Title: Kingdom Plantae
1Kingdom Plantae
- BSC 2011C Fund of Bio II
- Spring 2007 J. Laborda
2Introduction
- Botany
- Importance of the Plant Kingdom
- It provides a majority of our food
- It provides a majority of our energy
- Plants produce some of our oxygen
- Plants provide a variety of products
- Plants are also important to us in a sort of
spiritual way, a source of beauty, comfort,
relaxation, etc
3Introduction
- Basic Plant Kingdom Information
- Cellular Structure
- Eucaryotic
- Most contain tissues
- Cell walls are present
- Most have chlorophyll (green) and other pigments
within an organelle called a plastid
4Introduction
- Basic Plant Kingdom Information (cont)
- Reproduction
- They reproduce sexually, though many also have
forms of asexual reproduction
5Introduction
- Three Major Plant Groups
- The kingdom is currently divided into 10 phyla
- See Appendix D in Campbell/Reece text
- These 10 phyla can be placed into three major
groups - Nonvascular plants
- Vascular plants without seeds
- Vascular plants with seeds
6Introduction
- Three Major Plant Groups (cont)
- Nonvascular plants (Bryophytes)
- Lack vascular tissues
- There are currently three phyla in this group
- Phylum Hepatophyta (liverworts)
- Phylum Anthocerophyta (hornworts)
- Phylum Bryophyta (mosses)
7Introduction
- Three Major Plant Groups (cont)
- Vascular plants without seeds
- A seed contains a young plant and stored food
inside a protective seed coat - There are currently two phyla in this group
- Phylum Lycophyta (lycophytes)
- Phylum Pterophyta (ferns, horsetails, whisk ferns)
8Introduction
- Three Major Plant Groups (cont)
- Vascular plants with seeds (contains two
sub-groups) - Non-flowering plants (Gymnosperms)
- Phylum Ginkgophyta (ginkgo)
- Phylum Cycadophyta (cycads)
- Phylum Gnetophyta (gnetophytes)
- Phylum Coniferophyta (conifers)
- Flowering plants (Angiosperms)
- Phylum Anthophyta
9Plant Classification
- Nonvascular Plants
- At one time all nonvascular plants were
classified in phylum bryophyta - The word bryophyta means moss plant
- This group (nonvascular plants) contains the
mosses (Bryophyta), liverworts (Hepatophyta), and
hornworts (Anthocerophyta) - Epiphytes
10Mosses
11Moss
12Moss
13Moss
14Plant Classification
- Nonvascular Plants (cont)
- Life cycle of a moss
- It illustrates alternation of generations
- The two generations (act of producing) are
- Gametophyte generation - multicellular haploid
form that mitotically produces haploid gametes
that unite and grow into the sporophyte
generation - Sporophyte generation the multicellular diplid
form that results from a union of gametes and
that meiotically produces haploid spores that
grow into the gametophyte generation
15Figure 29.8 The life cycle of a Polytrichum moss
(layer 3)
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Gametophyte
Sporophyte
16Antheridia
17Archegonia
18Young sporophyte
19Plant Classification
- Nonvascular Plants (cont)
- Economic importance of the nonvascular plants
(bryophytes)???
20Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants Without Seeds
- These are plants with vascular tissues for
transporting water and minerals throughout the
plant - This group (vascular plants w/o seeds) contains
the lycophytes (Lycophyta), ferns, horsetails,
whisk ferns (Pterophyta) - Phylum Lycophyta (lycophytes)
- Phylum Pterophyta (ferns, horsetails, whisk
ferns)
21Lycophytes (club mosses, spike mosses, quillworts)
22Ferns (pterophtes true ferns ?filicinophytes?)
23Horsetails (pterophtes ?sphenophytes?)
24Whisk ferns - pterophtes (?psilophytes?)
25Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants Without Seeds (cont)
- They do not produce seeds, but rather spores
- Spores are a single cell with a protective coat
26 Sporangia release spores. Most fern
species produce a single type of spore that gives
rise to a bisexual gametophyte.
The fern spore develops into a
small, photosynthetic gametophyte.
3
2
Although this illustration shows an egg and
sperm from the same gametophyte, a variety of
mechanisms promote cross-fertilization between
gametophytes.
Key
Haploid (n)
Diploid (2n)
Antheridium
Page 585
Young gametophyte
Spore
MEIOSIS
Sporangium
Sperm
Archegonium
Mature sporophyte
Egg
New sporophyte
Zygote
Sporangium
FERTILIZATION
Sorus
On the underside of the sporophytes reprodu
ctive leaves are spots called sori. Each sorus is
a cluster of sporangia.
6
Fern sperm use flagella to swim from the
antheridia to eggs in the archegonia.
4
Gametophyte
A zygote develops into a new sporophyte,
and the young plant grows out from an
archegonium of its parent, the gametophyte.
5
Fiddlehead
Figure 29.12
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29Fern Antheridium
30Fern Archegonium
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32Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants With Seeds
- Non-flowering plants (Gymnosperms)
- The seeds of a gymnosperm are not enclosed in an
ovary - They lie on tiny shelves
- Phylum Ginkgophyta (ginkgo)
- Phylum Cycadophyta (cycads)
- Phylum Gnetophyta (gnetophytes)
- Phylum Coniferophyta (conifers)
33Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants With Seeds (cont)
- Non-flowering plants (Gymnosperms) (cont)
- Phylum Coniferophyta
- Several families of conifers in this phylum
- Pine family pines, cedars, spruces, furs
- Cypress family cypresses junipers
- Yew family yews
- Redwood family redwoods, sequoias, bald
cypresses (have needles instead of scales like
the Cypress Family)
34The Life Cycle of a Pine
35Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants With Seeds (cont)
- Non-flowering plants (Gymnosperms) (cont)
- Phylum Cycadophyta (cycads)
- e.g., Sago palm female pic above right, see p.
