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Plant Diversity

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Title: Plant Diversity


1
Plant Diversity
  • Chapter 22

2
What is a Plant?
  • Plants are multicellular eukaryotes that have
    cell walls made of cellulose.
  • They develop from multicellular embryos and carry
    out photosynthesis using the green pigments
    chlorophyll a and b

3
The Plant Life Cycle
  • Plants have life cycles that are characterized by
    alternation of generations
  • In this life cycle, the haploid gametophyte phase
    alternates with the diploid sporophyte phase
  • A gametophyte is a haploid, or gamete-producing,
    phase of an organism
  • A sporophyte is a diploid, or spore-producing,
    phase of an organism

4
Alternation of Generations Life Cycle
5
What Plants Need to Survive
  • The lives of plants revolve around the need for
  • Sunlight
  • Water minerals
  • Gas exchange
  • Movement of water nutrients throughout the
    plant body

6
Early Plants
  • The first plants evolved from an organism much
    like the multicellular green algae living today
  • However, the evolution of plants favored species
    that were more resistant to the drying rays of
    the sun

7
Overview of the Plant Kingdom
  • The great majority of plants alive today are
    angiosperms (the flowering plants)

Cone-bearing plants760 species
Ferns andtheir relatives11,000 species
Floweringplants235,000 species
Mosses andtheir relatives15,600 species
8
The Nonvascular Plants - Bryophytes
  • Mosses and their relatives are generally called
    Bryophytes (nonvascular plants)
  • Groups of Bryophytes include
  • Mosses
  • Liverworts
  • Hornworts
  • THEY HAVE NO true ROOTS, STEMS, OR LEAVES
  • They have a life cycle that depends on water for
    reproduction
  • They lack vascular tissue and therefore must grow
    low to the ground

9
Mosses
  • The most common bryophytes are mosses
  • They grow abundantly in areas with water
  • They can tolerate cold climates well
  • They do not have true roots, stems, or leaves
    instead, they have rhizoids (long, thin cells)
    that anchor them to the ground

10
Liverworts
  • Liverworts are Bryophytes-gametes look like
    little green umbrellas (sexual repro.)
  • Liverworts can also reproduce asexually by means
    of gemmae (small cup-like spheres that contain
    haploid cells)

SEXUAL
ASEXUAL
11
Hornworts
  • Hornworts are generally found only in soil that
    is damp nearly year round
  • Their gametophytes look like those of liverworts

12
Evolution of Vascular Tissue
  • What happened to allow plants to grow taller than
    mosses?
  • Fossil evidence shows that these plants contained
    vascular tissue tissue that is specialized to
    conduct water and nutrients through the body of a
    plant

13
Vascular Tissue
  • The first vascular plants had a new type of cell
    that was specialized to conduct water
  • Xylem carries water upward from the roots to
    every part of a plant.
  • Phloem transports nutrient solutions and
    carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis.
  • Lignin is produced by plants that makes cell
    walls rigid.
  • Both forms of vascular tissue, xylem and phloem,
    can move fluids throughout the plant body against
    the force of gravity

14
Seedless Vascular Plants
  • Seedless vascular plants include
  • club mosses
  • horsetails
  • ferns
  • These plants HAVE true roots, leaves, and stems
  • ROOTS underground organs that absorb water
    minerals
  • LEAVES photosynthetic organs
  • STEMS supporting structures that connect roots
    and leaves

15
Club Mosses
  • These are small plants that live in moist
    woodlands and near streambeds and marshes
  • Lycopodium is the most common club moss today
    it looks like a mini pine tree

16
Horsetails
  • The only living genus of horsetails is Equisetum
  • Its leaves are arranged in distinctive whorls at
    joints along the stem

17
Ferns
  • Ferns are members of the phylum Pterophyta
  • They have creeping or underground stems called
    rhizomes and large leaves called fronds
  • They are most abundant in wet habitats

frond
rhizome
roots
18
Life Cycle of Ferns
19
Seed Plants
  • Over millions of years, plants with the ability
    to forms seeds became the most dominant group of
    photosynthetic organisms on land
  • Seed plants are divided into 2 groups
  • Gymnosperms bear seed directly on cones
  • Conifers
  • Cycads
  • Ginkgoes
  • Gnetophytes
  • Angiosperms flowering plants that bear their
    seeds within a layer of tissue that protects the
    seed
  • Grasses
  • Flowering trees and shrubs
  • All flowers

