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Announcements Lab this week: Wear warm clothes for conifer walk Jim Brown Seminar Wed. 9 th UC Theatre
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Coniferales (Conifers) 5 families worldwide, 3 in Montana Cupressaceae - Cypress Family Taxaceae - Yew Family Pinaceae - Pine Family
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Conifers - Pinaceae (Pine Family) Pinus - PineLarix - Larch or TamarackTsuga - Hemlock Pseudotsuga - Douglas Fir Abies - Fir Picea - Spruce
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Larix - Larch P. monticola Key features Deciduous needles in clusters Small cones w/ 3-parted bracts
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P. albicaulis L. lyallii Subalpine Larch L. occidentalis Western Larch
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Tsuga - Hemlock P. albicaulis T. heterophylla (coastal disjunct)
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Pseudotsuga menziesii - Douglas-fir P. monticolaP. albicaulis
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Abies - Fir P. monticolaP. albicaulis Key features Blunt evergreen needles Barrel-shaped cones held upright Cone scales dehisce (fall off)
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A.lasiocarpa Subalpine Fir P. monticolaP. albicaulis A.grandis Grand Fir
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Picea - Spruce P. monticolaP. albicaulis Key features Sharp needles Papery cones hang down twig w/ pegs scaley bark
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P. monticolaP. albicaulis P. engelmannii Engelmann Spruce P. glauca White Spruce
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Conifers - Pinaceae (Pine Family) Pinus - PineLarix - Larch or TamarackTsuga - Hemlock Pseudotsuga - Douglas Fir Abies - Fir Picea - Spruce
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Cupressaceae - Cypress Family Key features Leaves usually scale-like (folded and flattened) Female cones small, either woody or “berry-like” Two genera in Montana Thuja (large trees) Juniperus (small trees or shrubs)
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Thuja plicata - Western Red Cedar Coastal disjunct found on moister western slopes in Rockies Female cones
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Juniperus - Juniper J. scopulorum Rocky Mtn. Juniper Dioecious shrubs/small trees Female cones berry-like J. communis Common Juniper low shrub w/needles worldwide distribution shrub/small tree scale leaves
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Taxaceae - Yew Family Key features Dioecious shrubs/small trees Needles flattened; appear 2-ranked No cone - seed surrounded by a fleshy aril One genus/species in Montana (Taxus brevifolia)
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Taxus brevifolia - Pacific Yew Coastal disjunct only in moist areas here (canyons etc.) Papery bark Arils (only on females)
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Conifer Questions???? Cupressaceae - Cypress Family Taxaceae - Yew Family Pinaceae - Pine Family
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Moving on to angiosperms: the vast majority of plants ConifersGingkosCycadsEphedra Seed plants Angiosperms 600 species 257,000 species ~135 mya
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Plant life histories Different means to the same end: survival & reproduction
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Lifespan and timing of reproduction Ideal plant strategy: 1)live forever 2)make lots of seeds every year Why not?
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Lifespan and timing of reproduction Ideal plant strategy: 1)live forever 2)make lots of seeds every year Why not? Limited resources (light, nutrients, water etc.) tradeoff between survival/growth and reproduction (usually...)
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Lifespan and timing of reproduction Life history strategies high adult mortality --> reproduce now! ex. weeds, vernal pool plants high seedling mortality --> just survive! ex. trees, grassland forbs
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Lifespan and timing of reproduction: herbs (woody trees and shrubs are all perennial by definition) Annual 1st year: flowers, dies Biennial 1st year: makes rosette 2nd year: flowers, dies Perennial Lives for multiple years May or may not flower in any year Mimulus douglasiiOenothera biennisBalsamorhiza and Lupinus
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Lifespan and timing of reproduction iteroparity - reproduce repeatedly semelparity- reproduce once, then die etc.
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Lifespan and timing of reproduction Agave (Century Plant) extreme semelparity
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Plants are sessile and modular vs.
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Some consequences of being a plant can make own food (photosynthesis) can grow indefinitely & survive major damage BUT, can’t go look for a better place local competition for resources evolution of fungal/bacterial symbioses evolution of seed dispersal mechanisms can’t go look for mates evolution of pollination mechanisms
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Competition for light affects plant growth form over evolutionary time over individual lifespans
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terminal (apical) bud axillary bud node internode Angiosperm vegetative terminology leaf! stem
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terminal (apical) bud axillary bud node internode Angiosperm vegetative terminology leaf! opposite leaves alternate stem or shoot whorled
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Angiosperm vegetative terminology Basal leaves (at base of shoot) Cauline leaves (on shoot)
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petiole Leaf parts blade stipule midvein margin pinnate palmate dichotomous parallel Leaf venation
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stoma w/guard cells (regulates gas exchange) waxy cuticle (blocks water loss) Leaves need to uptake gas (CO 2 ) for photosynthesis, but also need to minimize loss of H 2 O through leaves mesophyll w/chloroplasts vein w/vascular tissue (water , sugar ) Plant water relations
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Succulents (modified for water storage)
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Artemisia tridentata (Asteraceae) Sagebrush foliage - Adaptation to dry/high sun conditions
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Leaf forms simple unlobed simple lobed simple lobed (palmate) compound (palmate) compound (pinnate) compound (twice pinnate) entiredentate Leaf margins
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How to figure out what is the leaf axillary bud is always at base of leaf (above the petiole)
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Roots anchoring water and nutrient absorption water and carbohydrate storage TaprootFibrous roots Adventitious roots
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Storage roots ?
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Modified stems rhizome = horizontal, rootlike stem stem roots rhizome shoot buds tuber (extra-starchy rhizome)
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Modified stems stolon = an aboveground horizontal stem with long internodes Saxifraga Fragaria plantlets
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Saxifraga Fragaria
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Saxifraga Fragaria Asexual or clonal reproduction Definition of “individual” depends on perspective genetic individual --> “genet” growth unit --> “ramet” Modularity => a continuum between growth and reproduction
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Saxifraga Populus tremuloides (Aspen)
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