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Gymnosperms & Angiosperms Lecture 9 Spring 2014 Vascular Plants: Seed Plants 1 What traits unite the seed plants? Fig. 29.7 Gymnosperm evolution 2 Gymnosperm evolution 3 Adaptations of seed bearing vascular plants • Heterospory – (present in a few seedless vascular plants) • • • • Reduced gametophytes Pollen Ovules Seeds Gymnosperm evolution: Heterospory Heterospory – Production of two different types of spores Ch 29, p.613 4 5 Gymnosperm evolution: Reduced gametophytes Fig. 30.2 6 Gymnosperm evolution: Reduced gametophytes Why is this beneficial? Fig. 30.2 Gymnosperm evolution: Pollen • Pollen grains – Microsporangium – Sporopollenin • Benefit of pollen grains? 7 Gymnosperm Lifecycle 8 Female Gametophyte produced inside ovule Fig. 30.6 Male Gametophyte (in Pollen) Gymnosperm Lifecycle: Ovules • Megasporangium • Megaspore • Integument = sporophyte tissue that envelopes and protects the megasporangium Fig. 30.3 9 10 Gymnosperm Lifecycle Fig. 30.6 Gymnosperm Lifecycle: Ovule Fertilized Ovule Fig. 30.3 11 Gymnosperm Lifecycle: Seeds Seed = embryo, food supply, and protective coating Benefits? Fig. 30.3 12 Gymnosperm Lifecycle: Seeds 13 Gymnosperms • Seeds not enclosed in a chamber gymnos = naked, sperm = seed Exposed seed Enclosed seed 14 Gymnosperm diversity 4 phyla • Phylum Coniferophyta • Phylum Ginkgophyta • Phylum Cycadophyta • Phylum Gnetophyta Phylum Coniferophyta • ~600 species • Pines, firs, larches, hemlocks, cedars, junipers, etc. Doug fir Juniper Pine Spruce Larch Port Orford cedar True cedar 15 Phylum Coniferophyta 16 Tallest trees Coastal redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) As tall as 90 m record 111.6 m (366 ft) tall Largest living organism - most biomass Giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron Oldest living organism giganteum) Bristlecone pine General Sherman (not pictured) (Pinus longaeva) 31 m(101.5 ft) in 4,600 years old still circumference living 2000-2500 years old Phylum Coniferophyta • Other adaptations – Many evergreen – Modified leaves • Often needlelike • Thick cuticle • Xylem = tracheids 17 18 Phylum Coniferophyta • Seed cones vs. pollen cones Seed cones (shore pine) Pollen cones (shore pine) Seed cone (fir tree) Phylum Coniferophyta Variations in seed cones Yew aril Juniper “berry” 19 Phylum Ginkgophyta 1 living species = Ginkgo biloba • Once widely distributed in Northern Hemisphere • Now exists only in cultivation • Flagellated sperm • Xylem = tracheids • Ginkgo Petrified Forest State Park 20 Phylum Cycadophyta ~ 130 species Cycads • Found in tropics and subtropics • Single unbranched trunks • Palm-like leaves • Flagellated sperm • Large cones – 3 ft long, 100 lbs • Xylem = tracheids 21 Phylum Gnetophyta ~ 75 species Welwitschia, Gnetum, Ephedra • Xylem = tracheids and vessels Welwitschia Gnetum Ephedra 22 Major events in plant evolution “Age of angiosperms” • 140-125 mya angiosperms appear • 65 mya major diversification 23 24 Angiosperm evolution ~ 250,000 species (90% of all plant species) Phylum Anthophyta • All flowering plants • Seeds enclosed in a chamber to mature Exposed seed Enclosed seed 25 Angiosperm evolution Adaptations of angiosperms • Flowers • Fruits Fig. 30.3 Pedicel 26 Angiosperm Lifecycle Male Gametophyte (in Pollen) Sporophyte Female Gametophyte (Embryo Sac) inside ovule Fig. 38.2 27 Angiosperm Lifecycle Fig. 38.3 Angiosperm Lifecycle Fig. 38.3 28 Angiosperm Lifecycle 29 Fig.30.10 Angiosperm Lifecycle: Double Fertilization Fig. 38.6 30 31 Angiosperm diversity Fig. 30.12 32 Angiosperm diversity Basal Angiosperms • Oldest angiosperm lineages ~ 100 species Angiosperm diversity • Magnoliids • ~ 8,000 species • Magnolias, laurels, tulip tree 33 34 Angiosperm diversity: Monocots Monocots • ~70,000 species 35 Angiosperm diversity: Eudicots Eudicots ~170,000 species