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Only the Critter Paper and Lab Paper may be
***REVISED*** for a better grade (the Plagiarism
Paper and Bibliography are not revisable).
Your paper revision will NOT be accepted without
the graded original. If you want maximum credit
on the revision, you must make all corrections!
(whether points were taken off for them the first
time or not!)
It should be noted that **REVISE** means correct
marked mistakes, NOT rewrite the paper!
Source: Basic Formatting!
1
Evolution of Angiosperms
2
“The rapid development as far as
we can judge of all the higher
plants within recent geological
times is an abominable mystery.”
-- letter from C. Darwin to J. Hooker 2 July 1879
3
Putative Angiosperm Ancestors


Bennettiales?
Flowerlike, bisexual strobili

Separate ovulate and pollen-bearing sporophylls
4
Putative Angiosperm Ancestors


Conflicting hypotheses
Remains an “abominable mystery”
5
Unique characteristics of
Angiosperms







Flowers
Seeds enclosed in carpel
Double fertilization  endosperm
Much reduced microgametophyte
Reduced megagametophyte (7 cells; 8 nuclei)
Stamens with paired pollen sacs
Sieve-tube elements & companion cells
6
Earliest Angiosperm Fossils


Pollen grains from 135 mya
Whole plant – Archaefructus
~ 125 mya
 Semi-aquatic



Middle Cretaceous – many
lineages present
End Cretaceous – angiosperms
dominant
7
Phylogenetic Relationships

Monocots and Eudicots – 97% of angiosperms

Monocots -- monophyletic
o

Eudicots – monophyletic
o

Synapomorphy – single cotyledon
Synapomorphy – triaperturate pollen
Remainder – multiple different evolutionary lines

Some arose before monocot/dicot split
o

Monoaperturate pollen
Magnoliids
8
Major Angiosperm Groups


Basal Angiosperms
Mesangiosperms
Magnoliids
 Monocots
 Basal Eudicots
 Eudicots

o
o
Rosids
Asterids
9
Groups of Angiosperms
10
Basal Angiosperms

ANITA grade
Amborella (shrub from New Caledonia)
 Nymphaeales (water lilies and some other aquatic
plants)
 Austrobaileyales (woody aromatic plants including
star anise).



ANITA stands for the genera Amborella,
Nymphaea, Illicium, Trimenia and Austrobaileya.
Sister to all other angiosperms
11
Amborella trichopoda





Dioecious
Undifferentiated
stamens
Drupes
No vessels
Embryo sac – 8
celled and 9
nucleate
12
The Rest of ANITA


Nymphales – water lilies
Austrobaileya scandens
Plantsystematics.org
13
Magnoliids




Numerous, spirally arranged floral parts
Magnoliales (Magnolia), Laurales (Calycanthus),
Piperales (Piper and Aristolochia), Canellales
Many Australasian
Essential Oils – nutmeg, pepper & bay leaves
14
Monocots


Monoaperturate pollen
3-merous floral parts
15
Eudicots


Tricolpate pollen
4- and 5-merous floral parts
16
Highly
Simplified
Angiosperm
Phylogeny
17
Major Groups
of
Angiosperms

Rosids
2 integuments
 Nucellus with 2 layers
of cells


Asterids
Single ingegument
 Nucellus with 1 layer of
cells

18
Earliest Angiosperms





Flowers lacking a perianth
125 mya
Leefructus
Archarfructus
Resemble
Amborella
not Magnolia
19
Evolution of the Flower

Perianth – no distinct sepals and petals
Some petals derived from sepals
 Sepals derived from leaves


Other petals apparently derives from stamens

Sepals – same number vascular strands as leaves
Stamens – 1 vascular strand
Petals – 1 vascular strand


20
Evolution of the Flower

Stamens – diverse structure and function
Woody magnoliids – broad, colored and scented
 High degree of differentiation

21
Evolution of the Flower

Unspecialized carpels



Extinct angiosperms – leaflike carpels
Most extant angiosperms – differentiated carpels
Variation in placentation
22
Major Evolutionary Trends





