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Download General Plant Life Cycle
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Plant Life Cycles Plant Evolution • Descendants from green algae (~450mya) – Contain cellulose in cell walls – Contain chlorophyll – Starch stored • Land Plants Must Overcome – Drying out – Gas exchange – Nutrient transport system – Support Land adaptations • Cuticle: Waxy coating prevents water loss • Stomata: pores that open/close to permit gas exchange • Roots & Stems: support • Vascular system: tissue that transports nutrients – Nutrients & water go up plant – Sugars go down the plant General Plant Life Cycle • Alternation of generations • Gametophyte (haploid) – Haploid spores created by meiosis – Gametophyte grows from spore – Gametophyte has sperm & egg cells General Plant Life Cycle • Sporophyte (diploid) – Diploid zygote created from sperm & egg – Zygote grows into a mature sporophyte – Sporophyte creates haploid spores by meiosis • Gametophyte grows from spore (cycle restarts) Mosses • Nonvascular, seedless • Grow low to ground to retain moisture • Lack true leaves – Leaf-like structures only 1 cell thick • Rhizoids anchor into soil • Early inhabitant of new ecosystems (succession) • Gametophyte phase – Dominant stage – Carpet of moss growing near ground • Female gametophyte: produces egg • Male gametophyte : produces sperm – Sperm swims through water to fertilize egg (zygote created) • Sporophyte phase – Sporophyte stalk grows up from the zygote – Sporangia contain haploid spores – Haploid spores land • Gametophyte stage restarts Moss Life Cycle Ferns • Seedless, vascular plants – Vascular: allows taller growth • Rhizoids: underground stems draw nutrients • Fronds: leaves uncurl – sporangia on underside Fern Life Cycle • Sporophyte phase – Dominant stage – Sporangia produces haploid spores – Spores released into air • Gametophyte phase – Spores land & grows into prothallus • Female gametophyte: produces egg • Male gametophyte : produces sperm – Sperm swims to egg – Zygote begins sporophyte stage Conifers • Seed advantages – Don’t depend on water – Protects & nourishes embryo – Allow plants to grow in new locations • Conifers: woody cone houses seeds – Male cones: produce pollen – Female cones: produce egg • Pines, redwoods, spruce, cedar Conifer Life Cycle • Sporophyte phase – Cones grow on mature tree – Female cones: contains female gametophyte (megaspore) – Male cones: contains gametophyte (microspores) • Microspores released & stick to female cones • Pollen tube grows from pollen towards the egg • Sperm travels down pollen tube (zygote created) • Sporophyte stage restarts • Seeds released to grow into new sporophyte female male Flowers • Reproductive structure of flowering plants • Sepals – outer ring of leaves – protection • Petals – Inner ring of leaves – Brightly colored to attract pollinators • Open petals & sepals reveal male and female structures Flowers • Female Carpal – Inner most part – Ovary: within the base (female gametophyte) – Style: long stalk – Stigma: sticky tip, collects pollen • Male Stamen – Surrounds carpal – Filaments: long stalks – Anther: produces pollen (male gametophyte) A) Microspores (male gametophyte) produced within anthers B) Two events: 1. Microspores (male gametophyte) released into the air, wind, or transferred via animals 2. Microspores stick to stigma C) Pollen tube grows from the pollen…towards the ovary C) Continued: Two sperm cells from the microspore travel down the pollen tube D) Double fertilization: 1 sperm fuses w/ egg (zygote created) 1 sperm fuses w/ the embryo sac (endosperm created) E) Ovule wall hardens into a seed; Embryo develops F) Ovary grows a fleshy tissue (fruit) over the seed G) Seed germinates (starts to grow) Fruit Production • In the seed – Embryo – Endosperm (nourishes seed) • Surrounding ovary grows into a fruit • Fruit attracts animals to eat and spread the seeds Fruit seeds in fox droppings End of the Semester!