970 likes | 1.8k Views
Plant Evolution . Plants. Origins over 700 MYA 10 Divisions 4 Basic lifecycles Green algae that evolved onto land Evolved for more independence from water Then coevolved with pollinators, dispersal Major events: Living on land, spores Vascular tissues Seeds Flowers & Fruits.
E N D
Plants • Origins over 700 MYA • 10 Divisions • 4 Basic lifecycles • Green algae that evolved onto land • Evolved for more independence from water • Then coevolved with pollinators, dispersal • Major events: • Living on land, spores • Vascular tissues • Seeds • Flowers & Fruits
Plant Evolution • Green Algae gave rise to: • Mosses and liverworts, which gave rise to: • Ferns and related plant groups which gave rise to: • Conifers and related plant groups which gave rise to: • Angiosperms (flowering plants) which have form two groups: • Monocots • Eudicots
Segregation of Nutrients Minerals & H2O Light & CO2 Gravity Increase in Height Dessication Tissues Gametes Dispersal Regional specialization Root system Shoot system Lignin & cellulose Vascular tissue Specialized structures Cuticle Sporophyte dominance Dispersal mechanisms Seeds Pollen Symbiosis Colonization of Land Challenges… Problems Solutions
Characteristics of Plants • Growth by divisions in Apical Meristems • Alternation of generations • Dependent embryos • Spores • Cuticle • Transport tissues • Secondary compounds
Dependent Embryos • Placental Transfer cells feed embryo from parent tissue
Spores • Walls of resistant sporopollenin • Dry out and travel in the wind • Disperse then grow into gametophyte plants
Cuticle • Waxy covering layer prevents water loss and microbial attack • Stomata allow for gas exchange • Thicker layers in plants adapted to arid conditions
Charophyceans- Share ancestry with plant’s green algae ancestor CharaColeochaete Modern examples of charophyceans
Transport Tissues • Xylem carries water up from the roots to the leaves • True xylem has rigid cell walls with lignin • Cells are dead and hollow to function • Makes up wood • Phloem carries a sugary solution through out the plant • Soft living tissue
Vascular tissue • Allows plants to grow taller • More support by lignified xylem tracheids • Can pull water up from soil • Can tolerate soil that is drier on the surface • Form parts of true leaves and roots. • Only found in diploid tissue • Lead to sporophyte dominance?
Plant Groups • Division Bryophyta • Mosses, liverworts, & hornworts • Division Pterophyta • Ferns, horsetails • Division Coniferophyta • Conifers • Division Anthophyta • Flowering plants
General Bryophyte Characteristics • All haploid dominant • Motile sperm • Limited to moist environments • Small size • Lack vascular tissue • Lack stomata • No true plant tissues (leaves, roots, stems) • Have cuticle
Bryophyte lifecycle: moss • Polytrichum spp • Haploid dominant • Dioecious or monoecious gametophytes • Swimming sperm • No true leaves • No mesophyll, stomata, veins • No vascular tissues • Phyllidia • No true roots • Rhizoids • Dependent sporophyte • Disperse by spores • Filamentous protonema stage
Gametophyte Phyllidia = leaf like structures
Liverworts Hepatophyta • Marchantia sp • Thallus • Leaf-like body • Gametophyte • Asexual Reproduction • Gemmae cup • Sexual reproduction • Gametophore • Dioecious gametophytes • Antheridiophore- male • antheridia • Archegoniophore- female • archegonia
Liverwort Sporangia • On undersides- develop from archegonia
Vascular Tissue • Allows plants to grow taller • More support by lignified xylem tracheids • Can pull water up from soil • Can tolerate soil that is drier on the surface • Form parts of true leaves and roots. • Only found in diploid tissue • Lead to sporophyte dominance? • Gametophytes progressively smaller
Seedless Vascular Plants • 400 MYA • Seedless, Vascular plants (having Xylem & Phloem). Today represented by four divisions: • Division Pterophyta- Ferns • Division Lycophyta- Club Mosses • Division Sphenophyta- Horsetails (Equisetum) • Division Psilophyta- Whisk ferns
Pteridophytes • Diploid dominate • Vascular tissue • Seedless • Cuticle, stomata • Swimming sperm • True roots and leaves • Pterophyta- fronds (megaphylls), sori, annulus • Lycophyta- microphylls, strobilus w/ sporophylls, heterosporus- megasporangium w/ megaspores, microsporangia w/ microspores • Gametophyte still independent, short lived, • monoecious in fern (Pteridophyta) • dioecious in club “moss” (Lycophyta) • Spores disperse plant • Sporophyte perennial
Annulus Sporangium Indusium