* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download PLANT DIVERSITY EVOLUTION OF LAND PLANTS
Photosynthesis wikipedia , lookup
Gartons Agricultural Plant Breeders wikipedia , lookup
Plant secondary metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Plant defense against herbivory wikipedia , lookup
Plant breeding wikipedia , lookup
Plant nutrition wikipedia , lookup
History of herbalism wikipedia , lookup
History of botany wikipedia , lookup
Pollination wikipedia , lookup
Plant morphology wikipedia , lookup
Ornamental bulbous plant wikipedia , lookup
Plant physiology wikipedia , lookup
Historia Plantarum (Theophrastus) wikipedia , lookup
Plant ecology wikipedia , lookup
Plant evolutionary developmental biology wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary history of plants wikipedia , lookup
Plant use of endophytic fungi in defense wikipedia , lookup
Sustainable landscaping wikipedia , lookup
Flowering plant wikipedia , lookup
10/18/2015 PLANT DIVERSITY 1 EVOLUTION OF LAND PLANTS KINGDOM: Plantae Spores Leaf Ancestral green algae • Flagellated sperm for reproduction • Plenty of water • Nutrients and CO2 diffuse into tissues Stem Roots • Flagellated sperm Holdfast • • • • Mosses (470mya) Non vascular plants Need moisture to reproduce Can’t lose water Nutrients in soil CO2 in air Gravity!!! Vascular plants • Stomata • Roots and stems connected by vascular system • Lignin to hold plant upright Ferns (425mya) 2 1 10/18/2015 THE PLANT LIFE CYCLE Plants have a life cycle called: alternation of generations HAPLOID ADULT (male or female) Haploid (n) Gametophyte plant (n) Sperm (n) Egg (n) Spores (n) DIPLOID Meiosis ADULT with sporangia Diploid (2n) Fertilization DIPLOID ZYGOTE DIPLOID JUVENILE Sporophyte plant (2n) 3 THE PLANT LIFE CYCLE The life cycle of a fern (vascular land plant) A Fern Life Cycle Key Gametophyte plant (n) Haploid (n) Diploid (2n) Male gametangium Sperm Spores Female gametangium Egg Sporangia Meiosis Mature sporophyte Fertilization New sporophyte growing from the gametophyte Zygote 4 2 10/18/2015 MOSSES PHYLUM: Bryophyta • Non‐vascular land plants (no, xylem, phloem, lignin) • No true roots or leaves • Form dense mats of many individuals (no lignin to stand up!) • Live in moist environments • Flagellated sperm 5 FERNS PHYLA: Monilophyta and Lycophyta • Vascular seedless land plants (xylem, phloem, lignin) • Have true roots and leaves • Spores can disperse in air but fertilization must happen in water • Flagellated sperm • Common in tropical and temperate forests 6 3 10/18/2015 THE CARBONIFEROUS PERIOD • Ferns were giant and very abundant. • They contributed to the increase in oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere and fossil fuels that we now use for energy. 7 VASCULAR PLANTS WITH SEEDS Evolved 360mya; account for 90% of plants today ADAPTATIONS OF VASCULAR PLANTS W/SEEDS • Pollen grains carry spores through the air (haploid) • Pollination – male pollen grain lands on female reproductive part • Fertilization – after pollination, sperm fertilizes egg(s) to create diploid zygote(s) • A protective seed forms around the zygote(s) with food inside • Seed gets carried off into the world 8 4 10/18/2015 GYMNOSPERMS (Vascular seed plants) Many phyla; mostly cone‐bearing trees, ginko trees, cycads • Sporangia found in male and female cones • Pollen released in the air • Fruitless; Slow growing; Long lived; Fire factoid (conifers) Female Sporangia Longitudinal section of female cone (holds ovules) Male Sporangia Longitudinal section of male cone (holds pollen) 9 GIANT SEQUOIA TREES Example of a Gymnosperm 10 5 10/18/2015 ANGIOSPERMS(Vascular seed plants) Many phyla; Flowering plants, grasses and fruits • Male and female sporangia all located in the flower • Produce fruit (see figure 17.7) • Pollen travels in air or by animal carriers Stigma Style Ovary Carpel (female parts) Anther Stamen Filament (male parts) Petal Sepal FRUIT: The ripened ovary of a flower Ovule Receptacle 11 ANGIOSPERM POLLINATION Invest energy into making structures to maximize pollination Lots of stamens for wind pollination Vibrant colors or scents can attract specific animals Birds – red/orange Beetles – sweet scents Nectar to attract bees & stamens that rub on bees 12 6 10/18/2015 ANGIOSPERMS PRODUCE “FRUIT” Fruits aid in dispersal of angiosperms • • • • Dandelion