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Introduction to Plants Earliest Plants Algae Phytoplankton Lived in the sea Problems with life on land Problem Drying Out Making Food Reproduction Solution Waxy cuticle, stomata Formed leaves Develops spores & seeds Gravity & Support Bark (cork) & vessels Roots & vessels Getting water & nutrients Types of Plants Avascular – Bryophytes – nonseed plants Tracheophytes – vessels support for transport and Mosses & Liverworts: The Bryophytes First land plants AVASCULAR = very small 500 m.y.a. Must grow in moist environments Used for fuel (peat) Reproduction in Bryophytes Mosses have a protonema (liverworts do not) Sexual reproduction Antheridium – makes sperm – Archaegonium – makes eggs – Asexual reproduction Fragmentation – Formation of gemmae – Tracheophytes Vessels XYLEM = transports water & dissolved minerals from roots to leaves – PHLOEM = transports sugars from leaves to rest of plant – Spores or seeds for reproduction Club Mosses (Lycophyta) Leaves produce spores Strobilus = spore-bearing leaves – Prothallus = produces antheridia & archaegonia – Horsetails (Sphenophyta) Jointed stems Reproduction similar to club moss Ferns (Pterophyta) 400 m.y.a. Dominant form = sporophyte Structure Rhizome = underground stem – Fronds = leaves – Sori = store spores on underside of fronds – Gymnosperms Gymno = “naked” Sperm = “seed” First plants to produce seeds No flowers – No fruit – Why Make Seeds? Has own food supply Protective coat against harsh conditions Some are designed for travel to new areas Sporophytes produce: MICROSPORE Produce male gametophyte – Produce pollen – MEGASPORE Produce female gametophyte – Produce ovule (makes archaegonia with egg cells) – Gymnosperm Reproduction Pollen grains carried by wind Land on ovule, develop pollen tube Sperm move through tube to fertilize egg – – – Fertilized egg = ZYGOTE EMBRYO = young, diploid sporophyte plant COTYLEDONS = food storage for embryo, become first leaves Why Pollen Instead of Spores? Plant can live in very dry areas Fertilization does not require water Pollen has protective coat and food supply for sperm Why Ovules Instead of Archaegonia? Protective tissues prevent drying out Ovule holds archaegonia and protects eggs from elements Minor Gymnosperm Groups Cycadophyta (1st in Triassic Era) Ginkgophyta – – Only one species today Ginkgo biloba Most lived 200 m.y.a. Gnetophyta – only three genera – – – Gnetum – house plants Ephedra – weight loss, allergies & asthma Welwitschia Coniferophyta (largest group) Needle or scale-like leaves Bear seeds in woody cones Can live in very cold climates Most are evergreens Have wood – – Made of thick-walled vessels (TRACHEIDS) Tracheids are xylem Angiosperms – “flower” Sperm – “seed” Extremely diverse All have seeds enclosed in fruit Angio Cambium Any growth tissue in plants Types of cambium Vascular = produces xylem & phloem – Cork = produces cork (bark) – Overall Structures Roots Stems Leaves Flowers [121] Roots [124] Absorb water & nutrients Hold plant in place Root types: Fibrous – Tap – Prop – Aerial – Stems [123] Support leaves & flowers Sometimes photosynthesis Transport (contain xylem & phloem) Types herbaceous – green & flexible – Woody – stiff, have cork layer, usually brown – Leaves [119] Cuticle = protection Stomata = gas exchange, water loss (transpiration) Epidermis = protection, color Mesophyll – – Palisade = most PHOTOSYNTHESIS Spongy = Vascular bundles run through it Flowers [131] Pistils = female reproductive structures Stamens = male reproductive structures Complete flowers – – Have petals & sepals Have male and female parts Incomplete flowers = missing one or more parts Types of Angiosperms [115] Monocots Dicots mono = “one” di = “two” cot = “seed leaf” cot = “seed leaf” Approx. 60,000 Approx. 170,000 species species Flowers = multiples Flowers = multiples of 3 of 4 or 5 Leaf veins parallel Leaf veins branching Plant Tropisms Tropism = plant response to external stimulus – – Positive: plant moves toward stimulus Negative: plant moves away from stimulus Types: – – – Phototropism = light Gravitropism = gravity Thigmotropism = touch (nastic movement – direction does not matter) Plant Hormones Hormone – chemical produced in one part of an organism that has an effect on a different part of the organism Types – – – – Auxins – regulate growth Gibberellins – speeds growth, germination Abscisic acid – dormancy, close stomata, stress Ethylene – ripens fruit