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Download Lab 9: Adaptations for Survival in Terrestrial Environments
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Biology 1001 FALL 2004 WEEK 10 LABORATORY Adaptations for Survival in Terrestrial Environments In earlier laboratories, you studied certain cellular features that allowed the movement onto land, including root hairs to absorb water and nutrients, tracheids and vessels to carry them, and epidermal cells, including guard cells, to restrict water loss. You also studied features of angiosperm reproduction that have evolved to allow greater reproductive success on land. These include the ovule and seeds, whereby the eggs and sperm and resultant zygote and embryo are retained on the mother plant, the carpel and fruit for protecting the developing ovules and seeds from desiccation and predation, and the pollen grain and pollen tube, for delivering the sperm to the egg. Angiosperms have become adapted to a wide variety of terrestrial and shallow aquatic environments by modifying the basic body plan of root and shoot (with stem and leaves) and the type and distribution of specific cells. Just as plants have evolved mechanisms for survival on land, animals have adapted in several ways to a terrestrial environment. These adaptations include modifications to the general body plan that include the following: (l) an outer impervious "skin" to prevent desiccation; (2) mechanisms to conserve body water by excretion of concentrated wastes; and (3) reproductive changes that provide for internal fertilization and protection of embryonic development. This last feature results in the amniotic egg, which we will study today. In this laboratory, you will study changes in the plant vegetative body and the vertebrate egg that allow survival in terrestrial environments. By comparing the fish embryo with that found in the amniotic eggs of chicks and pigs, you will have a chance to compare and contrast embryonic development in three major groups of animals. * * * I. Plant Kingdom: Adaptations in leaves for reducing water loss II. Animal Kingdom: Adaptations for terrestrial reproduction Appendix: Derivatives of the primary germ layers =========================================== Tobin and Dusheck, 3rd edition: I. pp.637-640; II. pp. 503-510, 860-867 Lab 10-1 I. EVOLUTION IN PLANTS: ADAPTATIONS IN LEAVES FOR MOISTURE LEVEL Depending on available moisture in their specific habitat, plants may be described as hydrophytes, mesophytes, or xerophytes. These are only general ecological groupings since there is no hard and fast division between them. Many species have a wide range of moisture tolerance. Plants have adapted to extremes in moisture level by altering their vegetative structures. All parts of the plant may be affected, leaves, stems and roots. Some parts may even be lost or highly modified. For example, in many cacti, the leaves only grow as spines to protect against being eaten and serve no photosynthetic function. In this section, we will study changes in leaf structure that are adaptive for different habitats. A. HYDROPHYTES Hydrophytes grow as free-floating or completely submerged fresh water plants. Their leaf characteristics may include: 1. a cuticle only on the upper epidermis in floating leaves and absent in submerged leaves 2. thin and ribbon-like leaf shape 3. a well-developed aeration system including enlarged intercellular air chambers throughout the plant 4. stomata only on the upper epidermis in plants with floating leaves and lacking in submerged leaves. B. MESOPHYTES Mesophytes are plants that have adapted to an environment of moderate moisture. This moisture is typical of the meadows and forests of temperate climates. Since most vascular plants are mesophytes, their structure and adaptations are already familiar to us. Their leaf characteristics include: 1. a thin cuticle covering the epidermis 2. an epidermis that is usually a single cell layer thick 3. stomata often present on both sides of the leaf in vertically held leaves (often only on the lower side of a horizontally held leaf) 4. a thin leaf due to a moderate amount of mesophyll Lab 10-2 C. XEROPHYTES Xerophytes are plants that survive where there is a limited water supply. They are characteristic of desert or semi-desert regions. Succulents, such as cacti, are generally regarded as highly specialized xerophytes. Non-succulent xerophytes are mostly grasses and woody taxa such as the evergreens. Their characteristics include: 1. a thick cuticle and thick epidermal cell walls 2. sunken stomata with an increased mesophyll layer containing large water storage cells 3. thick coats of epidermal hairs on either or both leaf surfaces 4. small leathery leaves You will be given cross sections of leaves from each type. Record your observations of morphological features in relation to environmental adaptations in Table 10-1. In the laboratory you will find examples of these three plant groups. Examine them carefully, paying particular attention the different types of hydrophytes and xerophytes. Note how some have evolved different ways to grow so they can prosper in very wet or very dry habitats. From the examples on display, write two separate short essays on your data sheet comparing two hydrophytic and two xerophytic plants that differ in their