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Non-Vascular Plants and Ferns
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Evolution of Land Plants
Land plants evolved from green algae The green algae called charophyceans are the closest relatives of land plants Comparisons of both nuclear and chloroplast genes Point to charophyceans as the closest living relatives of land plants Chara, a pond organism (a) 10 mm Coleochaete orbicularis, a disk- shaped charophycean (LM) (b) 40 µm
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Origin and Diversification of Plants
Fossil evidence indicates that plants were on land at least 475 million years ago Whatever the age of the first land plants those ancestral species gave rise to a vast diversity of modern plants
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Seedless vascular plants
Plant Evolution Bryophytes (nonvascular plants) Seedless vascular plants Seed plants Vascular plants Land plants Origin of seed plants (about 360 mya) Origin of vascular plants (about 420 mya) Origin of land plants (about 475 mya) Ancestral green alga Charophyceans Liverworts Hornworts Mosses Lycophytes(club mosses, spike mosses, quillworts) Pterophyte (ferns, horsetails, whisk fern) Gymnosperms Angiosperms
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Bryophytes Life cycles of mosses and other bryophytes are dominated by the gametophyte stage Bryophytes are represented today by three phyla of small herbaceous (nonwoody) plants Liverworts, phylum Hepatophyta Hornworts, phylum Anthocerophyta Mosses, phylum Bryophyta
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Bryophytes LIVERWORTS (PHYLUM HEPATOPHYTA) Gametophore of
HORNWORTS (PHYLUM ANTHOCEROPHYTA) MOSSES (PHYLUM BRYOPHYTA) Gametophore of female gametophyte Marchantia polymorpha, a “thalloid” liverwort Foot Sporangium Seta 500 µm Marchantia sporophyte (LM) Plagiochila deltoidea, a “leafy” liverwort An Anthoceros hornwort species Sporophyte Gametophyte Polytrichum commune, hairy-cap moss
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Liverworts Have no true roots or shoots Non- vascular
Require water to reproduce Have no or very little leaf structure Cannot live in sporophyte form
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Hornworts Free-floating aquatic plant, or land plant
No vascular tissue No true leaves or roots Can live in both gametophyte and sporophyte forms
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Mosses Land plant Most have no vascular tissue
Majority to life spent in gametophyte Need water to breed No leaves or roots Sporophytes are capsules on stalks
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Vascular Plants Vascular plants have two types of vascular tissue
Xylem and phloem Xylem Conducts most of the water and minerals Includes dead cells called tracheids Phloem Distributes sugars, amino acids, and other organic products Consists of living cells
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Vascular Plants Vascular plants have roots Vascular plants have leaves
Are organs that anchor vascular plants Enable vascular plants to absorb water and nutrients from the soil May have evolved from subterranean stems Vascular plants have leaves Leaves are organs that increase the surface area of vascular plants, thereby capturing more solar energy for photosynthesis
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Vascular Plants Two types of vascular plants: seedless and seeded
Seedless vascular plants form two phyla Lycophyta, including club mosses, spike mosses, and quillworts Pterophyta, including ferns, horsetails, and whisk ferns and their relatives Modern species of lycophytes are relics from a far more eminent past Are small herbaceous plants Ferns Are the most diverse seedless vascular plants
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Seedless Vascular Plants
LYCOPHYTES (PHYLUM LYCOPHYTA) PTEROPHYTES (PHYLUM PTEROPHYTA) WHISK FERNS AND RELATIVES HORSETAILS FERNS Isoetes gunnii, a quillwort Selaginella apoda, a spike moss Diphasiastrum tristachyum, a club moss Strobili (clusters of sporophylls) Psilotum nudum, a whisk fern Equisetum arvense, field horsetail Vegetative stem Strobilus on fertile stem Athyrium filix-femina, lady fern
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Ferns Like vascular plants but do not have seeds
Common in shady areas, diverse in the tropics Have flagellated sperm that require water to reach the eggs
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Alternation of Generations
The seed plant life cycle contains both haploid and diploid stages Diploid individuals are called sporophytes Haploid individuals are called gametophytes Does not happen in algae May have evolved as an adaptation to harsh environments Haploid cells divide into a cluster of cells before meiosis
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Alternation of Generations
HAPLOID Meiosis Spores n Mitosis Gametophytes (male and female) n Gametes (sperm and eggs) n Fertilization Zygote 2n DIPLOID Sporophyte 2n
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Sporophytes (growing from gametophytes)
Dominant Gametophyte Mosses have a dominant gametophyte stage Sperm (n) (released from their gametangium) 1 2 3 4 Gametangium containing the egg (n) (remains within gametophyte) Egg Fertilization Zygote (2n) Mitosis and development Sporophytes (growing from gametophytes) HAPLOID DIPLOID Gametophyte (n) Sporangium Stalk Meiosis Spores (n) 5 Gametophytes (n) Stopped here section 45 tuesday
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Dominant Sporophyte Most plants have a dominant sporophyte stage 5 1
2 3 4 Gametophyte (n) (underside) Sperm (n) Egg (n) Fertilization Zygote (2n) Mitosis and development New sporophyte growing out of gametophyte Sporophyte (2n) Meiosis Sporangia 5 Spores (n) HAPLOID DIPLOID
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Seeded Vascular Plants
Gymnosperms- conifers, cycads, and ginkgo Angiosperms- flowering plants
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