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Plants (Kingdom Plantae) Multicellular eukaryotes Photoautotrophs Terrestrial? Not all plants are terrestrial Return to water from land Move to land was a major step

Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

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Plants (Kingdom Plantae). Multicellular eukaryotes Photoautotrophs Terrestrial? Not all plants are terrestrial Return to water from land Move to land was a major step. Move to Land Required Significant Adaptations. Water uptake and loss Gas exchange Reproduction Support. Move to Land. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

• Multicellular eukaryotes

• Photoautotrophs

• Terrestrial?– Not all plants are terrestrial

• Return to water from land

• Move to land was a major step

Page 2: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Move to Land Required Significant Adaptations

• Water uptake and loss

• Gas exchange

• Reproduction

• Support

Page 3: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Move to Land

• Plants probably evolved from a group of green algae called the charophytes

• Are a fringe species exhibiting multicellular traits

• Why a fringe species?

Page 4: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 5: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Features Common to Green Algae and Plants

• Chlorophyll a and other accessory pigments (Chl b, -carotene)

• thylakoid membranes stacked into grana

Page 6: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 7: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Features Common to Green Algae and Plants

• Chlorophyll a and other accessory pigments (Chl b, -carotene)

• similar photosynthesizing organelles

• cell walls of cellulose

• store carbohydrates as starch

• alternation of generation

Page 8: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Highlights of Plant Evolution

• Four major periods

• Move onto land (~425 - 475 mya)

– prevent desiccation of whole plant

– protect reproductive structures

– Features seen in mosses (bryophytes)

Page 9: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 10: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 11: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 12: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Highlights of Plant Evolution

• Evolution of vascular tissue and diversification (~400 mya)– simple diffusion not an option–Mosses - water-conducting tubes– transport and support– larger body sizeThese are features first seen in ferns, horsetail,

whisk ferns****Similar protection of gametes

Page 13: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 14: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 15: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Horsetail

Whisk Fern

Page 16: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Highlights of Plant Evolution

• Evolution of seed (~360 mya)

– additional protection from desiccation and predation

– dispersal

Page 17: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 18: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Highlights of Plant Evolution

• Emergence of flowering plants (~130 mya)– Seeds in protective ovary– Expanded potential for diversity–Complex structure with great potential

for adaptation–Greater sexual reproductive success–Coevolution between insects and

angiosperms

Page 19: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 20: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 21: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Nontracheophytes

• Mosses, liverworts and hornworts

• Probably closest to ancestral form

• protected gametangia

• lack vascular tissue

• Encrusting

• Water needed for fertilization

Page 22: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Gametophyte

Sporophyte

Sporophyte relies on gametophyte for nutrients

Page 23: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 24: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 25: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Nonseed Tracheophytes Plants

• Ferns, horsetail, club mosses

• Retain some traits of mosses

• Evolved some traits also seen in seed-producing vascular plants

Page 26: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Traits Shared with Nontracheophytes

• Antheridia and archegonia retain similar structure

• Require water/moisture for sexual reproduction

• Production of spores

Page 27: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Traits Shared with Seed-Producing Plants

• Vascular tissue - greater body size

• Sporophyte is dominant stage of life cycle

Page 28: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Gametophyte

Sporophyte

Page 29: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 30: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 31: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 32: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 33: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Seedless tracheophytes were the dominant vascular plants for ~ 50 million years

• Continents in tropical/subtropical zone

• As continents drifted away from equator, conditions changed

• Seed-producing plants were present during height of seedless vascular plant success

Page 34: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Rise of Seed-Producing Tracheophytes

• Well suited for environmental changes

• Gametophyte smaller and retained in moist tissues of sporophyte

• Pollination rather than swimming sperm

• Evolution of seed

• gymnosperms and angiosperms

Page 35: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Gymnosperm

• “naked seed”

• still have a seed coat

• four divisions

• Coniferophyta best known

• evergreens

• needle-shaped leaves, thick cuticle

Page 36: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 37: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Gametophyte

Sporophyte

Gametophyte passes within sporophyte

Page 38: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

• “protected seed”

• most diverse group– 235,000 known species vs. 721 species of

gymnosperms

• One division - Anthophyta

• Two classes– Monocotyledones– Dicotyledones

Angiosperms

Page 39: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Angiosperms

• successful and effective design

• different themes of the same design

Page 40: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)
Page 41: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Gametophyte

Sporophyte

Gametophyte passes within sporophyte

Page 42: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)

Develops into fruit

Develop intoseeds

Page 43: Plants (Kingdom Plantae)