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Published byTabitha Barnett Modified over 9 years ago
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Plant Diversity I Chapter 29
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Slide 2 of 18 Evolution Land plants descended from Chlorophyta Green Algae Specifically Charophyta Plant-like Protists Generalized Phylogenetic Relationship: Charophyta Bryophyta Seedless Vascular Plants Gymnosperms Angiospems
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Slide 3 of 18 How do we know? Charophytes land plants Cellulose production is identical, but unique to these 2 groups Unique peroxisome structure & enzyme production Sperm structure is closely related Similar cell plate production Nuclear and chloroplast genes are closely related
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Slide 4 of 18 Movement to land… Advantages Increased Sunlight In water it is attenuated and/or refracted Increased availability of CO 2 Nutrient rich soil medium Disadvantages Risk of desiccation Less water available Gravitational force has greater effect
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Slide 5 of 18 Plants are… Suppliers of oxygen to all other terrestrial organisms Terrestrial producers Serve as food source for animals & fungi Alternation of generations Diploid and haploid life stages Diploid = sporophyte Haploid = gametophyte
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Slide 6 of 18 Alternation of generations Sporophyte (2n or Haploid) Produces spores (n) by Meiosis Spores grow into Gametophyte (n) Mitosis Gametophyte (n) produces gametes (n) Gametes (n) fuse in fertilization Zygote (2n) is produced Mitosis = Sporophyte (2n)
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Slide 7 of 18 Gametangia Gamete production occurs in specialized organs called gametangia Male gametangia = antheridia (antheridium) Only male deer (bucks) have antlers Female gametangia = archegonia (archegonium) Land plants called embryophytes since zygote develops inside female
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Slide 8 of 18 Land Plants (4 groupings) Bryophyta – non-vascular plants so they are very small in size & live in moist environments Seedless vascular plants – ferns Still reside in moist, cooler environments Waxy covering protects from desiccation Gymnosperms (naked seeds) – Confers bear cones Angiosperms (Covered seeds) – fruits & flowers
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Slide 9 of 18 Bryophyta First land plants – evolved from Chlorophytes Mosses, liverworts, hornworts (no Hogwarts) Concerned with water loss since not living in water anymore 2 Adaptations to deal with water retention Waxy cuticle cover Gametes packaged in structures called gametangia
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Slide 10 of 18 Moar Bryophyta!! Nonvascular plant The lack of vascularity & flagellated sperm = dependence on water Bryophytes live in damp areas Spend the majority of their life in the gametophyte (haploid) stage Rhizoids anchor the gametophyte Long single tubular cells Does not absorb water or nutrients like roots do
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Slide 11 of 18
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Slide 12 of 18 Only plants with gametophyte as dominant part of life cycle Sporophytes basically live off the gametophyte, but do photosynthesis
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Slide 13 of 18 Questions What is the phylogenetic progression in plants? Chlorophyta is in which Kingdom? What is the male gametangia called? What is the female gametangia called?
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Slide 14 of 18 Seedless Vascular Plants Xylem & Phloem – Plant vascularity Xylem transports water throughout the plant and takes minerals from the soil to the photosynthetic areas of plants Phloem transports sugar and nutrients to the various plant structures Vascularity developed as plants needed to be tall for photosynthesis, but also needed to uptake water & nutrients from the soil Common example = ferns
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Slide 15 of 18 Seedless Vascular Plants (Page 2) Vascularity allowed for taller plants Outcompete other plant types for sunlight Still need to be in damp environment for sperm to reach egg Dominant stage is sporophyte Pterophyta – may be source of carbon that is now coal Proliferated during the Carboniferous period of late Paleozoic era
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Slide 16 of 18 Homo vs. Hetero Major Seedless plants are ferns Ferns are homosporous Homosporous means single spore production that gives rise to bisexual gametophytes Homosporous heterosporous Heterosporous – 2 spore types Some produce male gametophyte (microspores) Some produce female gametophytes (macrospores)
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Slide 17 of 18 Sporangia -- Site of mieosis Sporophyte (2n) spores (n)
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Slide 18 of 18 Questions 1. As we go from bryophytes to seedless vascular plants, the dominant generation of the life cycle goes from __________ to __________ 2. What is the advantage of branched sporophytes? 3. We will see: homosporous (seedless vascular plants) ____________
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