Lecture Ch. 29 Date _______

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PLANT DIVERSITY I.
Advertisements

Chapter 29 Reading Quiz About how many species of plants inhabit earth today? What are the two generations in the “alternation of generations”? What structure.
Chapter 16 - Plants, Fungi, and the Move onto Land
Plants Land plants retain derived features they share with green algae: – Chlorophyll a and b. – Starch as a storage product. – Cellulose in cell walls.
Ch 29/30 - The Making of a Land Plant
Plant Diversity I How Plants Colonized Land Chapter 29.
AP Biology Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Plants Domain Eukarya.
Kingdom Plantae- now Viridiplantae Eukaryotic, multicellular, photoautotrophs, cell walls made of cellulose.
Plant Diversity I.
Chapter 29 Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land AP Biology.
Biology 11. Transition onto Land Advantages of living in the water included… 1.Prevents drying out. 2.Gives structural support (less affected by gravity)
Chapter 29 Plant Diversity I
Plant Diversity I How Plants Colonized Land. Closest relatives??? Green algae called charophyceans are the closest relatives of land plants Green algae.
Chapter 17 – Introduction to Plants
The Land Plants: Adaptation for Terrestrial life.
Plant Diversity and Life Cycles
Plant Diversity and Life Cycles
Chapter 29 Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land.
1)Please turn in your Unit 9 Test Corrections on the table by the door.  Staple your corrections to the back of your test. 2)If you have not yet selected.
Plant Diversity I Level 1 Biological Diversity Jim Provan Campbell: Chapter 29.
Plants I Chapters 29. What you need to know! Why land plants are thought to have evolved from green algae. Why land plants are thought to have evolved.
Lecture #13 Date _______ Chapter #29 ~ Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land.
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land (Ch.29)
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land Chapter 29.
Do Now: Lengthwise growth of a root tip into the soil results mainly from… Cone bearing plants are known as… Which of the following statements about bryophyta.
Parade through the Plants
THE PLANT KINGDOM.
CHAPTER 29: PLANT DIVERSITY How Plants Colonized Land By: Meg Riley, Anna Ferlanti, and Laurie VanBenschoten.
Chapters 29 and 30. Characteristics of All Plants Multicellular Eukaryotic Photosynthetic autotrophs Alternation of generations.
Plant Diversity I Chapter 29. Introduction to Plants  Multicellular, ________, photosynthetic autotrophs  Cell walls made of cellulose  More than 290,000.
Topic 13 Introduction to the Kingdom Plantae Biology 1001 November 2, 2005.
Chapter 29: Plant Diversity I The Colonization of Land
The Move to Land and Plant Diversity. More than 280,000 species of plants inhabit Earth today. Most plants live in terrestrial environments, including.
Packet #68 Chapter #29. Introduction There are more than 290,000 species of plants that inhabit the earth. How, and why, based on the theory of evolution,
Plant Diversity: How Plants Colonized Land
Plant Diversity I Chapter 29. Slide 2 of 18 Evolution  Land plants descended from Chlorophyta  Green Algae  Specifically Charophyta  Plant-like Protists.
Chapter 29 Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land.
Chapter 29 and 30: Plants Objectives
Chapter 29 Evolution of Land Plants. Overview Plants can be described as multicellular, eukaryotic, photosynthetic autotrophs Four main groups:  Bryophytes.
Ch. 29 Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land.
Seedless Plants.
Plant Diversity. General Characteristics of Plants All plants are: Eukaryotic Autotrophic Multicellular Cell Walls with cellulose Chloroplasts w/ chlorophyll.
Plant Diversity Chapter
Plant Diversity Chapters 29 & 30 Biology – Campbell Reece.
AP Biology Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Plants Domain Eukarya.
Plant Evolution. What are plants? Multicellular Eukaryotic Photosynthetic autotrophs Cell Walls made of cellulose.
How Plants Colonized Onto Land First Sign of a Plant The first plant was a form of green algae called Charophyceans. The first plant was a form of green.
Chapter 29.  500 mya plants and fungi moved from the land to the water  All plants evolved from an aquatic green algae  In Kingdom Plantae, there are.
HOW PLANTS COLONIZED LAND Plant Diversity I. Fungi EUKARYA Trypanosomes Green algae Land plants Red algae Forams Ciliates Dinoflagellates Diatoms Animals.
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land. Four Key Traits Plants share with ancestor The four key traits that plants share with charophyceans (algae)
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land AP Biology Crosby High School.
The Colonization of Land by Plants and Fungi
Chapter 29 Plant Diversity
Chpt. 29 Plant Diversity Colonization of Land
Plant Diversity What to know from Ch 29, 30, 35
How Plants Colonized Land
Plant Classification.
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land
How Plants Colonized Land
Supplemental Instruction 2/20/2018
Lecture #13 Date _______ Chapter #29 ~ Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land.
Plant Diversity I How Plants Colonized Land (The Seedless Plants)
Chapter 29: Plant Diversity
Plant Diversity.
“Man is the most insane species
Challenges on Land Water – Most found under the surface of the land
Plant Kingdom.
The Evolution of Plants
The Evolution of Land Plants
Adaptations of Land Plant Prof. Ms. Vrushali S
Presentation transcript:

