Life: The Science of Biology, 8e
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Transcript Life: The Science of Biology, 8e
Chapter 28 - Sadava
Plants without Seeds:
from Water to Land
Before we start Plants, a review….
Domain Archaea
Prokaryotic, include extremophile bacteria
Domain Bacteria
Prokaryotic, includes what we knew as Kingdom
Monera
Domain Eukarya
Eukaryotic
Includes:
Kingdom Fungi
What we knew as Kingdom Protista (green algae are
related to plants)
Kingdom Plantae
Kingdom Animalia
Land plants are monophyletic
all descend from a single common
ancestor
One shared derived character
a synapomorphy
development from an embryo protected
by tissues of the parent plant
Why is this important on land?
Also called embryophytes
Land plants retain derived features they
share with green algae (which are
protists):
Chlorophyll a and b.
Starch as a storage product.
Cellulose in cell walls.
Photo 28.2 Green algae of
phylum Chlorophyta are most
likely ancestors of plants.
“Plants” can be defined in several ways
Streptophytes include land plants and a
paraphyletic group of green algae —all retain
egg within parent’s body
Green plants: streptophytes plus all other
green algae. All have chlorophyll b
This textbook: “plants” refers only to land
plants
What we think of in Kingdom Plantae
10 clades of land plants
Vascular plants, or tracheophytes
7 clades
all have conducting cells called tracheids
The seven groups of vascular plants
constitute a clade themselves
Nonvascular plants
3 clades
www.sonoma.edu/users/c/cannon/
Plants first appeared on land between 400–500
million years ago
Adaptations were needed to survive in dry
environments
Large plants must transport water to all parts
of plant
Needed support in air
Needed methods to disperse gametes
Characteristics of land plants:
The cuticle (waxy lipids)
Stomata – openings in stems and leaves;
regulate gas exchange (except liverworts)
Gametangia enclosing gametes
Embryos in a protective structure
Pigments that protect against UV radiation
Spore walls containing sporopollenin
Mutualistic relationships with fungi to promote
nutrient uptake from soil
Alternation of generations
All land plants have a life
cycle with alternation of
generations
multicellular haploid
(gametophyte)
multicellular diploid
(sporophyte) individuals
Alternation of generations
Sporophyte
Produces spores, all cells are diploid
Cells in sporangia (in sporophyte) undergo
meiosis to produce haploid, unicellular
spores
Spores are released
Spore develops into multicellular haploid
structure, the gametophyte
Gametophyte
Produces gametes, all cells are haploid
Produce gametes by mitosis
Fusion of egg and sperm results in diploid
zygote
Zygote develops into sporophyte
Reduction of the gametophyte generation is a
major theme in plant evolution
In nonvascular plants: gametophyte is larger,
longer-lived, and more self-sufficient than the
sporophyte
Gametophyte is photosynthetic
In plants that appeared later, this is reversed
In seed vascular plants (gymnosperms and
angiosperms), sporophyte generation is
dominate
Sporophyte is photosynthetic
Gametophyte might only be a few cells it is so
small
Nonvascular plants
Do not have vascular tissue
liverworts, hornworts, and mosses
These groups do not form a clade – why?
In nonvascular plants, the
gametophyte generation
is photosynthetic
Sporophytes arising
from gametophytes
Sporophytes may or may
not be photosynthetic,…
but are always
nutritionally dependent
on gametophyte, and is
permanently attached
Gametophytes
http://taggart.glg.msu.edu/bot335/MOSS.GIF
Haploid gametophyte produces gametes in
specialized sex organs (gametangia)
Female: archegonium produces one egg
Male: antheridium produces many sperm
with two flagella each
Flagellated moss sperm
http://www.dkimages.com/discover/prev
iews/832/20113674.JPG
Archegonium
Antheridium
• Nonvascular plants
• Sperm must swim to
archegonium, or be
splashed by raindrops
• Egg or archegonium
releases chemical
attractants for sperm
• Water is required for
all these events
Vascular Plants
• Vascular plants include the club mosses, ferns,
conifers, and angiosperms (flowering plants).
• True roots and leaves
What Features Distinguish the Vascular
Plants?
The vascular system consists of tissue
specialized for transport of materials
Xylem
conducts water and minerals from soil up
to aerial parts of plant.
