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0. Seed-bearing Plants. 0. 0. Land Plants fall into two major groups. Non vascular Vascular. 0. Vascular Plants. Some are seedless Others produce seed. 0. Seed-bearing Vascular Plants fall into two major categories. Angiosperms. Gymnosperms. 0.
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0 Seed-bearingPlants
0 Land Plants fall into two major groups • Non vascular • Vascular
0 Vascular Plants • Some are seedless • Others produce seed
0 Seed-bearing Vascular Plants fall into two major categories Angiosperms Gymnosperms
0 Seed-bearing Vascular Plants fall into two major categories • Gymnosperm – seeds naked on surface of sporophyll • Angiosperm – seeds enclosed in a ripened ovary
0 Seed-bearing plants also produce pollen
0 Living Gymnosperms Cycads Conifers Ginkgoes Gnetophytes
0 Cycads Appeared on Earth 250 MYA • Reached their greatest abundance and diversity during the Jurassic • Declined sharply during the Cretaceous radiation of the angiosperms.
0 Mexican Cycads Dioon Ceratozamia
0 Australian Cycads Macrozamia Macrozamia
0 African Cycads Encephalartos Stangeria
0 Only Cycad Native to the US Zamia pumila
0 Cycads – Vegetative Characteristics Encephalartos in Africa
0 Cycad Stems • Columnar • Little branching • Not very woody
Produced in crowns at tip of stem Pinnately compound 0 Cycad Leaves
0 Certain roots in Cycads grow toward the soil surface Corraloid Roots
0 A Closer Look at Coralloid Roots • Grow upward near soil surface • Branch to form masses • Root cortex inhabited by Cyanobacteria(carry out nitrogen fixation)
0 Cycads – Reproductive Structures
Cycads produce pollen and seeds in cones • Cones develop at apex of stem
0 All Cycads are Dioecious • Individual plants produce either pollen cones or seed cones Pollen Cone Seed Cone Cycas revoluta
0 Many Cycads are Pollinated by Insects • Only a few cycad species studied • Weevils and oldest known bee genus (Trigona) • Usually pollinators mate and lay eggs within female cone • All cones except Stangeria produce heat. Thought to volatilize pollinator attractants • Hence insect pollination may predate flowering plants Trigona weevils
The Gnetophytes Ephedra Gnetum Welwitschia
0 Ephedra is a desert shrub
Ephedra is distributed in arid regions of the world 50 species 39 species monotypic
Ephedra contains Ephedrine http://www.anephedraattorneyforyou.com/
Gnetum occurs in the tropics 50 species 39 species monotypic
Welwitschia is a bizarre plant of an extremely arid environment
Welwitschia occurs only in the Namib Desert in South-West Africa 50 species 39 species monotypic
Welwitschia leaves grow from the base – leaves fray as they grow
Today represented by a single species Once occurred in North American Forests Presently occurs naturally only in China 0 Ginkgo was a common forest tree in the geological past
“Natural” trees may actually be plants cultivated at ancient Monasteries 0 Present Distribution of Ginkgo biloba
0 Ginkgo – Vegetative Characteristics
Extensive branching Very woody 0 Ginkgo Stems
0 Ginkgo Stems long shoot spur shoot
0 Ginkgo Stems spur shoot long shoot
Fan shaped Dichotomous branching veins 0 Ginkgo Leaves
Individual plants produce either pollen “cones” or seed “cones” Produced on spur shoots 0 All Ginkgo trees are Dioecious C Pollen “Cone” Seed “Cone”