seeds: air seed dispersal Cocklebur fruits: seeds dispersed by attaching to animal fur Edible fruits: seeds dispersed and given nutrients by animal poop! Germination: The growth of a seed into a diploid sporophyte plant Fruit Seed dispersal 13 ANGIOSPERM CROPS Wheat, corn, rice and spices are all dried angiosperm fruits • Evolution has created a variety of human food sources • Deforestation and agriculture has altered natural habitats • Need ways to farm without deforestation ‐ GMOs can tolerate, insects, heat, drought ‐ Wild plants can be found that naturally tolerate heat and drought (African grains) 14 7 10/18/2015 EVOLUTION OF LAND PLANTS You should know the order of evolution of mosses, ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms and the characteristics of each. Mosses 1 Land plants Origin of land plants (about 470 mya) Nonvascular plants (bryophytes) Liverworts Ancestral green alga Hornworts 500 450 400 350 300 Seed plants Gymnosperms Origin of seed plants 3 (about 360 mya) Vascular plants Monilophytes (ferns, horsetails, whisk ferns) Seedless vascular plants 2 Lycophytes (club mosses, spike mosses, quillworts) Origin of vascular plants (about 425 mya) Angiosperms 0 Millions of years ago (mya) 15 FUNGAL DIVERSITY 16 8 10/18/2015 FUNGI Green algae Other green algae Brown algae Land plants Protists Protists Ancestral eukaryote • Fungi are more closely related to animals than they are plants! Red algae Protists Evolved from a heterotrophic protist More protists Fungi Key All unicellular Both unicellular and multicellular All multicellular Yep. Protists Animals 17 KINGDOM: FUNGI Heterotrophs that acquire their nutrients by absorption. Hyphae (feeding structures) • Have cell walls made of chitin • Decomposers symbionts and parasites • Asexual reproduction (molds!) • Sexual reproduction (heterokaryotic stage) Reproductive structure Spore-producing structures (tips of hyphae) Mycelium: a mass of hyphae 18 9 10/18/2015 FUNGAL DECOMPOSERS Some fungi break recycle dead material into nutrients • Important ecosystem function • Can break down toxins and pollutants • Reproductive structures of mushrooms on a dead log • So… we eat reproductive parts of fungi………. Mmmm…… 19 FUNGAL PARASITES 30% of fungi parasitize protists, plants and animals • • • • • White‐nose syndrome in bats Andes Mountains frog die offs Human infections Dutch elm disease in 1926 Human food crops 20 10 10/18/2015 FUNGAL SYMBIONTS Lichens are associations of green algae or cyanobacteria with fungi • Fungus gets food • Benefit for algae? • Lichens can tolerate harsh environments (temp, moisture, soil) • Sensitive to air quality • Some lichens are 1000s of years old! Algal cell Fungal hyphae Reindeer moss in the arctic tundra Symbiosis: a relationship between two species living closely 21 FUNGAL SYMBIONTS Fungal mycorrhizae deliver nutrients to plants in exchange for food • Fungi thread into root and form hair‐like projections into the soil • Occurs in 80% of all plants; important in agriculture • May have helped ancient plants to colonize land (present in mosses, fossil evidence) 22 11 10/18/2015 Green algae Other green algae Brown algae Land plants Protists Protists Ancestral eukaryote Protists Red algae Key All unicellular Both unicellular and multicellular All multicellular More protists Fungi Yep. Protists Animals 23 ANIMAL DIVERSITY 24 12 10/18/2015 ANIMAL EVOLUTION The first animals likely evolved from a heterotrophic protist 1 bya • Evolved from soft to hard bodied organisms • First animal fossil 575 mya • Cambrian explosion 25 KINGDOM: Animalia Heterotrophs that acquire their nutrients by ingestion • • • • Lack cell walls (have collagen for support) Have specialized cells Diploid organisms that reproduce sexually Characterized by body plan 26 13 10/18/2015 ANIMAL BODY PLANS Groups of animals can be distinguished by their body plans • Radial animals are often sedentary (sessile) or drift passively • Bilateral animals are often mobile Bilateral Symmetry (Lobster) Radial Symmetry (Anemone) Posterior Dorsal Anterior Ventral 27 KINGDOM: Animalia No true tissues Sponges Radial symmetry Lophotrochozoans Flatworms Invertebrates Molluscs Annelids Nematodes Arthropods Deuterostomes Ecdysozoans Bilateral symmetry Cnidarians Bilaterians True tissues Eumetazoans Ancestral colonial protist Echinoderms Chordates 28 14