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I. Anthophyte II. Angiosperms as a Separate Group Three unrooted trees showing the relationships among the Gnetales (blue), Conifers (Green), Ginkgo&Cycads(Coral) and Angiosperms Bowe et al. 2000. Phylogeny of seed plants based on all three genomic compartments: Extant gymnosperms are (fuschia). monophyletic and Gnetales' closest relatives are conifers PNAS 97: 4092-4097. Bootstrap Value = 92 Bootstrap Value = 83 Tree based on Phytochrome A and Phytochrome C. Note high bootstrap values for Amborella as basal (Matthews and Donoghue, 1999). Qiu et al.’s Tree (Nature, 25 November 1999) Based on 5 - genes 2-mitochondrial 2-plastid Magnoliids 1-nuclear Basal Angiosperms Bootstrap Value = 100 Illiciales Nymphaeales Amborella Barkman et al. 6-gene tree (PNAS 2000). 9-gene tree Barkman et al. 2000 Barkman et al. comparison of bootstrap values for Root A (Amborella and Nymphaeales) vs Root B (Amborella alone). Dark bars are noise-reduced; open are raw data. Amborella alone is in the basal clade Amborella and Nymphaeales share the basal clade Support Leans Towards a Shared Clade Textbook Version of the 4 Main Groups These 3 groups are unresolved 4 Main Angiosperm Groups Shown on Qiu’s Tree 4. Eudicots- the largest group 2. Magnoliids 3. Monocots 1. Basal Angiosperms + =Illiciales (Trimeniaceae, Amborella) Amborella is native to New Caledonia The ANITA group is mostly Australasian. Amborellales Amborellaceae Amborella Amborella branchevergreen, simple, alternate leaves with wavy edges www.ucsc.edu/currents/99-00/art/ amborella.flr.99-08-30.jpg Amborella Flowering Branch Amborella male flower-note “leaflike” stamens with a thick filament that are spirally arranged. Amborella is dioecious. www.ucsc.edu/currents/99-00/art/ amborella.flr.99-08-30.jpg Amborella Female Flowers Carpels The “stamen”like structures are staminodes. www.botany.org/newsite/publications/ajb/20 04coverStories.php Nymphaeales Nymphaeaceae Nymphaea Nymphaeaceae the “N” of the ANITA groups. Note: Radial symmetry, aquatic habit, palmate venation. We have two local species of Nymphaea Victoria amazonica, Amazon Water Lily, Nymphaeaceae Note many flower parts, radial symmetry http://www.mobot.org/manual.plantas/foto/Nymphaea.jpg Stamens with wide“leaf-like” filament. fused carpels, stigmas radiate from a circular disk Stamens Stigmas Ovary Note several locules (chambers) in the ovary Nymphaeales Nymphaeaceae Nuphar Nuphar the other main genus of the Nymphaeaceae found in the NE- note radial symmetry, blade like filaments, fused carpels. We have 1-3 local species of Nuphar. Rhizomes of Nuphar with leaf scars and adventitious roots. These would grow in the substrate under water. http://www.kv.geo.uu.se/pollen/N/Nuphar.html Nuphar lutea (Nymphaeaceae) pollen Monosulcate Pollen Nuphar Embryo Sac Recall that Nuphar female gametophytes have only one nucleus in their central cell and lack the antipodal cells entirely-making their embryo sac only 4-celled!! sy = synergids cc = central cell nucleus e = egg (behind synergids) Illiciales Illiciaceae Illicium phylogeny.arizona.edu Illiciaceae - “I” of ANITA http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/library/kohler/1761_021.jpg Illicium sp. Star Anise http://www.fleischlos.de/asset s/images/sternanis.gif Note: radial symmetry, woody, mostly unfused flower parts Illicium religiosum http://www3.justnet.ne.jp/~goostake/SIKIMIX.JPG Star anise developing fruit and mature fruits