Download The Land Plants

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Xylem wikipedia , lookup

Ecology of Banksia wikipedia , lookup

Leaf wikipedia , lookup

Seed wikipedia , lookup

Plant nutrition wikipedia , lookup

Plant secondary metabolism wikipedia , lookup

Plant defense against herbivory wikipedia , lookup

Plant breeding wikipedia , lookup

Plant use of endophytic fungi in defense wikipedia , lookup

History of botany wikipedia , lookup

History of herbalism wikipedia , lookup

Flower wikipedia , lookup

Botany wikipedia , lookup

Plant physiology wikipedia , lookup

Historia Plantarum (Theophrastus) wikipedia , lookup

Plant ecology wikipedia , lookup

Fern wikipedia , lookup

Ornamental bulbous plant wikipedia , lookup

Plant morphology wikipedia , lookup

Pollination wikipedia , lookup

Evolutionary history of plants wikipedia , lookup

Perovskia atriplicifolia wikipedia , lookup

Plant evolutionary developmental biology wikipedia , lookup

Plant reproduction wikipedia , lookup

Flowering plant wikipedia , lookup

Glossary of plant morphology wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
The Land Plants
Chapter 12
Impacts, Issues
Beginnings and Endings
Don’t worry
about dates
Roots, Stems, and Leaves
 Life on land favored water conserving features
• Cuticle: Waxy layer that restricts evaporation
• Stomata: Openings across the cuticle
From Haploid to Diploid Dominance
• Gametophyte: Haploid stage that forms
gametes by mitosis
• Sporophyte: Diploid stage that forms spores by
meiosis; a sporangium helps protect and
disperse spores
mitosis
multicelled
sporophyte
(2n)
zygote
(2n)
fertilization
DIPLOID
meiosis
HAPLOID
gametes
(n)
mitosis
multicelled
gametophyte
(n)
spores
(n)
mitosis
Fig. 23-5a, p. 372
zygote is only
diploid phase
green algae
bryophytes
ferns
gymnosperms
angiosperms
Fig. 23-5b, p. 372
Bryophytes
The Bryophytes
Importance of Mosses
Seedless
Vascular PlantsEX: Ferns
Vascular Tissues
Ferns – No Seeds, Much Diversity
 Ferns
• The most diverse seedless vascular plants
• Spores are dispersed from clusters of sporangia
(sori) on lower surfaces of frond leaves
• Many live as epiphytes attached to another plant
spores
Fern Diversity
Human Use of Seed Plants
 Humans depend heavily on :
•
•
•
•
Food crops
Lumber and wood product
Drugs and medicines
Fabrics and dyes
Two Lineages of
Seed-Bearing Vascular Plants
 Gymnosperms
• Cycads, conifers, ginkgos, and gnetophytes
 Angiosperms (flowering plants)
• Most modern plants
• Seeds form inside floral tissue that later develops
into a fruit
Vascular PlantsGymnosperms
Some
Gymnosperms
Vascular PlantsAngiosperms
Keys to Angiosperm Success
 Short life cycles and rapid growth
 Specialized reproductive structures (flowers)
 Specialized pollination and dispersal structures
• Wind and animal pollinators
• Fruits that float or stick
• Seeds that survive animal digestive tracts
Specialized Angiosperm Structures
 A flower is a specialized reproductive shoot
 Seeds develop inside the ovaries (chambers
that enclose ovules) of flowers
 After fertilization, an ovary becomes a fruit
Pollination and Coevolution
 Pollinators
• Animals move pollen grains from male parts of
one flower to female parts of another
 Coevolution
• Over time, plants and their animal pollinators
jointly evolved; changes in one exerts selection
pressure on the other
Focus on
a Flowering Plant Life Cycle
 Flowering plants form eggs in ovaries and pollen
in stamens
 Flowering plants make fruits containing seeds
which supply their embryo sporophytes with
endosperm, a nutritive tissue
Life Cycle: Lilium
Summary: Plant Evolutionary Trends