Title: The Plant Kingdom
1The Plant Kingdom
2- General information about Kingdom Plantae. . .
- They exhibit tremendous diversity in size,
habitat, and form - They evolved from green algae
- Green algae and plants both contain chlorophyll
a, b, carotenes, xanthophylls (for
photosynthesis) - Green algae and plants both store excess
carbohydrates as starch - They both contain cellulose as a major component
of their cell walls - They both share certain details of cell division
(formation of cell plates)
3- Plants are multicellular
- They are photosynthetic
- They contain a waxy cuticle to prevent
desiccation (an adaptation representing their
emergence from aquatic systems) - They obtain carbon from atmospheric carbon
dioxide - Openings (stomata) on surface tissues permit gas
exchange - They have multicellular sex organs (gametangia),
each with a sterile layer of cells surrounding
the gametes - Archegonium - female organ produces single egg
- Antheridium - male organ produces sperm
- The fertilized egg (zygote) develops into an
embryo within the female gametangium
4- The life cycle of plants. . .
- Plants have an alternation of generations -
spending part of their lives in the haploid stage
and part in the diploid - The gametophyte generation - haploid portion of
the life cycle gives rise to haploid gametes by
mitosis - The sporophyte generation - diploid portion of
the life cycle gives rise to spores following
meiosis
- The haploid gametophyte plant produces
antheridia and archegonia - Sperm produced in the antheridia get to the
archegonia and swim down its neck - One sperm fuses with the egg (fertilization),
resulting in a 2n zygote (first stage in the
sporophyte generation)
5- The zygote divides mitotically and forms the
embryo, which eventually matures into the
sporophyte plant - The sporophyte plant produces spore mother cells
- which are special cells that divide by meiosis,
forming haploid spores (first stage of the
gametophyte generation) - Spores grow by mitosis into mature gametophyte
plant - The cycle repeats
6mitosis
7- There are four major groups of plants. . .
- The nonvascular plants are most primitive
(Gametophyte dominant) - The other three groups have vascular tissues
xylem for conducting water and minerals and
phloem for food conduction (Sporophyte dominant) - The vascular, seedless plants include the Ferns
and others - Gymnosperms reproduce by seeds, often produced in
cones - Angiosperms reproduce by seeds enclosed within a
fruit
8Kingdom Plantae (representative
Divisions) I. Nonvascular
Plants (Gametophyte dominant) Division
Bryophyta (mosses) Division Hepatophyta
(liverworts) Division Anthocerophyta
(hornworts) II. Vascular Plants
(Sporophyte dominant) A. Seedless
Plants Division Pteridophyta (Pteridophytes) Cla
ss Polypodiopsida (ferns) Class Psilotopsida
(whisk ferns) Class Equisetopsida
(Horsetails) Division Lycophyta (Club
mosses) B. Seed Plants 1.
Gymnosperms naked seeds Division Pinophyta
(conifers) Division Cycadophyta (cycads) Division
Ginkgophyta (ginkgos) Division Gnetophyta
(gnetophytes) 2. Angiosperms (seeds
enclosed in a fruit) Division
Magnoliophyta Class Magnoliopsida
(dicots) Class Liliopsida (monocots)
9Division Bryophyta
- Mosses and other Bryophytes
10- General characteristics of nonvascular plants. .
. - Land plants that do not contain vascular tissues
are restricted in size (they are always small and
found in moist environments). - Division Bryophyta are the mosses
- Most live in dense colonies or beds
- They contain rhizoids - tiny rootlike structures
that anchor the plant to the soil - Each plant has an upright stem that bears
leaves - The leafy green plant in the gametophyte
11The moss gametophyte
- It is the dominant phase (haploid)
- Bears gametangia at the top of the plant
- Many have separate sexes others have antheridia
and archegonia on the same plant
12- Fertilization in Moss. . .
- Requires the presence of water
- Splashing raindrops may carry sperm to the
archegonia - Insects may transport a water droplet with sperm
to archegonia - The sperm swims down the neck of the archegonium
and fertilizes the egg - The zygote (2n) grows into a mature sporophyte,
growing out of the female gametophyte - The sporophyte (2n) is nutritionally dependent on
the gametophyte (n)
13The moss sporophyte
- Is composed of three main parts
- Foot - anchors the sporophyte to the gametophyte
- Seta - the stalk
- Capsule - contains spore mother cells
14- Spore mother cells undergo meiosis, forming
haploid spores - Spores are released from the capsule and
dispersed by wind or rain - The spore germinates and grows into a filamentous
thread (protonema) - The protonema forms buds, each of which grows
into a gametophyte, and the cycle continues
The gametophyte is dominant because it lives
independent of the sporophyte (this is a
primitive characteristic) Mosses are not
considered to be a direct path to higher plants
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17- Ecological and commercial importance of moss
- Moss is important in soil formation and the
prevention of erosion - Moss provides food for many animals
- Peat moss is important as a soil conditioner the
large empty cells hold water - Peat moss is burned as fuel in some countries
- The name moss is often used for plants (or
algae) that are not true mosses (but never by a
Biology II student?
18Division Hepatophyta
19- General information about liverworts. . .
- The body form is often a flattened, leaf-like,
lobed thallus - The lobes of the thallus resemble lobes of a
human liver, thus their name - Rootlike rhizoids on the underside of the thallus
anchor the plant to the soil - There is no vascular tissue
- These are small inconspicuous plants restricted
primarily to damp environments - Many are leafy like mosses and do not have a
lobed thallus
20- Sexual reproduction in liverworts. . .
- They produce archegonia and antheridia on the
haploid thallus - The life cycle is very similar to mosses, but the
structures look different - The sporophyte generation is attached to the
gametophyte
- Asexual reproduction. . .
- Gemmae - balls of tissue borne in saucer-shaped
structure (gemmae cup) directly on the thallus - Splashing water and animals aid in dispersal of
gemmae - Each gemmae can grow into a thallus
- The thallus branch and grow - the older part of
the thallus dies, leaving each extended lobe as a
separate plant
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22Division Anthocerophyta The Hornworts
- The gametophyte superficially resembles the
thalloid liverworts - They have a single, large chloroplast in each
cell - Archegonia and antheridia are embedded in the
gametophyte thallus