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Diversity of & Phylogeny of Plants Classification: Assigning to categories. Goal of classification: designate logical and “natural” groups. Carl Linnaeus (Sweden, 1707-1778) an early pioneer in plant classification. First to use Binomial (2 word) system of naming species. Carl Linnaeus Classification & Phylogeny • • • • • Since Darwin’s time, prevailing idea: Classification should reflect evolutionary relationships. Phylogeny = Evolutionary lineage Classification should reflect phylogeny: Phylogenetic relationships can be expressed by Phylogenetic trees. Ideally, all named groups should be one complete branch of a phylogenetic tree. A Phylogenetic tree Modern Methods to Uncover Phylogeny • • • • • Cladistics: Modern method for comparing organisms to determine relationships. Relationships based on “shared derived characters”. Shared ancestral characters don’t give evolutionary info: • It’s expected that they could occur in any group in the lineage. Goal: recover branching pattern of evolution. Product: cladogram -branching tree (p. 1378) Clubmosses Ferns Pines Oaks Cladogram Classification Groups & Phylogeny p. (1373): Monophyletic group: One complete evolutionary lineageancestor & all descendants. • Ideally all named groups should be monophyletic. Polyphyletic group: Several lineages- members don’t share a single ancestor. • All taxonomists seek to identify & eliminate these. Paraphyletic group: One ancestor but not all descendants. • • Examples: Reptiles, dicotyledons. (See pp. 1373-1378). Cladists: These groups should not be recognized. Monophyletic Paraphyletic Polyphyletic Modern Trends in Plant Classification: p. 1169-1192; (FNCT: 1373-1378, in part). Increased emphasis on phylogeny. New sources of taxonomic information (DNA, etc.) Emphasis on quantitative methods. Debate between Cladistic & traditional (Phenetic) schools. • • Phenetics: Use all available characters to compare taxa. “Total distance” of prime inportance. Cladistics Use only known shared derived characters; Only they have evolutionary meaning. • Branching pattern of evolution of prime importance. Recently: use of cladisitcs more common. Recent Approaches to Classification (p. 1163): Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) Bremer, Chase, & Stevens (1988) Attempts to reclassify flowering plants into monophyletic groups (Family & Order-level) based on new Cladistic & molecular research. Basal families Magnoliids Monocotyledons Eudicotyledons Classification of Organisms: 3 Domains Archaea: (Non-bacterial prokaryotes) Bacteria: (true bacteria) Eukarya: 4 Traditional Kingdoms of Eukarya “Protista”: (Eukaryotic cells, often single-celled organisms. • • • Euglenoids, Red Algae, Dinoflagelates, Diatoms, Brown algae, Green algae… “Catch-all” group: not monophyletic. Includes green algae (=base of plant tree)! Fungi: (Heterotrophic, external digestion). Plantae: (multicellular autotrophs) ='embyophytes = 'higher plants'. Animalia: (Heterotrophs, internal digestion). Bacteria Archaea “Protista” Phylogeny of Living things Plants Fungi Animals Phylogeny of Green Plants Lycophytes Mosses & Ferns Hornworts Seed plants Charophytes Liverworts Other Green algae Chlorophytes Pteridophytes Bryophytes Gymnosperms & Angiosperms Green Algae “Protista” Green Algae Share numerous cell characters with higher plants Green algae + higher plants form a monophyletic clade. Variable habit: Unicellular, colonial, multicellular. Primarily fresh water. Two main lineages: Chlorophyte clade*. Charophyte, other green algae, & higher plant clade. Other Green algae Chlorophytes Higher Plants *Clade = monophyletic group e.g. 'CLADistics' Green Algae Chara: Member of a sister group to land plants Chara at Lake Tombigbee, Alabama-Coushatta Indian Reservation near Lvingston, TX Bryophytes: Mosses, Liverworts & Hornworts: First land plants: Ordovician (510-439) M.Y.A. had some bryophyte-like characteristics. Said to be “transitional from green algae to vascular plants”. 3 distinct lineages (see title) But: diverse, successful modern plants; NOT 'throwbacks'! occur worldwide in most habitats. 2nd (mosses:15,000 sp.) & 4th (liverworts: 9,000 sp.) largest plant groups! Evolutionary strategies: different than vascular plants. Stay small & remain close to water source. Survive (rather than avoid) dehydration. Hornworts: Anthocerophyta Sporophyte Gametophyte An East Texas Hornwort! Sporophytes Gametophyte Liverworts: Hepatophyta (P. 352, 408) A leafy liverwort Gemma cups for asexual propagation A thallose liverwort Liverworts: Hepatophyta (P. 352) Sporophytes Gametophyte Mosses: Bryophyta Capsule (Sporangium) Sporophyte Gametophyte Rhizoids Mosses & other Bryophytes on Ravine Wall: Sabine National Forest, East Texas Vascular Plants 3 major clades: Ferns Lycophytes Seed plants The End! Version 16.10