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Plants Plants TERRESTRIAL eukaryotes multicellular photosynthetic lifecycles with alternation of generations cell walls contain cellulose chloroplasts use chlorophyll a and b Learning Outcomes Explain characteristics of the major groups of plants. Describe adaptations to terrestrial environment in major plant groups. Draw/Explain lifecycles - alternation of generations in each group of plants. Explain the advantages of vascular tissue. Explain the advantages of seeds. LAND PLANTS VASCULAR PLANTS Angiosperms 360-300 MYA 400-375 MYA 420-410 MYA Gymnosperms Ferns Club mosses Mosses Hornworts Liverworts Charophyta SEED PLANTS 140-120 MYA Major Plant Groups show increasing adaptations to terrestrial environment Bryophytes • No xylem or phloem • Gametophyte predominant • Water required for fertilization • Seedless liverworts hornworts mosses Seedless vascular plants • Vascular tissue present • Sporophyte predominant • Water required for fertilization • Seedless whisk ferns, club mosses, horsetails, spike mosses ferns ancestral alga Gymnosperms • Vascular tissue present • Sporophyte predominant • Pollen grains; water not required for fertilization • “Naked” seeds gnetophytes, ginkgos, conifers, cycads Angiosperms • Vascular tissue present • Sporophyte predominant • Pollen grains; water not required for fertilization • Seeds form in a floral ovary that becomes a fruit monocots, eudicots, and relatives Green algae were precursors of Plants All photosynthetic organisms were aquatic before land plants evolved. What types of adaptations might be needed to survive on land? Alternation of Generations Alternation of Generations sporophyte -- produces -- spores diploid haploid MEIOSIS gametophyte -- produces haploid gametes haploid MITOSIS Bryophytes Bryophytes How do these plants obtain nutrients? Why do they need water for fertilization? Are both generations photosynthetic? Why are bryophytes small? Pterophytes Pterophytes are vascular plants Pterophytes What are the advantages of a vascular system? How do the gametophyte and sporophyte compare to mosses? Differences between rhizoids, rhizomes, and roots? Gymnosperms Cycads Ginkos Gnetophyptes Conifers What are the advantages of producing pollen? What are the advantages of producing seeds? Cycads Ginko Gnetophytes Conifers Conifers Pollen and Ovule producing Cones Angiosperms Flower Anatomy stamen filament anther petal sepal carpel stigma style ovary ovule (forms within ovary) receptacle Angiosperms Angiosperms microspores will produce male gametophyte megaspores -will produce female gametophyte many angiosperms have flowers that produce both male and female gametophytes in the same flower, but some angiosperms have separate sexes and flowers on a given plant only produce one type of gametophyte. Angiosperms eudicot monocot Angiosperms We can tell eudicots and monocots apart by features of their anatomy MONOCOTS EUDICOTS seeds 1 cotyledon 2 cotyledons flower petals multiples of 3 multiples of 4 or 5 leaves parallel veins branching veins Lifecycle of Fungi 2 dikaryotic stage (n+n) Fusion of nuclei Fusion of cytoplasm sporeproducing structure (n) 1 Asexual Cycle mycelium (n) Sexual Cycle 3 zygote (2n) spores (n) Meiosis 4 spore-producing structure (n) 4 Nuclear fusion 3 Diploid (2n) stage Dikaryotic Haploid (n) (n+n) stage stage Meiosis 5 spore (n) gill cap stalk 1 2 Cytoplasmic fusion