Different pollination vectors
Bisexual/ unisexual flowers
Differentiated perianth
Specialized pollinators develop
Fruit dispersal vectors
23
Generalized Evolutionary Trends
1. Flowers with indefinite merosity  definite
merosity
2. Floral axis shortened; floral parts often fused
3. Ovary inferior; differentiated perianth
4. Actinomorphic symmetry  zygomorphic
24
Floral Diversity
25
Specialized Families



Asteraceae and Orchidaceae – 2 largest families
Among the most specialized
One monocot – one eudicot
26
Asteraceae


Disk Flowers & Ray Flowers
Any combination thereof!
27
Orchidaceae


Highly specialized
flowers
Often intricate
pollinator relationships
28
Pollinators

Primative -- Wind
Indistinct & ineffective
 Flowers much reduced
 Copious amounts of pollen

29
Animals Agents of Floral Evolution

Plants can’t move around (DuH!) – depend on
“animals”
Co-evolution
 Perfect flowers – each visit more efficient!

30
Beetle Pollinated




Flowers open
Dull colored
Strong (usually) fruity odor
Floral parts thick
31
Fly pollinated



Carrion (or fruity) smell
Reddish to purple-brown
No nectar guides
32
Bee pollinated




Flowers open
Colored but not red
Sweet odor
Nectar guides
33
Bee Pollination: milkweed leg trap
Pollen sacs [pollinium]
Butterfly Pollinated





Flowers produce nectar
Various colors – reds
Sweet odor
Nectar guides
Often landing platforms
35
Nocturnal Moth Pollination




Open at night
Usually white (or light)
Strong/ sweet odor
Lots of nectar
37
Deception Pollination

False food reward
Sweet smell
 Nectar
 Mimic food-rewarding flowers


Sexual deception
Pseudo-copulation
 Prominent in orchids

38
Bat pollinated




Flowers open at night
White
Strongly scented
Lots of pollen
39
Bird Pollinated




Copious, thin nectar
Little odor
Colorful – often red
Tubular
40
Important Pigments

Small number of pigments
Caretonoids
 Flavinoids -- Block UV

o
Anthocyanins
o
o
o
o
Flavonols
o

Water soluble
pH determines color
Colors can change post pollination
Colorless – white/ivory pigments
Betalains
o
Only in Caryophyllids
41
Marsh Marigold


Outer yellow – UV absorbing carotenoids
Inner yellow – UV reflective flavinoid calchone
42
Fruits



Ripe ovary and associated structures
Fruit dispersal fundamental aspect of radiation
Parthenocarpic -- without fertilization and seed
development (e.g., banana, pineapple, citrus …)
43
Fruit Types

Simple Fruit


Aggregate Fruit


Individual carpels in a single flower
Multiple Fruit


One of more fused carpels from single flower
Derived from an inflorescence (e.g., many flowers)
Accessory Fruit

Tissue not from ovary
44
Simple Fruits


Fleshy or Dry at maturity
Fleshy
Berries – 1 –many seeds; all parts fleshy
 Drupes – 1 seeded; fleshy mesocarp; stony endocarp
 Pomes – compound inferior ovary – accessory fruit


Dry

Dehiscent – multiple seeds
o

Legume, silique, follicle, capsule
Indehiscent – only one seed
o
Achene, samara, cypsels
45
Fruit Dispersal

Wind
Dandelions – cypselas
 Maples – schizocarp


Water


Coconut
Animals
Ingestion
 Adhering


Self-dispersal
46
Biochemical Evolution

Secondary Metabolites
Alkaloids – morphine, cocaine, caffeine, nicotine
 Terpenoids – taxol, rubber, cardiac glycosides, isoprene
 Phenolics – flavonoids, tannins, lignins, catechols,
salicylic acid
 Quinones – coqnzyme Q
 Raphids – Calcium oxalate

47
Secondary Metabolites

Protect against herbivory
Reduce palatability
 Total avoidance


Mustards – cabbage, horseradish, mustard
Avoided by most herbivorous insects
 Attractants for others (e.g., cabbage butterfly)


Insects that do feed often brightly colored

They are also protected from predation
48
49
50
51
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