Title: P1252109389PeKdW
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2Green Plants
3Green Plants
- Green algae and land plants
- Green algae are protists
- Study them along with land plants for two
reasons - They are the closest living relatives to land
plants - The transition from aquatic to terrestrial life
occurred when land plants evolved from green
algae.
4Why Do Biologists Study the Green Plants?
5Why Do Biologists Study the Green Plants?
- Agriculture, forestry, and horticulture
- Much research involved in increasing productivity
- In finding new ways to use plants
- Primary producer in the biosphere
6Plants and the Ecosystem
- Produce oxygen
- Build soil by providing food for decomposers
- Prevent nutrients from being lost by erosion by
wind and water - Hold water
- Moderate the local climate
7Primary Producers
- Land plants are the dominant primary producers in
terrestrial ecosystems and are key to the carbon
cycle on continents
8The Food Chain
- Plants are eaten by herbivores
- Herbivores are eaten by carnivores
- Carnivores are eaten by omnivoresorganisms that
eat both plants and animals. - Omnivores feed at several different levels in the
terrestrial food chain.
9Domestication andSelective Breeding
- Humans actively select agricultural crops
- called artificial selection
10Artificial Selection Changes Traits
11Plant-Based Fuels and Fibers
- Humans depend on plants for cooking and heating
fuels - As a source of fibers for clothing and other
things - Primary interest in woody plants is for building
materials
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14Bioprospecting
- Find naturally occurring compounds that can be
used as drugs, fragrances, insecticides,
herbicides, or fungicides
15Other Reasons to Study Plants
- Hydroponics, the liquid culture of plants, can be
used to harvest large quantities of plant
chemicals - Ethnobotanists study how humans use plants and
research new uses for plants.
16How Do Biologists Study Plants
17Studying Plants
- They compare the fundamental morphological
features of various green algae and green plants - They analyze the fossil record of the lineage
and - They assess similarities and differences in
molecular traits such as the DNA sequences from
selected genes.
18Analyzing Morphological Traits
- The 12 most important phyla of plants are grouped
into three categories nonvascular plants,
seedless vascular plants, and seed plants
19Analyzing Morphological Traits
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24Non-Vascular Plants
- Include liverworts, hornworts, and mosses
- Vascular tissuespecialized groups of cells that
conduct water or dissolved nutrients from one
part of the plant body to another
25Seedless vascular plants
- Well-developed vascular tissue
- Do not make seeds.
- A seed consists of an embryo and a store of
nutritive tissue, surrounded by a tough
protective layer - Horsetails, ferns, club mosses, and whisk ferns
26Seed Plants
- Have vascular tissue
- Make seeds
- Five major lineages in the group cycads,
ginkgoes, conifers, gnetophytes, and angiosperms.
27Angiosperms and Gymnosperms
- The gnetophytes, cycads, ginkgoes, and conifers
are gymnosperms - Seeds do not develop in an enclosed structure
- Flowering plants are angiosperms
- Seds develop inside a protective structure called
a carpel.
28Using the Fossil Record
- Fossil record for land plants began 476 million
years ago - Huge, so it is broken up into five segments
- Each of which encompasses a major event in the
diversification of land plants
29Using the Fossil Record
30Evaluating Molecular Phylogenies
- The phylogenetic tree that follows shown has
several important points - Land plants probably evolved from green algae.
- The green algal group called Charales is the
sister group to land plantsmeaning that Charales
are their closest living relative.
31Evaluating Molecular Phylogenies
- 3. The green algae group is paraphyletic.
- The land plants are monophyletic.
- The nonvascular plants are the most basal groups
among land plants. - Morphological simplicity of the whisk ferns is
probably a derived trait. - Seeds and flowers evolved only once.
32Evaluating Molecular Phylogenies
33What Themes Occur in the Diversification of Green
Plants?
34How Did Plants Adaptto Dry Conditions?
