Title: Kingdom: Plants Domain: Eukarya
1Kingdom PlantsDomain Eukarya
2What 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
3What evidence defends that plants evolved from
green algae?
- Cell walls are both made of cellulose
- Peroxisome enzymes
- Structure of flagellated sperm
- Formation of a phragmoplast, (vessicles derived
from Golgi bodies form a cell plates)
4What 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
5What are some disadvantages of land plants?
- a scarcity of water
- lack of structural support
6What is the difference between vascular
non-vascular plants?
- Vascular
- Xylem-transports water
- Phloem- transports food
- Nonvascular no xylem or phloem
- Therefore short in height
7What 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
8What 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 -
9What 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
10What are some advantages for vascular plants?
- Lignin, water-conducting cells are strengthened
by and provide structural support - Increased height for competition of sunlight
11What 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
12Explain 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
13What 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
14What 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)
15What 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
16What 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
17What 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
18What are the two clades/groups of Angiosperms?
19How do Humans depend on seed plants?
- key sources of food, fuel, wood products, and
medicine
20What 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
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