Title: Kingdom Plantae
1Kingdom Plantae
- Characteristics
- Eukaryotic, Multicellular, Cell Walls made of
Cellulose, Autotrophic (photosynthetic using
chlorophyll)
2Adaptations for Survival
- To get water
- root hairs increase surface area
- mycorrhizae increase root surface (absorptive)
area hold water near roots - Vascular plants use xylem to transport water to
stems leaves - To conserve water
- Waxy coating (cuticle)
- Guard cells close stomata when water is scare
- to reduce transpiration (water loss thru leaves)
3Adaptations for Survival
- To get sunlight
- Leaves are large, flat, and broad
- Leaves arranged on stem
- To exchange gases CO2 O2
- Guard cells control opening closing of stomata
to maintain homeostasis of gases - (need CO2 for photosynthesis)
- (need O2 for cellular respiration)
4Adaptations for Survival
- To get nutrients/minerals
- Mycorrhizae help absorption
- Nitrogen-fixing bacteria (genus Rhizobium) pull
nitrogen from air so plants can use it - Phloem moves sugars from photosynthesis from
leaves to roots
5Sexual Reproduction
- Sexual alternation of generations alternate
between haploid (n) and diploid (2n) phases - Sporophyte phase 2n, diploid undergoes meiosis
? produces spores (n) - Gametophyte phase n, haploid produces gametes
(male-sperm female-eggs)
6Asexual ReproductionMitosis
- Allows for fast reproduction, but NO genetic
variation can fill an environment quickly, BUT
if/when environment changes, they may not be able
to adapt to survive - From cuttings
- Cut potatoes into sections, each with an eye, new
plant grows from cutting - From plantlets
- Cactuses produce clones, drop from mature plant
to ground, take root - Strawberries grow new plants from roots
- Horticulturists use graftings
7Nonvascular plants Mosses, Liverworts, Hornworts
(aka Bryophytes)
- Small, close to ground water
- Have NO vascular tissue (xylem phloem)
- cant pull water up
- Depend on
- Diffusion to transport nutrients
- Osmosis to transport water
- Sperm swim to egg cells
- Reproduction
- alternation of generations
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8Sporophyte phase
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Gametophyte phase
9Vascular plants Gymnosperms Angiosperms
- Have specialized tissue to transport water and
nutrients - Xylem transports water from roots to leaves
- xy goes high
- Phloem transports nutrients (glucose) from
leaves to roots - phloem falls
- Can grow tall redwoods gt 300 ft.
10- Angiosperms(Anthophyta)
- enclosed seed
- Seed produced inside layer of protective tissue
(ovary fruit) - Some flowers have both male female parts
- Pollination by wind or animals (more effective
than wind pollination) - Co-evolution
- of animals
- plants for
- pollination
- Gymnosperms(Coniferophyta)
- naked seed
- Seed produced on scales of female cones
- Male cones pollen grains
- Female cones-ovule
- Wind pollinates
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11Specialized tissues
- Roots - anchor plants, prevent erosion,
mutualistic relationships with fungus
(mycorrhizae) bacteria (nitrogen fixers)
transport materials, store food - Stems support, transport (xylem phloem),
defense system, produce leaves flowers - Leaves main photosynthetic organs broad,
flat water conservation guard cells gas
exchange
Masters of Photosynthesis Sunlight CO2 H2O ?
O2 C6H12O6
12Plant growth
- Meristems grow forever
- Unspecialized cells mitosis makes new cells
ready for differentiation - Found in places of rapid growth
- stem root tips
- apical meristem grow at tip
- (apex)
13Root cap protects apical meristem on root (tender
cells) excretes slippery substance to allow
root to ease through soil
14Plant development (in angiosperms)
- Flowers exist to bring gametes together protect
zygote and embryo - Male gametophyte-pollen Female ovule
- Pollination? Fertilization ?
- Zygote Endosperm ?
- Embryo Endosperm (seed) ? Germination ?
Seedling ? Mature plant
15Water Transport
- Active transport proteins in root cells
transport ions of nutrients into root - Now water in root cells is less concentrated than
outside (concentration gradient) water moves
into roots by osmosis - Root pressure (waterproof strip prevents
backflow) pushes water up into plant - Xylem tissue transports water to leaves
- Transpiration water loss through leaves (pulls
water up in plant)
16Regulation hormones
- Hormone chemical signals that affect
- growth, activity, development
- To respond, must have receptors (proteins to
which hormones bind) - Auxins regulatory substances produced by tips
of growing plant - Stimulation cell elongation new root growth
- Cells on shaded side with more auxin elongate
bend shoot toward light - Cytokinins produce effects opposite of auxins
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17Hormones
- Gibberellins stimulates growth, promotes
germination, may cause dramatic increases in size - Abscisic Acid opposite effects of gibberellins
- Ethylene gas stimulates fruits to ripen causes
leaves to seal off and drop in autumn
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18Tropisms how plants respond to stimuli
- Phototropism grow toward light
- Gravitropism stems grow away from ground, roots
grow toward ground - Thigmotropism respond to touch vines,
tendrils - Rapid response sensitive plant (Mimosa pudica),
Venus flytrap close leaves by osmotic pressure
changes
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20http//www.dwm.ks.edu.tw/bio/activelearner/36/imag
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21http//botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/130/Tropisms/g
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22http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7d
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23http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/12
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