Kingdom: Plants Domain: Eukarya - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Kingdom: Plants Domain: Eukarya

Description:

Kingdom: Plants Domain: Eukarya What is the first plants? For more than the first 3 billion years of Earth s history, the terrestrial surface was lifeless Life ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:234
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: GinaCo
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Kingdom: Plants Domain: Eukarya


1
Kingdom PlantsDomain Eukarya
2
What is the first plants?
  • For more than the first 3 billion years of
    Earths history, the terrestrial surface was
    lifeless
  • Life evolved in the seas
  • 1st photosynthetic organisms were aquatic green
    algae, charophytes

3
What evidence defends that plants evolved from
green algae?
  1. Cell walls are both made of cellulose
  2. Peroxisome enzymes
  3. Structure of flagellated sperm
  4. Formation of a phragmoplast, (vessicles derived
    from Golgi bodies form a cell plates)

4
What are the advantages/adaptation for
terrestrial plants?
  • A waxy cuticle- protection from drying out
  • Gas exchange through stomates
  • nutrient-rich soil
  • Abundant CO2
  • Less predators

5
What are some disadvantages of land plants?
  • a scarcity of water
  • lack of structural support

6
What is the difference between vascular
non-vascular plants?
  • Vascular
  • Xylem-transports water
  • Phloem- transports food
  • Nonvascular no xylem or phloem
  • Therefore short in height

7
What were the 1st land plants?
  • Bryophytes mosses, liverworts hornworts
  • Non-vascular
  • No true roots have Protonema root-like
    structures that absorb water and minerals.
  • Rhizoids Anchors plants.
  • Lifecycle dominated by haploid gametophyte stage
  • Antheridia male gametophytes, produces swimming
    flagellated sperm
  • Archegonia female gametophytes, produce eggs and
    are the site of fertilization
  • Spores for reproduction
  • Haploid cells which sprout to form gametophyte

8
What is alternation of generations?
  • A reproductive cycle in which plants alternate
    between two multicellular stages.
  • The gametophyte is haploid and produces haploid
    gametes by mitosis
  • Fusion of the gametes gives rise to the diploid
    sporophyte, which produces haploid spores by
    meiosis
  • The diploid embryo is retained within the tissue
    of the female gametophyte
  • Land plants are called embryophytes because of
    the dependency of the embryo on the parent

9
What are the Ecological and Economic Importance
of Mosses
  • capable of inhabiting diverse and extreme
    environments (common in moist forests and
    wetlands)
  • Some mosses might help retain nitrogen in the
    soil
  • Sphagnum, or peat moss, forms deposits of
    partially decayed organic material known as peat
  • Sphagnum is an important global reservoir of
    organic carbon

10
What are some advantages for vascular plants?
  • Lignin, water-conducting cells are strengthened
    by and provide structural support
  • Increased height for competition of sunlight

11
What were the first vascular plants?
  • Ferns, whisk ferns horsetails and club mosses
  • Has true roots, leaves stems
  • Swimming, flagellated sperm
  • Life cycle dominated by sporophyte stage
  • Spores for reproduction- haploid cells which
    sprout to form gametophytes

12
Explain the alternation of generation for ferns
  • Fern gametophyte (1n)
  • Small haploid plant which produces gametes
  • A sorus (pl. sori) is a cluster of sporangia.
    Sori are located on the underside of the leaves.
  • Homospory male female on the same plant

13
What are Gymnosperms?
  • The 1st type of seeded plants
  • Conifers, Ginkos and Cycads
  • Vascular
  • heterospory male vs. female gametophytes
  • naked seeds not enclosed by ovaries
  • Pollen, eliminated the requirement for
    fertilization
  • Spread through wind animals

14
What are Angiosperms?
  • Flowering plants
  • Vascular
  • Heterspory
  • Megaspores produces eggs
  • Microspores produces sperm
  • Has flowers, modified leaves for sexual
    reproduction
  • Seeds with fruit
  • Pollen
  • Life cycle dominated by sporophyte stage
  • Trees and bushes are diploid
  • Gametophytes (microscopic)

15
What are key adaptations for seed plants?
  • Having seeds, consisting of an embryo
    nutrients surrounded by a protective coat can be
    dormant for years
  • Reduced gametophytes
  • Heterospory
  • Megaspores produces eggs
  • Microspores produces sperm
  • Ovules consist of a megasporangium, megaspore,
    and one or more protective integuments increases
    protection of egg
  • Pollen Microspores develop into pollen grains,
    which contain the male gametophytes eliminates
    need for a film of water and can be dispersed
    great distances by air or animals

16
What are the 4 modified types of leaves of a
flower?
  • Sepals enclose the flower
  • Petals brightly colored and attract pollinators
  • Stamens the male structures which produce pollen
    on their terminal anthers
  • Carpels the female structures which produce
    ovules

17
What is the function of flowers fruits?
  • Flowers attract pollinators
  • A fruit a mature ovary (fleshy or dry)
  • Various fruit adaptations help disperse seeds
  • Fruits protect seeds and aid in their dispersal
  • Seeds can be carried by wind, water, or animals
    to new locations

18
What are the two clades/groups of Angiosperms?
  • Eudicot/

19
How do Humans depend on seed plants?
  • key sources of food, fuel, wood products, and
    medicine

20
What are some threats to Plant Diversity?
  • Destruction of habitat is causing extinction of
    many plant species
  • Loss of plant habitat is often accompanied by
    loss of the animal species that plants support

21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com