594 for a great pic of a male cycad - About 130 species left todaymuch more diverse in
the past
36Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants With Seeds (cont)
- Non-flowering plants (Gymnosperms) (cont)
- Phylum Ginkgophyta (ginkgos)
- Ginkgo biloba is the only extant species
- Male female plants are separate, females put
out a real bad smell - Males are prized as an ornamental
- The fan-shaped leaves turn gold in autumn
37Ginkgo biloba
38Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants With Seeds (cont)
- Non-flowering plants (Gymnosperms) (cont)
- Phylum Gnetophyta (gnetophytes) (only 3 families)
- EPHEDRACEAE
- Ephedra 40 species. Europe to China, Mexico and
US, S. America. - GNETACEAE
- Gnetum 28 species. Indomalesia, amazonian S.
America, tropical W. Africa. - WELWITSCHIACEAE
- Welwitschia One species (W. mirabilis) of Angola
and SW Africa.
39Ephedra viridis
40Ephedra sinica
41Gnetum
42Welwitschia mirabilis
43Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants With Seeds
- Flowering plants (Angiosperms)
- Seeds enclosed in an ovary
- Only one phylum P. Anthophyta
- Mature ovary called a fruit
- E.g., oranges, tomatoes, corn kernels, pea pods
- Only one phylum Phylum Anthophyta
44Fruits
45Life Cycle of an Angiosperm
46Generic Flower
47Plant Classification
- Vascular Plants With Seeds
- Flowering plants (Angiosperms) (cont)
- Phylum Anthophyta divided into two classes
- Class Monocotyledoneae (monocots)
- Class Eudicotyledonae (eudicots) (the old
Dicotyledonae dicots) see p. 602-603
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52Monocot
Eudicot - Dicot
53Monocot fibrous Eudicot tap
54Monocot pollen
55Plant Anatomy
- Introduction
- Plant parts can be termed as woody or
herbaceous - Woody parts
- Herbaceous parts
- Whole plants can be termed as woody or
herbaceous - Herbaceous plants
- Woody plants
56Plant Anatomy
- Plant Organs
- Vegetative organs
- Reproductive organs
57Plant Anatomy
- Plant Tissues
- Meristematic tissues all one type of cells able
to carry on mitosis - Apical meristem
- Lateral meristem
- Vascular tissues made of more than one type of
cell. They conduct water and dissolved materials - Xylem carries water and dissolved ions from the
roots to stems and leaves - Phloem carries dissolved sugars from the leaves
to all other parts of the plant
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59Plant Anatomy
- Plant Tissues (cont)
- Structural tissues tissues that carry on
photosynthesis and/or form the structural parts
of plants - E.g., Epidermis (covers protects) in more
herbaceous plants - E.g., Periderm Cork tissues (protects,
waterproofs) replaces epidermis in woody plants
60Plant Anatomy
- The Leaf
- Probably two most important functions
- Trapping energy of sun
- Photosynthesis (production of sugars)
61Plant Anatomy
- The Leaf (cont)
- Cuticle
- Epidermis
- Chloroplasts
- Stomata w/guard cells
62Falling Leaves
- Deciduous Trees
- Have an abscission layer at base of petiole
- Leaf scar
- Loss of green color due to lack of water to
leaves during death of abscission layerless
bountiful colors will show through as result - Some colors, such as red, blues, violets only are
produced when temps around 40 degrees - Some species do not produce other pigmentsso
when chlorophyll is lacking, they appear brown
due to the tannic acid in all trees
63Falling Leaves
- Evergreens
- Most coniferous trees do not lose leaves till
Spring when new leaves have already grownthus
appear always green
64Plant Growth Time Factors
- Annual plants
- Sprout, grow, flower, and produce seeds in one
growing season - Most herbaceous plants are annuals
- Biennial plants
- Sprout grow in first growing season
- Flowers produces seeds in second growing season
- Perennial plants
- Grows year after year
- Most woody plants are perennials
- Some herbaceous plants are perennials
65The Root
- Functions of Roots
- Anchoring
- Absorption
- Transportation
- Food Storage
66The Root
- Root Systems
- Taproot system (e.g., carrots, oak trees)
- Fibrous root system
- Adventitious roots arising from stems
67The Root
- Growth of a Root
- Longitudinal section of a root tip
- Root cap
- Meristematic region
- Elongation region
- Maturation region
68The Root
- Growth of a Root
- Primary tissues (made during the primary growth
of a root) - Epidermis
- Cortex
- Endodermis
- Vascular tissues
- Vascular cylinder in eudicots
- Spread out in monocots
69The Root
- Growth of a Root
- Primary tissues (made during the primary growth
of a root) - Vascular tissues (cont)
- Xylem
- Phloem
- Cambium
- Pericycle
70The Stem
- Functions of Stems
- Manufacture and display leaves
- Conduct materials to leaves for photosynthesis
and growth, and to roots for growth - Most carry on photosynthesis when young, and a
few as adults (e.g., cacti)
71The Stem
- External Anatomy of a Stem
- Bud scales
- Apical bud (terminal bud)
- Lateral bud
- Internode
- Bud scale scars
- Leaf scar
- Lenticels
72End of Plant Unit
- Some additional material covered in lab