20
Reproduction Free From Water
  • Adaptations that allow seed plants to reproduce
    without water include
  • flowers or cones
  • the transfer of sperm by pollination
  • the protection of embryos in seeds

21
Cones Flowers
  • Cones are the seed-bearing structures of
    gymnosperms
  • Flowers are the seed-bearing structures of
    angiosperms

22
Pollen
  • In seed plants, the entire male gametophyte is
    contained in a tiny structure called a pollen
    grain
  • The pollen grain is carried to the female
    gametophyte by wind, insects, birds, small
    animals, or bats
  • The transfer of pollen from the male gametophyte
    to the female gametophyte is called pollination

23
Seeds
  • A seed is an embryo of a plant that is encased in
    a protective covering and surrounded by a food
    supply
  • An embryo is the early developmental stage of the
    sporophyte plant
  • The seed coat surrounds and protects the embryo
    from drying out
  • After fertilization, the zygote contained within
    a seed grows into a tiny plant the embryo

24
Seeds
25
Gymnosperms Cone Bearers
  • Gymnosperms include
  • Gnetophytes
  • Cycads
  • Ginkgoes
  • Conifers

26
Gnetophytes
  • Welwitschia, located in the southwestern Africa
    desert, is one of the most remarkable gnetophytes
  • 2 huge leathery leaves which grow continuously
    and spread across the ground

27
Cycads
  • Cycads are members of the phylum Cycadophyta
  • Palm-like plants that reproduce with large cones
  • Found in all tropical and subtropical zones
    around the world

28
Ginkgoes
  • Today, the phylum Ginkgophyta contains only one
    living species, Ginkgo biloba (the maiden-hair
    tree)
  • Cultivated and protected in China by monks
  • the male species of this tree is often planted in
    urban settings in the US, where their resistance
    to air pollution make them popular shade trees
  • The female tree smells like vomit

29
Conifers
  • Conifers are by far the most common gymnosperms
  • The phylum Coniferophyta includes
  • Pines
  • Spruces
  • Firs
  • Cedars
  • Sequoias
  • Redwoods
  • Yews

30
Conifers
  • Conifers thrive in a wide variety of habitats
  • Mountains, sandy soil, cool, moist areas
  • Leaves that are long and thin reduces surface
    area reduces H2O loss by evaporation
  • Leaves also have a thick, waxy layerreduces
    water loss
  • Most conifers are evergreens meaning they
    retain their leaves year round

31
Angiosperms Flowering Plants
  • Angiosperm-enclosed seed
  • Angiosperms-unique reproductive organs known as
    flowers which attract pollinators (more efficient
    than wind)
  • Flowers contain ovaries, which protects the
    seeds.
  • After pollination, the ovary develops into a
    fruit, which protects the seed and aids
    dispersal.

32
Diversity of Angiosperms
  • Angiosperms are an incredibly diverse group that
    includes
  • Monocots and dicots
  • Woody and herbaceous plants
  • Annuals, biennials, and perennials

33
Monocots and Dicots
  • Monocots and dicots are named for the number of
    seed leaves, or cotyledons, in the plant embryo
  • Monocots have one seed leaf and dicots have two
    seed leaves

34
Characteristics of Monocots Dicots
35
Woody Herbaceous Plants
  • Flowering plants are grouped by stem
    characteristics
  • Woody plants are made primarily of cells with
    thick walls that support the plant body
  • Trees
  • Shrubs
  • Vines
  • Herbaceous plants do not produce wood as they
    grow, instead they have smooth stems
  • Dandelions
  • Zinnias
  • petunias

36
Annuals, Bennials, Perennials
  • There are 3 categories of plant life spans
  • Annual flowering plants that complete a life
    cycle within one growing season
  • Marigolds, pansies, zinnias, cucumbers
  • Biennial flowering plants that complete their
    life cycle in 2 years
  • Primrose, parsley, celery
  • Perennial flowering plants that live for more
    than 2 years (every season)
  • Peonies, asparagus, grasses
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