PLANTS - MrsRyan
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Transcript PLANTS - MrsRyan
PLANT Evolution
Structural Adaptations
Vascular system – roots and shoots
(tracheophytes)
Mycorrhizae – fungal associations
Stomata and cuticle
Lignin – hardens cell walls – preventing
water loss
Vascular tissues – xylem and phloem
Stomata
Reproductive Adaptations
Must keep gametes from drying out.
Gametangia – jacket surrounding moist
chamber where gametes can develop
Sperm encased in pollen and egg in
ovule
Origin from Algae
Charophytes – closest to plants in
molecular studies
Natural selection favored those who
could survive when not submerged in
water
Origin of Plants
Plant Evolution
1.
2.
3.
4.
4 major periods in plant evolution
Bryophytes – mosses – gametangia –
little or no vascular tissue
Ferns (Pterophyta) – seedless,
vascular plants
Gymnosperms (Coniferophyta) – the
first seed plants
Angiosperms (anthophyta) –
emergence of the flowering plants –
complex reproductive organs
Bryophytes
Mosses
Cuticle and gametangium
Sperm are flagellated – must swim to reach
eggs
No lignin, no vascular system
Seedless
2 generations – gametophyte (n) and
sporophyte (2n)
Alternation of Generations
Bryophytes
Moss Life Cycle
Ferns
Have vascular tissue
Sperm must swim through water to
reach eggs
Seedless
Inhabit tropical areas
Ferns
Gymnosperms
At the end of the Carboniferous period –
climate became cold and dry.
Provided opportunity for seed plants
Conifers – pine, spruce, firs, redwoods
Nearly all conifers are evergreen
Thick cuticle – stomata in pits
Life Cycle of Conifer
Sporophyte generation and
gametophyte generation.
Use pollen grains to transport sperm
Seeds can remain dormant for years
Fire, rain, and animals can crack seeds
and cause germination.
Angiosperms
2 types of flowering plants – Monocots and
Dicots
Undergo double fertilization
Pollen deposits two sperm nuclei in the female
gametophyte
One sperm fertilizes an egg- produces a zygote
and develops into an embryo
The second fertilizes another female gametophyte
cell which develops into an endosperm (nutrient
storing tissue)
A mature ovule is a seed, a mature ovary is
the fruit
Monocots and Dicots
Monocots vs. Dicots
Monocots
One cotyledon
(seed leaves)
Flower parts in
multiples of 3
Parallel leaf veins
Ex. Corn,lily
Dicots
2 cotyledons
Flower parts in
multiples of five
Netlike leaf veins
Primrose, maple