Title: Chapter 23: The great and mighty Angiosperms
1Chapter 23 The great and mighty Angiosperms!!!
- Flowers Take Over the World
2Angiosperms The most diverse group
- 235,000 species
- Dominant life forms on planet Earth
- From very small (e.g. Wolffia)
Wolffia flower
3Giant flowers
- To the very largestinking corpse lily
- AndRafflesia
Amorphophallus titanumthe Stinking corpse lilly
4Parts of the flower
- We covered 23.2 in labyou are responsible for
this
5What distinguishes angiosperms?
- Double Fertilization
- One sperm (1N) from male gametophyte (pollen
grain) unites with egg (1N) to form embryo (2N) - Another sperm (1N) unites with female gametophyte
tissue (2N) to make endosperm (3N) or food for
embryo - Double fertilization in some gymnosperms, but
doesnt make endosperm, just two babies (remember
Gnetum?)
6Other traits that distinguish angiosperms
- Ovules develop into seeds in a carpel (part or
parts of the ovarythink of the sections of an
orange) - These ovaries develop into fruits
7Angiosperms are divided into two groupsmaybe!
- Dicotyledones or dicots
- Monocotyledones or monocots
- What traits distinguish them?
- Lets draw a phylogeny!!
8Life Cycle of Angiosperms
- Note Im skipping 23.2 in lecture, but you are
responsible for that material (covered in lab)!!! - Lets start with pollen
- Anthers contain cells that undergo meiosis to
make microspores - Microspores make two cells a tube cell and a
generative cell - These two cells make up the pollen grain or
microgametophyte
9Angiosperm Life Cycle
10Pollination angiosperm sex as seen by the male
- The pollen grain is transported by wind, animals
or water to the stigma, the part of the pistil
that receives pollen - The pollen germinates by forming a pollen tube
from the tube cell - Two sperm are made from the generative cell
- These travel down the tube cell, which tunnels
through the stigma and style and eventually to
the ovary - More on pollination in chapter 24
11Fertilization sex seen through an angiosperm
womans eyes
- Ovaries contain ovules. This is what goes on in
the ovules - The megasporocyte makes megaspores (by what
process?), one of which becomes the
________________? - The megagametophyte (or embryo sac) has 7 cells
and 8 nuclei (usually)
12Now Mrs. Flower is ready to have sex with Mr.
Flower
- The pollen tube allows two sperm into the
nucellus opening or micropyle - One sperm fertilizes the egg the other sperm
fertilizes the 2-nucleated cell to make - a 3N endosperm (lunch)
- This is double fertilization
- Wrap the baby with a lunch in a paper bag (the
integuments or what becomes the seed coat) and
you get.
13A SEED!!
14Put the seed inside the mature ovary and you get.
15A FRUIT
16Seed development
- Monocots
- One cotyledon or seed leaf
- Lots of endosperm
- Endosperm is transferred to cotyledon
17Seed development (cont)
- Dicots
- Two cotyledons
- Can transfer food reserves of endosperm directly
to embryo OR via the cotyledons
18Monocot vs. Dicot Seeds
- One last thing about monocots
- They usually have protective sheaths around their
stems, called coleoptiles
19Germination requirements
- Usually must be warmabout room temp or above
- Must have water available to activate enzymes
(e.g. that break down starch in endosperm to
sugar) - Must have oxygen (water-logging is anaerobic)
20Germination linked to environment
- Some seeds can take waterlogging
- Many need fire e.g. serotinous cones
- Some can take the cold (germinate just above
freezing)
21Hypogeous vs. epigeous germination
- Hypogeous
- Below-ground germination
- Example peas
- Epigeous
- Cotyledons come out of the ground
- Example beans
22Chapter 24 stuff
- Pollination syndromes
- Traits that are coordinated between flowers and
pollinators
23Bee pollination
- Intelligent and social
- High constancy
- High energy requirements
- See in UV
- Can be complex
- Colors are usually blue, purple, yellow, white
(not red) - Nectar guides
24Bee pollination
25Bat pollination
- Night blooming
- Fragrant
- Very often white
- Lots of nectar
- Often pendulous
- High energy
- Nocturnal
- Color blind
- Excellent sense of smell
26Bats as pollinators
27Bird pollination
- No smell
- Lots of nectar
- Reds
- Tubular shaped often (hummingbirds and sunbirds)
- diurnal
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29Butterfly Pollination
- Butterflies need large landing platform
- Flowers are often tubular and long for butterfly
proboscis - Fragrantbutterflies can smell (with their feet!)
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