Plants
We don't really cover much about plants in biology 1 except photosynthesis, plant cells characteristics, and flower reproduction.
To learn more, watch some of the following videos. They explain all sorts of things from adaptations to reproduction.
The Sex Lives of Nonvascular Plants: Alternation of Generations
Year of production: 2012
Running Time: 9:41 min
Created by Crash Course Biology
Hank introduces us to nonvascular plants - liverworts, hornworts & mosses - which have bizarre features, kooky habits, and strange sex lives. Nonvascular plants inherited their reproductive cycle from algae, but have perfected it to the point where it is now used by all plants in one way or another, and has even left traces in our own reproductive systems.
Vascular Plants = Winning!
Year of production: 2012
Running Time: 11:53 min
Created by Crash Course Biology
Hank introduces us to one of the most diverse and important families in the tree of life - the vascular plants. These plants have found tremendous success and the their secret is also their defining trait: conductive tissues that can take food and water from one part of a plant to another part. Though it sounds simple, the ability to move nutrients and water from one part of an organism to another was a evolutionary breakthrough for vascular plants, allowing them to grow exponentially larger, store food for lean times, and develop features that allowed them to spread farther and faster. Plants dominated the earth long before animals even showed up, and even today hold the world records for the largest, most massive, and oldest organisms on the planet.
The Plants & The Bees: Plant Reproduction
Year of production: 2012
Running Time: 10:23 min
Created by Crash Course Biology
Hank gets into the dirty details about vascular plant reproduction: they use the basic alternation of generations developed by nonvascular plants 470 million years ago, but they've tricked it out so that it works a whole lot differently compared to the way it did back in the Ordovician swamps where it got its start. Here's how the vascular plants (ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms) do it.