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A phylogeny of Kingdom Plantae
Biology 2: Form and Function
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Overview Plants likely evolved from green alga (Chlorophyta)
All plants exhibit alternation of generations Keys in development include an increasing dependence from water (vascular system), and a shift in dominance from the gametophyte to sporophyte stage The most advanced plants are angiosperms
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(3 phyla) (4 phyla) (5 Phyla)
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Non-vascular plants Photosynthetic, independent gametophytes
Nutritionally dependent sporophyte attached to the gametophyte Water required for fertilization Generally small, gametophyte more conspicuous than sporophyte
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Bryophyta
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Hepaticophyta
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Anthocerotophyta
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Vascular plants Vascular tissues include phloem (carries sugars away from photosynthetic structures) and xylem (carries water and nutrients to photosynthetic structures) Greater development of sporophyte stage, nutritionally and photosynthetically independent of sporophyte
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Non-seed vascular plants
Pterophyta (ferns), Psilophyta (whisk ferns), Lycophyta (club ferns) and Arthrophyta (horsetails). Reproductive organs include antheridia and archegonia which produce free swimming sperm and require water for fertilization
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Seed vascular plants Lack antheridia
Possess non-flagellated sperm, and produce few archegonia Heterosporous: Microgametophyte = pollen, released directly into environment Macrogametophyte = held within ovules Produce either naked seeds (Gymnosperms = coniferophyta, Cycadophyta, Gnetophyta and Ginkgophyta), or fruit seeds (Anthophyta)
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Pterophyta
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Arthrophyta
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Coniferophyta
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Cycadophyta Gnetophyta Ginkgophyta
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Anthophyta (Angiosperms)
Flowering plants, divisible into monocots and dicots Ovules enclosed within carpels (sporophytic tissue) Double fertilization: One sperm nucleus fuses with egg nucleus Second sperm nucleus fuses with two polar nuclei to form the nutritive triploid endosperm After fertilization, carpels develop into fruit
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