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Published byArline Powers Modified over 9 years ago
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Plants, Fungi and the Move Onto Land
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Colonizing Land Terrestrial Adaptations? Structural Shoots, roots, leaves Vascular tissue
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Colonizing Land Terrestrial Adaptations Reproductive Gametangia Embryophytes: egg is fertilized and develops within plant Plants are heteromorphic: sporophyte and gametophyte
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Charophytes and Plants Green algae (seaweeds) are most probable plant ancestor 475 million ya, shallow seas experiences seasonal droughts Natural selection would favor gametangia formation
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Plant Highlights
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Bryophytes Non-vascular (mostly) (no xylem & phloem) Swimming sperm Waxy cuticle Embryo develops inside female gametangia Zygote develops into sporophyte
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Ferns Evolution of vascular tissue Swimming sperm Seedless plants Use spores for dispersal strategy
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Carboniferous period (300 mya)
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Evolution of the Seed Independence on water for reproduction Climate became drier and colder Utilize air and insects for pollen Three main groups: seed ferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms Produce microspores (pollen) and megaspores (ovule) Seed is a fertilized ovule (embryo)
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Mosses, Ferns and Seed Plants
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Gymnosperms: “naked seeds” Unprotected seeds Include: conifers, cycads, ginkgos, and gnetophytes Independent of water for fertilization
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Gymnosperms Cone-bearers Woody trees with needle-like or scale- like leaves Evergreen and deciduous
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Angiosperms Only plants with true flowers Seed is enclosed in an ovary Coevolution with pollinators
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Most successful and diverse group
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Angiosperms
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Angiosperm Pollinators
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Seed Dispersal
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Values of Plant Diversity
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Kingdom Fungi Decomposers of dead organics (saprobes) Help recycle nutrients 430 million years of evolution on land Over 80,000 species classified
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Kingdom Fungi Heterotrophs: feed by absorption Extracellular enzyme secretion Most are multicellular
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Typical Fungi Life Cycle
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Kingdom Fungi – Lichens Mistaken as mosses Mycobiont is usually an ascomycete Photobiont can be a chlorophyte and/or cyanobacterium When both, cyano’s primarily fix nitrogen
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Kingdom Fungi – Mycorrhizae Hyphae increase surface absorptive area Plants receive nutrients and water from fungus Fungi receives carbohydrates from plant Many plants are dependent
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Ecological Impacts of Fungi Parasites Commercial use
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