- Photosynthetic organisms had to adapt to
conditions to move from aquatic to terrestrial
environments - Conditions in which only a portion of their
tissues were bathed in fluid - Water problem arose in two steps
- (1) preventing water loss from cells
- (2) transporting water from tissues with access
to water to tissues without access
35Preventing Water Loss
- Cuticle - a waxy, watertight sealant
- Gas exchange is accomplished by stomata
36Transporting Water
- The first land plants were low and sprawling
- Early upright land plants were rigid due to
turgor pressure - Vascular tissue evolved in a series of gradual
steps - provided an increasing level of structural
support, allowing plants to grow upright
37Transporting Water
38Transporting Water
39Transporting Water
40The major innovations that allowed plants to
adapt to life on land
41Alternation of Generations
- Multicellular haploid phase called the
gametophyte - Multicellular diploid phase known as the
sporophyte - Relationship between gametophyte and sporophyte
is variable - Time of sporophyte and gametophyte varies from
species to species - Amount of mitosis varies from species to species
42Alternation of Generations
43Alternation of Generations
44Alternation of Generations
45Alternation of Generations
46Alternation of Generations
47Alternation of Generations
48Retaining and Nourishing Offspring
- Two evolutionary changes occurred in early in the
history of land plants - (1) gametes were produced in complex
multicellular structures
49Retaining and Nourishing Offspring
- (2) the embryo was retained on the parent and
nourished - Based on this innovation, biologists call the
land plants embryophytes
50- Evolutionary adaptations that allowed plants to
reproduce effectively on land
51Key Lineages ofGreen Plants
52Green Algae
- Paraphyletic group
- About 7000 species
- Have a double membrane and chlorophylls a and b,
but relatively few accessory pigments. - Green algae live in close association with other
organisms - Fungi and cyanobacteria
53Ulvobionta
- Most green algae belongs to this group (e.g.,
Volvox) - Important primary producers in aquatic areas
54Coleochaetales
- Microscopic Algae
- Most grow as flat sheets of cells (e.g., water
lilies), and the multicellular individuals are
haploid - Found living on solid surfaces in still or slow
moving fresh waters
55Charales (Stoneworts)
- They commonly accumulate crusts of calcium
carbonate over their surfaces. They can form
extensive beds on lake bottoms - Implicated as the closest relative of land plants
- Brittleworts or skunkweed
56Nonvascular Plants (Bryophytes)
- Nonvascular plants or bryophytes
- Most basal lineages of land plants
- The three lineages with living representatives do
not form a monophyletic group - Represent an evolutionary grade
- (liverworts, hornworts, and mosses)
57Hepaticophyta (Liverworts)
- Liver-shaped leaves
- Can grow on bare rock or tree bark, which helps
in soil formation - Live near water
- umbrella-shaped sporophytes
58Anthocerophyta (Hornworts)
- The sporophytes look like horns and have stomata
- Single, large chloroplast in each cell of
gametophyte
59Bryophyta (Mosses)
- Can be abundant in extreme environments and can
become dormant - Sphagnum species are among the most profuse
- No vascular tissue or wood
- Play important roles in reducing erosion
- Water and nutrient cycling
60Seedless Vascular Plants
- Paraphyletic group that forms a grade between the
nonvascular plants and the seed plants. - All species of seedless vascular plants
- Have conducting tissues with cells that are
reinforced with lignin, forming vascular tissue - Four main groupings  Psilophyta, Lycophyta,
Sphenophyta, Pterophyta, Â
61Lycophyta(Lycophytes, or Club Mosses)
- Lycopods are the most ancient plant lineage with
roots. Tree-sized lycophytes dominated the
coal-forming forests of the Carboniferous period
62Psilotophyta (Whisk Ferns)
- Rootless, green-stemmed epiphyte
- Whisk ferns are restricted to tropical regions
and have no fossil record - One of only a few surviving members of an ancient
group - most primitive and simplest vascular plant alive
today
63Sphenophyta (or Equisetophyta) (Horsetails)
- Terrestrial and herbaceous
- Can flourish in waterlogged soils by allowing
