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Plant Diversity and Structure. Kingdom Plantae Eukaryotic Multicellular Mostly terrestrial  Increased sunlight, more CO 2, nutrient rich soils Cell walls.

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Presentation on theme: "Plant Diversity and Structure. Kingdom Plantae Eukaryotic Multicellular Mostly terrestrial  Increased sunlight, more CO 2, nutrient rich soils Cell walls."— Presentation transcript:

1 Plant Diversity and Structure

2 Kingdom Plantae Eukaryotic Multicellular Mostly terrestrial  Increased sunlight, more CO 2, nutrient rich soils Cell walls of cellulose (a polysaccharide) Mostly autotrophic/photosynthetic  Some parasitic species Believed to have evolved from green algae known as charophytes more than 500 million years ago

3 Plant Reproduction – Alternation of Generations Plant life cycle consists two multicellular stages:  Gametophyte – haploid stage that produces gametes Archegonia – female sex organ that produces eggs Antheridia – male sex organ that produces sperm  Sporophyte – diploid stage that produces spores (the dominant stage in most plants  what you see when you look at a plant) Megaspores – develop into female gametophyte Microspores – develop into male gametophyte

4 Alternation of Generations Gametophyte stage (1n) – gametes produced Fertilization occurs to form diploid zygote  mitosis  sporophyte (2n) Sporophyte produces spores by meiosis Spores undergo mitosis to form gametophyte

5 Plant Phyla Four main groups:  Bryophytes  Pteridophytes  Gymnosperms  Angiosperms

6 Bryophytes (mosses) Includes mosses, liverworts, and hornworts Nonvascular (no xylem or phloem tissue) Small in size and grow close to ground; anchored by rhizoids Require water for fertilization (release sperm into water) Gametophytes dominant stage of life cycle

7 Pteridophytes (ferns) Includes club mosses, quillworts, ferns, horsetails, whisk ferns Vascular, but seedless Have true roots and leaves Sporophyte is the dominant stage Still require water for fertilization

8 Gymnosperms (pines and conifers) Vascular “naked” seeds Produce pollen grains Have modified leaves that form cones Includes ginkgo, cycads, gnetophyta, and conifers (most common)

9 Angiosperms (flowering plants) 90% all plant species – most successful Vascular Have seed/s that develop from ovules within protective ovaries Produce pollen Also have:  flowers – complex reproductive structures  fruits – mature ovaries of plants

10 Flower Parts Sepals – enclose bud Petals – attraction Stamen – male part  Filament  Anther – pollen Carpel/Pistil – female part  Stigma - pollen sticks  Style  Ovary – houses ovules

11 Angiosperms Traditionally divided into monocots and dicots  Mono – one cotyledon  Di – two cotyledons

12 Advantages of Seed Plants Seeds – embryo and food in protective coat Reduced gametophytes within cones or flowers Heterospory – produce two spore types  Megaspores and microspores Ovules and production of eggs  Ovules – in the ovary and develop into the seed  Protects egg and zygote

13 Pollen and sperm production  Pollen grain – contains two sperm nuclei and has waterproof coating  Eliminates need for water for fertilization Variation of seed dispersal  Seeds protected by fruits  May be kite or propeller like – wind dispersal  May be modified as burrs – animal dispersal  May be eaten and digested – animal dispersal

14 Three Basic Plant Organs Roots  Anchor the plant  Absorb water and minerals  Store sugars and starches (food) Stems  Structure  Display leaves  transport Leaves  Photosynthesis  Gas exchange

15 Four major tissue types: Dermal – single outer layer (epidermis)  Forms cuticle – a waxy layer that protects and holds in water Vascular – transports material (vascular bundles/veins)  Xylem – transports water from roots to shoots; consists of tracheids and vessel elements  Phloem – transports sugars from leaves to rest of plant; consists of sieve tube elements and companion cells Ground – anything else  Pith – inside vascular tissue  Cortex – outside vascular tissue

16 Xylem and Phloem

17 Meristematic - embryonic tissue for growth (mitosis)  Apical meristems – tips of roots and shoots Allow plant to grow in length  PRIMARY GROWTH Apical dominance – plant concentrates resources on growing taller towards light  Axillary bud growth is stimulated only when terminal bud is removed Protoderm – gives rise to new epidermis Procambium – gives rise to primary vascular tissue  Lateral meristems – result in growth which thickens shoots and roots Grow in width  SECONDARY GROWTH Includes vascular cambium – produces new secondary vascular tissue

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19 Three major types of cells Parenchyma – most abundant and least specialized  Have thin and flexible primary walls  Perform most of plant’s metabolism Collenchyma – grouped in cylinders and help support growing plant  Thicker primary cells walls Sclerenchyma – supporting elements  Thick secondary walls strengthened with lignin  Found in mature plant parts no longer growing

20 Other important parts - Roots Root hairs - increase surface area for absorption Root cap – tough layer of cells that protect apical meristem

21 Leaves Blades – thin, flattened sections Petiole – think stalks that attach leaf to stem Mesophyll – specialized ground tissue where most photosynthesis takes place Stomata – tiny openings on the underside of leaves  Allow for gas exchange  Surrounded by guard cells that control opening and closing  Also site of water loss - transpiration

22 Stems  Nodes – where leaves attach  Internodes – regions between nodes  Buds – undeveloped tissue that can produce new stems and leaves  May develop woody tissue (wood is the layers of xylem)

23  Phytomer - repetitive units of growth that occur along the plant consisting of a leaf, a section of the stem, and a lateral bud


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