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Seed Plants. Evolution of the seed. Seeds represent an extreme form of heterospory Seed – mature ovule with embryo Megasporangium surrounded by integuments Events leading to evolution of seed Retention of megaspores in megasporangium (nucellus) Reduction in number of megaspore mother cells
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Evolution of the seed • Seeds represent an extreme form of heterospory • Seed – mature ovule with embryo • Megasporangium surrounded by integuments • Events leading to evolution of seed • Retention of megaspores in megasporangium (nucellus) • Reduction in number of megaspore mother cells • Only one megaspore survives • Reduced megagametophyte • Young sporophyte developes in megagametophyte which is in megasporangium • Integument envelopes megasporangium • Apex of megasporangium modified for pollen
Fossils • Oldest seeds from Devonian (365 mya) • Elkinsia • Archaeosperma
Paleozoic plants showing potential stages in the evolution of the seed
Progymnosperms • Seedless vascular plants – but likely progenitors of seed plants • Unlike other seedless vascular plants, progymnosperms had secondary vascular tissue (both xylem and phloem) and its structure is very like that of modern conifers • Some had a eustele and were heterosporous
Extinct Gymnosperms • Three groups of extinct gymnosperms • Seed ferns • Cordaitales • Bennettitales – may be ancestors of angiospems • Had a flower – like structure
Living Gymnosperms • Gymnosperm means “naked seed” – ovules & seeds exposed on surface of sporophylls • Most have polyembryony • Pollen grain – no water required! • In Conifers and Gnetophytes, sperm are non-motile • Pollen tube • In Ginkgo and cycads, transitional. Pollen tube is present, but sperm swim to egg
Coniferophyta • Xylem composed of tracheids • Non-motile sperm conveyed to egg by pollen tube • Leaves usually needle-like or scale-like • Fascicles in pines • Ovulate and microsporangiate cones on same plant; ovulate cone compound
Pine life cycle • In general, representative of gymnosperms, but has many peculiarities specific to pines • Highlights • Male gametophyte consists of 4 nuclei when dispersed, 2 sperm produced near pollination • Female produces several archaegonia, all of which may be fertilized (polyembryony #1) • Each archaegonium produces 4 embryos (polyembryony #2)
Some “living fossils” • Metasequoia – the dawn redwood • Wollemia pine – discovered in 1994 near Sydney, Australia
Cycadophyta • Xylem of tracheids • Produce flagellated motile sperm • Pollen tube not the main conveyer of sperm to egg • Ovulate and microsporangiate cones on separate plants • Leaves “palm-like” • Often contain toxins • Pollen may be carried from male to female by insects
Ginkgophyta • Xylem composed of tracheids • Motile sperm • Pollen tube not true conveyer of sperm to egg • Ovulate and microsporangia on separate plants • Ovules fleshy, stinky • Leaves fan shaped