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Liverworts and Mosses • 16,000 bryophytes species show some adaptations for life on land • They have root-like structures for anchoring called rhizoids • These structures can also bring water up but they have to rely on diffusion to distribute the water throughout the plant • Because of this most bryophytes are less than 2 cm. tall Enclosed Reproductive Structures • These structures represent adaptation to terrestrial life • they prevent the gametes from drying out • The archaegonia house the eggs while antheridia house the sperm • some species have separate male and female plants • Some plants have both parts • In all species, the sperm has to swim to the egg Liverwort archaegonia Sperm cells have to swim up the stalks, through a film of water to fertilize the eggs Tracheophytes • Vascular plants • Two types of adaptations allowed some plants to become taller • Structures that provide support • vessels that conduct water and nutrients Seedless Vascular Plants • These plants reached tree-like heights and dominated the landscape from 360 mya to 286 mya • Modern versions are the club mosses, ferns and horsetails • The ancient ancestors are coal today CLUB MOSS Lycopodium HORSETAILS Equisetum FERNS Lycopodium and Equisetum • There are only 15 species of horsetails • commonly called “scouring rushes” • they are abrasive due to deposits of silica in their outer layer of cells • club mosses are commonly called “ground pine” • all are only a few centimeters tall Ferns • There are 12000 species of ferns • In the tropics, there are “tree ferns” • Ferns are the only seedless plant with broad leaves • This gives them an advantage and may account for their relative success Seed Plants • Have dominated the land for the past 250 million years • this was made possible by the development of pollen and seeds • In seed plants both the female and male gametophytes are greatly reduced in size • the female gametophyte is a small group of cells that produce eggs • the pollen is the male gametophyte The Seed • It is analogous to the egg in birds and reptiles • The seed consists of an embryonic plant, a food supply for the embryo, and a protective coat • The embryo can lay dormant until the conditions are right for growth • Some seeds possess elaborate adaptations for dispersal Gymnosperms • Non-flowering seed plants • There are three divisions • coniferophyta • ginkgophyta • cycadophyta Conifers • There are 500 species of conifers • They include pines, firs, spruce, hemlocks and cypresses • Most abundant in cold latitudes and high elevations • Their advantages are retaining their leaves all year as to photosynthesize when other plants are dormant continued • And, their needle-like leaves have small surface area so evaporation is minimized • Third, they have a substance in their sap that acts like an anti-freeze. It also gives them the pine scent. Ginkgo • Were once widespread during the Jurassic period • Today, there is only one species, Ginkgo biloba • Ginkgos have separate male and female plants • they are very resistant to pollution and the males are used for landscaping Cycads • Kind of look like ferns but aren’t • There are about 160 species today • They live in the tropics and sub-tropical areas • Grow slowly and live for a loooooooong time • Some specimens are estimated to be 5000 years old • Seeds used to be food but they contain a neurotoxin so….not so much anymore Angiosperms • Flowering plants • Incredibly diverse with 352,000 species • They can be a few millimeters wide (duckweed) to 328 feet tall (eucalyptus tree) • Have been around for more than 100 million years Three Major Adaptations • Flowers • fruit • broad leaves • Broad leaves are appealing to herbivores so angiosperms have evolved lots of defense mechanisms • thorns, spikes, resins, toxins • Humans have used many of the poisons as medicine Two Types of Angiosperms Dicotyledons (dicots) Monocotyledons (monocots) Monocots • About 65,000 species • Includes grasses, grains, corn, irises, lilies, and palms • Have one cotyledon or “seed leaf” • Vascular bundles (xylem and phloem) scattered throughout stem • Xylem conducts water up from roots • Phloem conducts sugars from photosynthesis Dicots • About 170,000 species • Includes most trees, shrubs, and herbs • Have two cotyledons • Vascular bundles arranged in rings in stem