Ch30 PowerPoint LN
Download
Report
Transcript Ch30 PowerPoint LN
Chap 30: Plant Diversity II
The Evolution of Seed Plants
Overview of Seed Plant Evolution
So in this section you are answering the essay question: What reproductive
adaptations did seed plants (gymnosperms and angiosperms) make to be
successful terrestrial organisms?
1
Reduction of the gametophyte generation
•
The gametophyte generation was getting pretty small with the ferns
(seedless) but it is even smaller and more “insignificant” with the
seed plants.
•
It is microscopic and cannot be seen with the naked eye.
•
In seed plants the female gametophyte develops from a spore that is
retained within the sporangia. See Fig 30.1c.
•
Advantage: no environmental stress is experienced.
•The gametophyte and embryo are protected from drought and
UV radiation.
•Nutrients can also be gotten from the parent.
•
Why has the gametophyte not disappeared from the life cycle?
•
screening of new mutations
•
gametophyte helps to nourish the sporophyte embryo
2
Figure 30.1 Three variations on gametophyte/sporophyte relationships
3
Seeds became an important means of dispersing offspring
•
A spore is a single cell whereas a seed an embryo plus food supply.
•
The seed develops within the female gametophyte which is retained
on the parent plant (sporophyte)
•
Within the ovule develops one or more egg cells which when
fertilized develops into a zygote and remains protected.
•
The seed’s protected coat develops from the integument of the ovule.
4
Figure 30.2 From ovule to seed
5
Figure 30.3 Winged seed of a White Pine (Pinus strobus)
6
Pollen eliminated the liquid-water requirement for fertilization
•
So this is an important point since one of the main aspects of
coming onto land was keeping a moist environment for the
sperm to find the egg. Now we can get rid of this
adaptation.
•
Pollen grains develop from the microspores which produce
the male gametophyte.
•
Pollen is protected by the sporopollenin coats.
•
When pollen nears the ovule it produces a pollen tube
through which sperm travel to reach the female
gametophyte.
•
Most of these sperm lack flagella
•
Airborne pollen not swimming of sperm
7
The two clades of seed plants are gymnosperms and angiosperms
•
Different ancestors of gymno- and angiosperms but both came from
the progymnosperms.
•
Two key reproductive adaptations of seed plants:
•
seeds
•
pollen
8
Gymnosperms
The Mesozoic era was the age of gymnosperms
•
Gymnosperms replaced the club mosses, horsetails and ferns as arid
conditions increased on Earth some 250 million years ago.
•
Gymnosperms were a main food for dinosaurs
•
Gymnosperms persisted when dinosaurs went extinct.
Four Phyla
•
Ginkgo (Ginkgo biloba)
•
Cycads
•
Gnetophyta
•
Conifers
9
Figure 30.5c Phylum Ginkgophyta: Ginkgo biloba
10
Figure 30.6 Phylum Cycadophyta: cycads
11
Figure 30.7a Phylum Gnetophyta: Welwitschia
12
Figure 30.8a Phylum Coniferophyta: Douglas fir
13
Figure 30.9 The life cycle of a pine (Layer 3)
14
Angiosperms
Angiosperm Clades
•
Phylum: anthophyta
•
Not simply divided into monocots and dicots anymore
•
Monocots: lilies, orchids, palms, grasses
•
•
venation in leaves runs parallel
Eudicots
•
includes the majority of dicots
•Netlike venation
•Roses, peas, sunflowers, oaks and maples
•
Other lineages
15
•
What contributed to the success of the angiosperms?
•
Xylem tissue with tracheids for mechanical support and transport
•
Fiber cells also for support
• Vessel elements which are more efficient at transporting water
than tracheids.
•
Reproductive adaptations of flowers and fruits.
The flower is the defining reproductive adaptation of angiosperms
•
Know fig 30.13
16
Fruits help disperse the seeds of angiosperms
•
•
What you are eating is an ovary.
•
The ovule develops around the seed
•
Pericarp: wall of the ovary/fruit
Fruit Classification
•
Simple fruit: derived from one ovary; cherries, soybean pod and
pea pod
•
Aggregate fruit: single flower with several carpels, each carpel
having an ovary and therefore producing lots of
“little fruits” and since these carpels are close
together they form an aggregate; blackberries
•
Multiple fruit: the flowers of this fruit are so close together that
there fertilized ovaries fuse as they develop and
become one fruit; pineapples.
17
Figure 30.17 The life cycle of an angiosperm
18
The radiation of angiosperms marks the transition from the Mesozoic era to the
Cenozoic era
•
Oldest fossils are about 130 million years ago
•
They became the dominant plants within 65 million years and are still
the dominant plant today.
Angiosperms and animals have shaped one another’s evolution
•
Coevolution: the influence two different species have on each other’s
evolution through their interactions and thus affecting the selected
adaptations of each organism.
• insects were favored to evolve with those plants that kept their
reproductive parts off of the ground.
• animals that carried a plant’s pollen or seeds were selected for by
obtaining food on the one hand and helping the plant to reproduce on
the other.
19
Plants and Human Welfare
So what is the value of plants to humans?
Agriculture is based almost entirely on angiosperms
•
Flowering plants provide most of our food. Vegetables and fruits are
both angiosperms
•
Selective breeding of plants became a way to improve crop
productivity and quality.
•
Table 30.2: Angiosperms are also valuable as medicines
Plant diversity is a nonrenewable resource
20
Table 30.2 A Sampling of Medicines Derived from Plants
21
Figure 30.12 Xylem cells in angiosperms
22
Figure 30.13a The structure of a flower
23
Figure 30.4 Hypothetical phylogeny of the seed plants
24