Lecture Ch. 29 Date _______ Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land

Plant Evolution bryophytes (mosses), pteridophytes (ferns), gymnosperms (pines and conifers); angiosperms (flowering plants) Plants: multicellular, eukaryotic, photosynthetic autotrophs Terrestrial colonization: Vascular tissue The seed The flower Nonvascular plants -Bryophytes Bryophytes differ from algae-have multicellular embryo attached to and nourished by parent plant. Vascular plants-have xylem and phloem Pteriodophtes-ferns called seedless plants-lack a seed stage

Nonvascular vs. Vascular plants Nonvascular-Bryophytes Vascular Pteridophytes Gymnosperms Angiosperms

Plant origins Charophytes: green algae (closest plant ancestor) Similarities: 1-Homologous chloroplasts: chlorophyll a & b 2- Biochemical similarity cellulose composition; peroxisomes 3- Cell division similarity mitosis; cytokinesis 4- Sperm similarity ultrastructure 5- Genetic relationship nuclear genes; rRNA Cellulose in cell walls found in many algae groups including dinoflagellates and brown algae Chlorophyll a and b found in euglenoids and some dinoflagellates. Only charophyte algae and land plants have the same enzyme in peroxisomes -function antiphotorespiration Cell division similarity in cell plate formation-phragmoplast which is an alignment of cyoskeletal elements and Golgi derived vesicles across the midline of the dividing cell.

Characteristics that separate plants from algae ancestors Apical meristems: localized regions of cell division Multicellular, dependent embryos (embryophytes) Alternation of generations Walled spores produced in sporangia Multicellular gametangia Apical meristem-localized regions of cell division at tips of shoots and roots. Multicellular plant embryos develop from zygotes retained within tissue of female parents. Parent provides nutrients for embryo uses placental transfer cells- analogous to mother -embryo (placental) in mammals. Embryophytes- land plants Sporangia are multicellular organs found on the sporophyte generation that produces the spores. Spore mother cell w/in sporangia goes through meiosis to make spores. Sporangia holds the spores until they are ready to be released. Multicellular gametangia- produces the gametes. Gametangia is found in the gametophyte body. Archegonia-female gametangia is vase-shaped organ that produces a single egg cell and retains the egg in base of organ. Antheridia-mlae gametangia produces the sperm.

Other terrestrial adaptations Cuticle Stomata Xylem and phloem Secondary compounds Adaptions for Water conservation-- cuticle and stomata Adaptions for water transport --xylem and phloem Secondary compounds-alkaloids, terpenes, tannins-have bitter tastes, strong odors or toxic effects Defend plants against herbivores Flavonoids absorb harmful UV radiation flavonoids

Bryophytes Mosses, liverworts, and hornworts 1st to exhibit the embryonic condition (male = antheridium; female = archegonium) Flagellated (water) sperm No vascular tissue (imbibe water) No lignin (short stature) Haploid gametophyte is the dominant generation

Protonema-mass of green filaments that develop from germinating spores. Rhizoids-root like structures Sporophytes remain attached to gametophyte body Usually photosynthetic when young. Depend on the parent gametophyte for nutrition. Transferred by placental nutritive cells

Mosses

Parts of a Moss Plant Sporangium-or capsule holds the spores on sporophyte body Seta- stalk or stem of sporophyte body Foot- obtains nutrients from gameotphyte body Calyptra- protective covering over immature capsule Peristome- upper part of capsule specialized for gradual spore Protonema-mass of green filaments that grow from germinating spore. Rhizoids-act as roots to anchor the gametophyte body.

Three variations on gametophyte/sporophyte relations Page 598 Bryophytes Sporophyte dependent on gametophyte Gametophyte-dominant life cycle, the dependent sporophyte is nourished by the gametophyte as it grows out of the archegonium

Pteridophytes: seedless vascular plants Ferns, club ‘moss’, horsetails True roots and leaves Roots have lignified vascular tissue Sporophyte-dominant life cycle Homosporous plants: a single type of spore…. Sporophyte---->Single type of spore ---->Bisexual gametophyte ---->Eggs; sperm (flagellated; damp locations) Carboniferous period plants

Pteridophytes P. 598 Large sporophyte and small independent gametophyte (fern) Sporophyte is dominant generation Gametophyte is small, photosynthetic and free-living (not dependent on the sporophyte for their nutrition.

Life Cycle of a Fern

Fern Frond