adaptations to an aquatic or a dry habitat. Lab 10-3 TABLE 10-1. ENVIRONMENTAL ADAPTATIONS IN ANGIOSPERM LEAVES EXAMPLE _________________ _________________ _________________ ADAPTATION Hydrophyte Mesophyte Xerophyte Habitat Thickness of Cuticle Number and Location of Stomates Number of Air Spaces Amount of Mesophyll Number and Size of Leaves Lab 10-4 II. EVOLUTION IN ANIMALS: ADAPTATIONS IN EGGS FOR DRY ENVIRONMENTS The fertilized eggs or zygotes of all vertebrates undergo a rapid series of mitotic divisions referred to as cleavage. When you studied mitosis in laboratory 4, the whitefish blastula whose cells you were observing had undergone cleavage. By the third cleavage in fish (and amphibian) eggs, a distinct animal pole with small cells and a vegetal pole with larger cells can be seen. The animal pole divides more quickly than the vegetal, producing many small cells. At the blastula or hollow ball stage, a cavity called a blastocoel forms near the animal pole. The next stage of development is termed gastrulation. It is marked by the appearance of a groove, called the dorsal lip, below the equator of the blastula. Gastrulation in lower vertebrates takes place by inward migration of cells at the edge of the yolk. Cells move inward and pass through the dorsal lip, then spread through the interior, forming a second cell layer, the endoderm. As these movements proceed, a new cavity, the archenteron is formed, obliterating the blastocoel. By the end of gastrulation, three primary germ layers (ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm) have been formed. The mesoderm is formed from certain cells on the dorsal surface of the endoderm between the ectoderm and endoderm. In addition, a group of cells in the mesoderm form an anterior- posterior rod termed notochord. This rod induces formation of the nervous system from the ectoderm above it. The Appendix at the end of this lab gives the derivatives of the three primary germ layers. THE AMNIOTIC EGG The amniotic egg is distinguished by the presence of membranes that form in addition to the developing embryo (animal) proper. Typically the embryo will develop four membranes. The innermost, the amnion, functions in protection, the yolk sac for nutrition, the allantois for circulation, and the chorion (the outermost) for protection. The amniotic egg is found in reptiles, birds and mammals, but is not seen in the other vertebrate classes, the amphibians and fishes. In addition, a protective shell may form around the embryo as it develops, a porous leathery one in reptiles or a calcified shell in birds. Such shells afford protection while allowing for the exchange of gases. Placental mammals do not have shells and typically retain the embryo during development. Lab 10-5 PROCEDURE 1. Examine the embryos of the Japanese Medaka, a freshwater killifish. These fish embryos have developed beyond the gastrula stage. They have two-chambered hearts, blood cells, eyes, limb buds, and a large mass of yolk. Remember, in fish embryos, you will not see extra-embryonic membranes. Locate a single fish under the scanning lens of your microscope. 2. Examine prepared microscope slides of a developing chick at 72-96 hours of incubation. 3. Examine a gravid pig uterus showing mammalian development. Contrast the development of the three groups observed: fish, bird and mammal, with respect to the environment they live, number of offspring produced and the degree of protection offered by the parents to the developing zygote by completing Table 10-2. Lab 10-6 TABLE 10-2. DEVELOPMENTAL DIFFERENCES IN FISH, BIRDS AND MAMMALS Environment Number of Offspring Fish Birds Mammals Lab 10-7 Protection APPENDIX: DERIVATIVES OF PRIMARY GERM LAYERS ECTODERM MESODERM ENDODERM Adrenal medulla Anal canal Cutaneous glands Enamel of teeth Hair Hypophysis Lens Nails Nasal cavity Nervous system Oral glands Sense organs Sinuses Skin (epidermis only) Adrenal cortex Blood Blood vessels Body cavities Bone Cartilage Genital ducts Gonads Heart Joint cavities Kidneys Lymph tissue Marrow Muscles Notochard Skeletal tissue Teeth Ureter Vagina Auditory tube Bladder Larynx Lining of digestive tract Liver Lungs Parathyroids Pancreas Pharynx Root of tongue Thymus Thyroid Tonsils Trachea Urethra and associated glands Lab 10-8 BIOLOGY 1001 NAME___________________________________ DATA SHEET: LABORATORY 10--Adaptations for Survival in Terrestrial Environments I. Plant Kingdom: Adaptations in Leaves for Moisture Level Attach Table 10-1. From the examples on display, write two separate paragraphs comparing two hydrophytic and two xerophytic plants that differ in their adaptations to an aquatic or a dry habitat. a. Two hydrophytes and how they differ in their adaptations to an aquatic habitat: b. Two xerophytes and how they differ in their adaptations to a dry habitat: Lab 10-9 III. Animal Kingdom: Adaptations for Terrestrial Reproduction Attach Table 10-2. 1. Write a short essay summarizing the observations you made in Table 10-2 of egg development in fish, birds and mammals. If you wish, you can type your essay and attach it to your worksheets. Lab 10-10 2. Eggs of reptiles, birds and some mammals are laid on land, usually away from water and independent sources of food. How do the following adaptations allow for this type of early development? yolk amnion hard porous shell Lab 10-11