oxygen to diffuse down their hollow stems - Silicified stems that are hollow except at the
jointed nodes - Multiflagellated sperm must travel through a film
of water
64Sphenophyta (or Equisetophyta) (Horsetails)
65Pteridophyta (Ferns)
- Ferns appear in the Devonian fossil record (359
to 353 Mya) - Vascular tissue
- Only seedless vascular plants to have large,
well-developed leaves
66Seed Plants
- The seed plants are a monophyletic group that
consists of the gymnosperms and the angiosperms - Defined by the production of seeds and pollen
grains - The earliest seeds appear in the Late Devonian
67The Evolution of Pollen and Seeds
- When pollen evolved, seed plants lost their
dependence on water for fertilization - Seed is a structure that encloses and protects a
developing embryo - Often attached to a structure that aids in
dispersal by wind, water, or animals - Enables the gametophyte to obtain nutrition from
the sporophyte
68Seeds
- A seed
- Develops from the whole ovule
- Is a sporophyte embryo, along with its food
supply, packaged in a protective coat - Development of seeds allowed plants to withstand
harsh environments and distribute their offspring
widely - Most seeds will only germinate under good
conditions
69Seeds
70The Evolution of Pollen and Seeds
71Gymnosperms
- Plants that have naked seeds that are not
enclosed in ovaries - Exposed on modified leaves that usually form
cones - Called conifers, include pine, fir, and redwood
- The gymnosperms include four plant phyla
- Cycadophyta- ancient plants, cycads
- Gingkophyta- ginkgos
- Gnetophyta- welwitschia, and gnetum
- Coniferophyta, pines and firs
72Gymnosperm Diversity
73Gymnosperm Diversity
74Gymnosperm Evolution
- The first seed-bearing plants appeared around 360
mya - Gymnosperm species
- Gymnosperms dominated the Mesozoic terrestrial
ecosystems - Many cycads and other progymnosperms
Archaeopteris
75Gnetophyta (Gnetophytes)
- Lineage dates back only to the early Cretaceous
- Three living genera
- Ephedra
- Gnetum
- Welwitschia
- Closest extant relative of the flowering plants
- Ephedrine isolated from this group
76Cycadophyta (Cycads)
- Palm-like gymnosperms
- Ancient group of seed plants
- Common in the Jurassic Period
- They harbor large numbers of cyanobacteria
77Ginkgophyta (Ginkgoes)
- One species is alive today Ginkgo biloba
- It is dioecious, and individual trees are either
male or female - Can live for a millenium
- Rotting seeds smell very bad
78Coniferophyta (Conifers)
- Naked seed
- Around 550 species arranged in seven families
- Named for its reproductive structure, the cone
- Leaves take the form of needles or scales
79Anthophyta (Angiosperms)
- Largest group of plants
- The defining adaptation is the flower
- Supply the food that supports virtually every
other species - Enclose their ovules (and seeds) within a carpel
- Ovary enlarges into fruit
80Angiosperms
- Are commonly known as flowering plants
- Are seed plants that produce the reproductive
structures called flowers and fruit - Seeds are contained in the fruit which is a
modified ovaries - Are the most widespread and diverse of all plants
- About 90 of all plants, over
- 250, 000 species
81Angiosperms
- The key adaptations in
- the evolution of
- angiosperms
- Are flowers and fruits
- Flowers are structures specialized for sexual
reproduction - Contains male and/or female sexual organs and
gametes
82Flowers
- A flower is a specialized shoot with modified
leaves - Sepals, which enclose the flower
- Petals, which are brightly colored and attract
pollinators - Stamens, which produce pollen
- Carpels, which produce ovules
83Fruits
- Usually consist of a mature ovary
- Several different types of fruit
- Can be either fleshy or dry
- Strawberries, grapes
- Beans and peas, nuts
- Can be dispersed by wind, water or animal
84Types of Fruits
85Angiosperm Diversity
- The two main groups of angiosperms
- Are monocots and eudicots
- Basal angiosperms
- Are less derived and include the flowering plants
belonging to the oldest lineages - Only about 100 species
- Magnoliids
- Share some traits with basal angiosperms but are
more closely related to monocots and eudicots - Very old lineage, fossil records of manoliid
pollen
86Angiosperm Diversity
87Monocots and Dicots