Course Syllabus General Botany
Course Syllabus General Botany
General Botany
Catalog Description
Study of structure and function of plant cells, tissues, and organs. Includes an evolutionary survey and life histories of the following representative
groups: algae, fungi, mosses, liverworts, ferns, and seed producing organisms. Plant reproductive and functional interactions with their
environment and with humans.”
Lecture hours = 3, Lab hours = 2
Prerequisites: None
Semester Credit Hours: 5
Lecture Hours per Week: 3 Lab Hours per Week: 2
Course Title: General Botany
Course Curriculum: State Criteria (those marked with an X reflect the state-mandated competencies
taught in this course) (double-click on the box and choose ‘checked’ or ‘not-checked’) Basic Intellectual
Competencies in the Core Curriculum
Reading
Writing
Speaking
Listening
Critical thinking
Computer literacy
Perspectives in the Core Curriculum
Establish broad and multiple perspectives on the individual in relationship to the larger society and world in
which he/she lives, and to understand the responsibilities of living in a culturally and ethnically diversified
world.
Stimulate a capacity to discuss and reflect upon individual, political, economic, and social aspects of life in
order to understand ways in which to be a responsible member of society.
Recognize the importance of maintaining health and wellness.
Develop a capacity to use knowledge of how technology and science affect their lives.
Develop personal values for ethical behavior.
Develop the ability to make aesthetic judgments.
Use logical reasoning in problem solving.
Integrate knowledge and understand the interrelationships of the scholarly disciplines.
To identify and recognize the differences among competing scientific theories.
To demonstrate knowledge of the major issues and problems facing modern science, including issues that
touch upon ethics, values, and public policies.
To demonstrate knowledge of the interdependence of science and technology and their influence on, and
contribution to, modern culture.
General Course Objectives:
1. To help prepare students who wish to pursue upper division coursework in biology or biology-related fields.
2. To help students develop an appreciation for the history and development of science.
3. To help students become better informed citizens by providing opportunities to learn the differences between science as a way of knowing and
other disciplines such as art, philosophy and religion
4. To provide students an opportunity to understand and appreciate the complexity and relationships of living systems.
5. To help students become better informed regarding the role of plants in the environment and the use of plants by humans.
6. To make students aware of changing technologies in science and the responsibilities and ethical decisions that comes with the use of various
technologies.
7. To help students become better informed regarding environmental issues.
Metabolism in Plants
1. contrast the generalized equations of photosynthesis and respiration
2. describe the significance in photosynthesis of various parts of the visible light spectrum
3. describe the significance of the various types of chlorophyll and the types of light they absorb and reflect
4. describe the significance of the carotenoids and phycobilins
5. explain the events, locations and principal products in the lights and dark reactions of photosynthesis
6. explain the events, locations and principal products in glycolysis, pyruvic acid conversion, the Krebs cycle, and the lectron transport
chain of respiration
7. distinguish between aerobic respiration and fermentation
8. Identify the events photosynthesis, aerobic respiration and anaerobic respiration in which ATP is created and/or used.
9. Compare assimilation and digestion
Ecology
1. List at least 10 ways in which humans have disrupted ecosystems.
2. List the functions of producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and decomposers in an ecosystem.
3. Describe energy flow through an ecosystem.
4. Describe how nitrogen and carbon are cycled.
5. Define succession and describe a succession that begins with bare rocks and one that begins with water.
6. Define ecotype, secondary succession, eutrophication, and climax vegetation.
7. Describe an environmental problem in your “immediate” area and provide documentation (news articles, government postings, etc) of
that problem.
Biomes
1. List the major biomes of North America and describe the characteristics and principal living members of each.
2. Select a biome in North America and locate another biome of the same type on another continent.
Laboratory Objectives
The Cell
1. distinguish the components of living or preserved cells with a light microscope
2. compare and contrast prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells
1. list in sequence the phases of meiosis and describe the big events in each
2. demonstrate the phases of meiosis in a concrete model (pipe cleaners, clay)
3. explain or recognize where gametophyte and sporophyte phases of the life
4. cycles of plants begin and end.
5. identify tissues and structures as haploid or diploid
6. compare meiosis and mitosis
Genetics
1. define F1, F2, genotype, phenotype, homozygous, heterozygous,
2. dominant, recessive, gene, and hybrid
3. demonstrate the ability to calculate probability
4. diagram monhybrid and dihybrid crosses
5. explain the effects of recessive and dominant genes
1. explain how water passes through a living plant
2. explain the role of transpiration in the movement of water
3. explain the nature of guttation
4. summarize the process of cellular respiration and the by-products of the process
Photosynthesis
1. define photosynthesis
2. using appropriate form, write a scientific report of the experiment
3. used to demonstrate the correlation between the presence of starch
4. and photosynthetic activity in a Coleus leaf
5. list the sequence in which plant pigments separate on chromatography paper
1. explain/identify tests for the presence of starch, sugar, protein and be able to
2. use the tests to determine the presence or absence of these substances in
3. unknown solutions
4. identify a simple test for the presence of fats or oils
5. identify a simple technique for removing oils from leaves
Roots, Tissues
1. match descriptions of plant tissues with the appropriate names and categories
2. explain the difference between root hairs and lateral roots
3. identify the locations and functions of root tissues such as epidermis, cortex,
4. Endodermis, pericycle, phloem, and xylem
5. identify the various regions of a root
6. identify the location and composition of Casparian strips
7. compare dicot and monocot roots
Stems
1. recognize the externally visible parts of a woody twig in winter condition
2. and describe their derivations or functions
3. in a young alfalfa stem, recognize the locations and describe the functions
4. of epidermis, cortex, primary phloem, primary xylem, and pith
5. explain the differences and similarities between herbaceous and woody
6. dicot stems
7. compare dicot and monocot stems
8. in a woody dicot stem, locate and identify the following: cork, cork cambium,
9. phelloderm, cortex, primary phloem, secondary phloem, vascular cambium,
10. secondary xylem, primary xylem, broad phloem ray, narrow phloem ray,
11. broad xylem ray, narrow xylem ray, fibers, tracheids, vessels, annual ring
12. of xylem, and pith
Leaves
1. compare simple and compound leaves
2. know the parts of a complete leaf
3. compare upper epidermis and lower epidermis
4. identify guard cells, compare them to other cells, and describe their function
5. locate veins (vascular bundles), palisade mesophyll, spongy mesophyll, stomata
6. describe the functions of various leaf cells and tissues
7. compare a pine leaf and a dicot leaf with respect to form and composition of tissues
8. cells
9. compare dicot and monocot leaves
1. describe the sexual life cycle of the black bread mold Rhizopus, and how
2. it reproduces asexually
3. label the various parts of the reproductive structures of a sac fungus
4. compare the production of asexual spores in Penicillium with the production
5. Of asexual spores in Rhizopus
6. explain the structure of a lichen
7. describe the 3 basic forms of lichens
8. explain how lichens reproduce
1. identify the parts of a complete flower and explain or recognize the function of each part
2. describe the basic variations in ovary position and general structure of flowers
3. compare compound and simple ovaries
4. describe or label the life cycle of a flowering plant
5. explain how an immature ovule becomes a seed
Ecology
1. explain succession and describe its various forms
2. describe the anatomical modifications of hydrophytes and xerophytes
3. explain what a transect is and how it can be used for analysis of vegetation
Course content will be taken from the adopted text and lab manual, scientific journals, current popular periodicals, appropriate online sources and
pertinent reference literature.
Methods of Instruction/Course Format/Delivery: Instruction for this course will include formal instructor lectures, question/answer sessions,
small group discussions, videos and interactive software.