Some cells have lignin — provides support
Phloem
conducts products of photosynthesis
through plant.
http://plantandsoil.unl.edu/croptechnology2005/UserFiles/Image/siteImages/Fig-3-large.gif
Tracheids are main
water-conducting
element in xylem
Evolution of tracheids in
plants set stage for
invasion of land
First plant fossils are from
Silurian (408-440 mya)
Made land more
hospitable for animals
Amphibians and insects
arrived soon after plants
www.unlv.edu/Colleges/Sciences/Biology/
Schulte/Anatomy/CellsTissues
Vascular plants also have a
large, branching,
independent sporophyte
Mature sporophyte is
nutritionally independent
from gametophyte
Fern
prothallus
Small independent gametophyte (left) and
branched sporopythe (right) of ferns
http://virtual.yosemite.cc.ca.us/randerson/Lynn's%20Bioslides/20.jpg
http://web.cortland.edu/broyles/hayg
• Vascular plants
• Euphyllophytes
• “true leaf plants”
• Includes:
• Monilophytes – seedless vascular plants that have
megaphylls
• seed plants (gymnosperms and flowering plants)
• Synapomorphies include overtopping growth
— new branches grow beyond the others —an
advantage in the competition for light
True leaves evolved
flattened photosynthetic structures arising
from a stem or branch
has true vascular tissue
two types
Microphylls – small, one vascular strand
Club mosses have these
Megaphylls
Heterosporous vascular plants produce
two types of spores:
Megaspores develop into female
gametophytes — megagametophyte
Megaspores are produced in small
numbers in megasporangia
Microspores develop into male
gametophytes — microgametophyte
Microspores are produced in large
numbers in microsporangia
Nonvascular seedless land plants: three
clades:
liverworts
mosses
hornworts
Embryophytes
Nonvascular Seedless plants
Hepatophyta
Liverworts: Hepatophyta
Sporophytes very short
Remember that gametophyte generation is
dominant in nonvascular plants
Can reproduce asexually
Do so by dispersing gemmae which are in
gemmae cups
www.bcbiodiversity.homestead.com/files
Embryophytes
Nonvascular Seedless plants
Bryophyta
The mosses: Bryophyta
Mosses (plus hornworts and vascular plants)
have stomata important in water & gas
exchange
Embryophytes
Nonvascular Seedless plants
Anthocerophyta
Hornworts: Anthocerophyta
Gametophytes are flat plates of cells
Have stomata, which do not close
http://www.botany.org/PlantImages/Conant/CA06-014_300.jpg
Seedless Vascular Plants
Seedless VASCULAR
plants – three
monophyletic
clades:
club mosses
horsetails
whisk ferns
plus ferns and
allies (not
monophyletic,
though 97% are)
Seedless Vascular Plants
Seedless vascular plants
Small, short-lived
gametophyte is
independent of the large
sporophyte
Single-celled spore is
resting stage
Can grow larger because
of vascular tissue but
must have water for part
of life cycle — for the
flagellated, swimming
sperm
www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/library/webb/BOT311/FERNS
Embryophytes
Seedless Vascular Plants
Lycophytes
Lycophytes: club mosses, spike mosses, and
quillworts
Roots and stems have dichotomous
branching
Leaves are microphylls
Strobilli – clusters of sporangia
Lycopodium annotinum
http://ip30.eti.uva.nl/bis/flora/pictures
Embryophytes
Seedless Vascular
Euphyllophytes
Monilophytes
Monilophytes (a.k.a. Pteridophytes) — horsetails,
whisk ferns, and ferns & allies, form a clade
Horsetails and whisk ferns are both monophyletic,
but ferns are not
But 97% of ferns form a clade — the
leptosporangiate ferns
Embryophytes
Seedless Vascular
Euphyllophytes
Monilophytes
Horsetails
15 species in one
genus — Equisetum
Silica in cell walls —
“scouring rushes”…
used for cleaning
Equisetum hymale
www.plantoftheweek.org/image
Embryophytes
Seedless Vascular
Euphyllophytes
Monilophytes
Whisk ferns
15 species in two
genera
No roots but welldeveloped vascular
system
Psilotum nudum
http://www.botanik.uni-karlsruhe.de/garten/fotos-knoch/Psilotum%20nudum%20Gabelblatt%201.jpg
Embryophytes
Seedless Vascular
Euphyllophytes
Monilophytes
Sporangia occur on undersides of leaves in
clusters called sori
http://departments.bloomu.edu/biology
/pics/botany/fern_sori2w.jpg
Monilophytes (Pteridophytes) – Ferns
Fern gametophytes produce antheridia and
archegonia, not always at same time or on
same gametophyte
www.esu.edu/~milewski/intro_biol_two/lab_2_moss_ferns
Embryophytes
Seedless Vascular
Euphyllophytes
Monilophytes
Most ferns found in shaded, moist environments
Tree ferns can reach heights of 20 m
Dixie Woods fern,
Dryopteris australis
Tree ferns
http://www.we-du.com/images/plants/350/frndrydwf.jpg
http://www.wettropics.gov.au/st/rainforest_expl
orer/Resources/Images/plants/TreeFerns.jpg