Download The Temple of Flora

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
The Temple of Flora
Exploring the Biology of Plants
An obvious plant
and another
Characteristics of living things
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Growth
Nutrition
Excretion
Sensitivity
Reproduction
Movement
Respiration
Differences between plants and
animals
Plants
• Have cell walls made of complex
polysaccharides (eg cellulose)
• Make their own food by the process of
photosynthesis, requiring carbon dioxide,
water, light energy and the green pigment
chlorophyll (in structures known as
chloroplasts)
Kingdoms of organisms
•
•
•
•
•
•
In simpler times:
Plants
Animals
Bacteria
Viruses
Plants and Animals are eukaryotic (ie their cells
contain a nucleus); Bacteria are prokaryotic
(don’t have genetic material in a nucleus)
A historical viewpoint
• Thallophyta
– Algae
– Fungi
• Bryophyta
• Pteridophyta
• Spermatophyta
– Gymnosperms
– Angiosperms
More-recent changes
• Since then:
Fungi no longer considered to be plants
Single-celled organisms may be Protista
‘Algae’ are several groups of unrelated
simple plants (some people don’t
regard them as plants, but we’ll
ignore them)
One group of algae (blue-green) now
considered to be bacteria
Some modern plant groups
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Rhodophyta
Phaeophyta
Chlorophyta
Bacillariophyta
Bryophyta
Pteridophyta
Spermatophyta
(in other words, algae now seen as being several
different groups, and fungi have been removed)
Other ways of grouping plants
• Non-Flowering Plants (Cryptogams)/Flowering
Plants (Phanerogams)
• ‘Algae’, Bryophytes and Pteridophytes are Non-Flowering
Plants; Spermatophytes are Flowering Plants.
• Non-Vascular Plants/Vascular Plants
• ‘Algae’ and Bryophytes are Non-Vascular Plants;
• Pteridophytes and Spermatophytes are Vascular Plants.
Why are fungi not plants?
• Cell wall is not made of polysaccharide
• Do not have chloroplasts and do not
photosynthesise
Groups of fungi
• Mushrooms and toadstools
• Moulds eg Penicillium, Mucor
• Rusts
Fungi
What is missing so far?
• Lichens
• These are composed fungi with symbiotic algae
(rather like a fungus-alga-fungus sandwich)
• The fungus provides protection; the alga
photosynthesises and produces carbohydrates
which can be used by the fungus
• Classified as fungi
• Interestingly, the symbiotic alga is not known in
the free-living state
Lichens
Lichen structure
Algae
• Although once regarded as a single taxonomic
group, now realised that the different classes of
algae are a group of plants in their own right. So,
for example, Class Phaeophyceae now Division
Phaeophyta
• All simple aquatic plants reproducing by means of
spores of one sort or another
• Both marine and freshwater (including soil algae);
multicellular and unicellular; macroscopic and
microscopic
Algae
•
•
•
•
•
Rhodophyta (red algae)
Phaeophyta (brown algae)
Chlorophyta (green algae)
Bacillariophyta (diatoms)
Various other groups: note, classified according to
colour (ie pigments) although their anatomy is also
significantly different
• Blue-green algae (Cyanophyceae), being prokaryotic,
now considered to be bacteria (Cyanobacteria) even
though they have cell walls and photosynthesise
Rhodophyta: Delesseria sanguinea
Rhodophyta: Phycodrys rubens
Phaeophyta: Fucus vesiculosus
Phaeophyta: Laminaria digitata
Chlorophyta: Pediastrum
Chlorophyta: Volvox
Chlorophyta: Spirogyra
Chlorophyta: Ulva lactuca
Chlorophyta: Codium fragile
Bacillariophyta: Diatoms
Oscillatoria – an example of a
Cyanobacteria
Bryophyta
• Mosses (Musci)
• Liverworts (Hepaticae)
Cell Division
• Mitosis – the type of cell division which results in identical
copies of the original cell – found where organisms are
growing or repairing tissues. Also found in simple organisms
that reproduce by ‘binary fission’
• Meiosis – cell division which results in halving the
chromosome number during the production of gametes (‘sex
cells’). As a result, a diploid cell (with two of every
chromosome: 2n) produces haploid cells (with one of each
chromosome: n). Similarly tetraploid cells (4n) produce diploid
ones (2n) and so on.
More terminology
• Gametophyte – the haploid phase in a life
cycle. i.e. a stage which produces haploid
gametes/spores by mitosis.
• Sporophyte – the diploid phase in a life cycle
i.e. a stage which produces haploid
gametes/spores by meiosis.
Life cycles
• In both Bryophytes and Pteridophytes there are two stages in
the life cycle.
• The moss/liverwort ‘plant’ is haploid (the gametophyte) and
lives in damp conditions; the spore capsule is diploid (the
sporophyte) and requires dry conditions for the spores to be
dispersed.
• The fern ‘plant’ is diploid (the sporophyte) and requires moreor-less dry conditions; there is a second stage (the prothallus:
haploid, tiny, and totally different in appearance) and his
requires damp conditions.
Mosses
• Yet more terminology if you want it:
• Acrocarpous mosses form cushions;
Pleurocarpous mosses creep across the
substratum.
Mnium hornum
Mnium hornum
Tortula ruraliformis
Ptilium crista-castrensis
Hypnum cupressiforme
Sphagnum
Marchantia
Pteridophyta
• Psilopsida (Quillworts)
• Lycopsida (Club-mosses: no relation to
‘mosses’)
• Sphenopsida (Horsetails)
• Filicopsida (Ferns)
Psilotum: Quill-wort
Psilotum: Quill-wort
Huperzia selago: Club-moss
Diphasiastrum clavatum: Club-moss
Equisetum: Horsetail
Equisetum: Horsetail
Calamites: Fossil Horsetail
Botrychium lunaria: Moonwort
Dryopteris filix-mas: Male Fern
Dicksonia: Tree Fern
Gleichenia dicarpa
Spermatophyta
• Seed plants
• Gymnosperms (Conifers, cycads etc)
• Angiosperms (Flowering plants):
– Monocotyledons (have one seed leaf eg grasses,
orchids)
– Dicotyledons (have two seed leaves – majority of
flowering plants)