water and minerals from roots to leaves.
  2. Carries food from leaves to other parts.
  3. Supports leaves, flowers, and fruits.
  4. Stores food in some plants (potato, sugarcane, ginger).

Types of Stems:

  • Herbaceous stem: Soft, green, flexible (grass, mint).
  • Woody stem: Hard, thick, brown (mango tree, neem tree).
  • Underground stem: Grows under the soil (potato, ginger, onion).

'Did you know? A potato is actually a STEM, not a root! It grows underground but has buds (eyes) that can grow into new plants.'


4. Leaf

Parts of a Leaf:

PartDescription
Lamina (Blade)The flat, green part of the leaf
PetioleThe stalk that joins the leaf to the stem
MidribThe central vein of the leaf
VeinsLines that carry water and food

Venation (Arrangement of Veins):

Reticulate Venation: Veins form a NET-like pattern. 'Found in mango, neem, hibiscus, and most BROAD-LEAF plants.'

Parallel Venation: Veins run PARALLEL to each other. 'Found in grass, wheat, rice, sugarcane, and most NARROW-LEAF plants.'

Reticulate VenationParallel Venation
Net-like patternLines run side by side
Mango, Peepal, RoseGrass, Wheat, Corn
Usually in dicot plantsUsually in monocot plants

5. Flower

Parts of a Flower:

  1. Petals: Colourful parts that attract insects and birds for pollination.
  2. Sepals: Small green leaves that protect the flower bud.
  3. Stamen: The male part that makes POLLEN.
  4. Pistil: The female part that makes OVULES (which become seeds).

Functions of Flowers:

  • Flowers produce SEEDS.
  • Seeds grow into NEW plants.
  • 'Without flowers, many fruit plants would not exist.'

6. Fruit and Seed

Fruit:

  • The FRUIT develops from the flower AFTER pollination.
  • It PROTECTS the seeds inside.
  • It helps in seed DISPERSAL (spreading seeds).

Seed:

  • A seed contains a BABY PLANT (embryo) inside.
  • It has a FOOD STORE for the baby plant.
  • When a seed gets the right conditions (water, air, warmth), it GERMINATES — grows into a new plant.

Seed Dispersal:

MethodHow It WorksExample
WindLight seeds with wings or hairMango, Maple
WaterSeeds float on waterCoconut
AnimalsSeeds stick to fur or are eatenCocklebur, Guava
ExplosionPod bursts openBalsam, Pea

7. Photosynthesis — How Plants Make Food

PHOTOSYNTHESIS is the process by which plants make their OWN food.

What Plants Need:

  1. Sunlight — from the Sun
  2. Water — absorbed by roots from the soil
  3. Carbon dioxide — from the air (through tiny holes in leaves called STOMATA)
  4. Chlorophyll — the GREEN pigment in leaves

What Plants Make:

Food (glucose) + Oxygen

Word Equation:

'Carbon Dioxide + Water → (in the presence of Sunlight and Chlorophyll) → Glucose + Oxygen'

Why Photosynthesis Is Important:

  1. Plants make food for THEMSELVES and for ALL animals (including humans).
  2. Plants release OXYGEN, which we breathe.

'Did you know? The tiny holes (stomata) on leaves open during the day and close at night. That is when photosynthesis happens — during DAYLIGHT.'


8. Common Mistakes

  1. Calling a potato a root: 'A potato is a STEM, not a root. It has buds (eyes) that grow into new plants. Roots do NOT have buds.'
  2. Confusing taproot and fibrous root: 'Carrot has ONE thick root going down (taproot). Grass has MANY thin roots (fibrous).'
  3. Thinking plants eat soil: 'Plants DO NOT eat soil. They absorb water and minerals from soil and make their OWN food through photosynthesis.'
  4. Confusing pollination and photosynthesis: 'Pollination is about making SEEDS. Photosynthesis is about making FOOD. They are DIFFERENT processes!'

9. Key Facts to Remember

  • 'Plants have SIX parts: root, stem, leaf, flower, fruit, seed.'
  • 'Roots absorb WATER and MINERALS from the soil.'
  • 'Leaves are the FOOD FACTORIES of the plant.'
  • 'Photosynthesis needs SUNLIGHT, WATER, CARBON DIOXIDE, and CHLOROPHYLL.'
  • 'Fruits develop from FLOWERS. Seeds grow into NEW PLANTS.'

10. Self-Test

Q1: Name the six main parts of a flowering plant.

Q2: What is the difference between taproot and fibrous root? Give one example of each.

Q3: Why are leaves called the 'food factories' of the plant?

Q4: List the four things a plant needs for photosynthesis.

Q5: What is released by plants during photosynthesis that animals need to breathe?

Q6: How does a coconut seed travel from one place to another?

Q7: Is a potato a root or a stem? How can you tell?

Q8: Match the venation to the plant: (a) Reticulate — Mango/Grass (b) Parallel — Neem/Wheat

Answers:

A1: Root, stem, leaf, flower, fruit, seed. A2: Taproot has ONE main root (carrot). Fibrous root has MANY thin roots (grass). A3: Because they make food (glucose) through photosynthesis using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide. A4: Sunlight, water, carbon dioxide, and chlorophyll. A5: Oxygen. A6: By WATER — coconuts float and can travel across oceans. A7: A potato is a STEM. It has buds (eyes) that can grow into new plants. Roots do not have buds. A8: (a) Reticulate → Mango (b) Parallel → Wheat

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