Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PLANT DIVERSITY I.
Advertisements

Regulation of Gene Expression
Section Plants are vital to our survival and provide oxygen for us to breathe and many of the foods that we eat. They make our lives comfortable.
Kingdom Plantae Characteristics: Eukaryotic (has a nucleus)
Calculate What percent of all plants are flowering plants
From Gene to Protein Chapter 17 Louise Paquin McDaniel College
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land
The Evolution of Plant and Fungal Diversity
Biology 11. Transition onto Land Advantages of living in the water included… 1.Prevents drying out. 2.Gives structural support (less affected by gravity)
The Bryophytes Mosses, Liverworts, & Hornworts
Chapter 29 – How Plants Colonized Land. Evidence suggests land plants evolved from green algae Chapter 29 – How Plants Colonized Land Rose-shaped complexes.
CHAPTER 29 PLANT DIVERSITY I: HOW PLANTS COLONIZED LAND Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Section B: The Origin.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
LECTURE PRESENTATIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
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.
22–1 Introduction to Plants
What is a plant? Unit 7 Chapter 20. Plant characteristics Eukaryotic Multicellular Autotroph: food made through photosynthesis Cell walls made of cellulose.
Lecture #13 Date _______ Chapter #29 ~ Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land.
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land Chapter 29.
Lesson Overview 22.1 What is a Plant?.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land
Plant Diversity I Chapter 29. Introduction to Plants  Multicellular, ________, photosynthetic autotrophs  Cell walls made of cellulose  More than 290,000.
Unit 1: Kingdom Plantae Chapters Date What are the characteristics of Plants ▪All plants are photosynthetic. ▪All plants are multicellular. ▪All.
The Plant Kingdom Evolution from Water to Land. Primitive Plants Were “aquatic” – lived in water If salt water, we use the term “marine” It is believed.
19 KEY CONCEPT Plant life began in the water and became adapted to land. (Charophytes are the ancestors of plants)
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
Copyright © 2005 Brooks/Cole — Thomson Learning Biology, Seventh Edition Solomon Berg Martin Chapter 26 The Plant Kingdom: Seedless Plants.
Plants Biology 112. Kingdom Plantae  Multicellular eukaryotes that have cell walls made of cellulose  Develop from multicellular embryos and carry out.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
Nonvascular Plants. Most primitive type of plants 3 phyla Together referred to as bryophytes Seedless – produce spores Since they don’t have vascular.
Lesson Overview Lesson Overview What is a Plant? Lesson Overview Lesson Overview What is a Plant? Lesson Overview 22.1 What is a Plant?
Ch. 29 Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land.
Nonvascular Plants, Mosses and Ferns.
The Evolution of Populations
LECTURE PRESENTATIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert.
End Show Slide 1 of 33 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 22–1 Introduction to Plants.
PLANT DIVERSITY 1 BE SURE TO READ THE DESCRIPTIONS OF ALTERNATION OF GENERATIONS AND THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE PLANT GROUPS IN THE LAB MANUAL.
Plant Diversity. General Characteristics of Plants All plants are: Eukaryotic Autotrophic Multicellular Cell Walls with cellulose Chloroplasts w/ chlorophyll.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Plants  plants dominate most of the land on Earth  plants and plant products are all around us, in the products we use and the foods we eat.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
Plants Kingdom: Plantae Sporophytes are diploid and gametophytes are haploid. Review Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Plant provide the base for.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
HOW PLANTS COLONIZED LAND Plant Diversity I. Fungi EUKARYA Trypanosomes Green algae Land plants Red algae Forams Ciliates Dinoflagellates Diatoms Animals.
Plants are multicellular eukaryotes that have cell walls made of cellulose. (Fig. 22-1) A. They develop from multicellular embryos and carry out photosynthesis.
© 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. PowerPoint Lectures Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections, Eighth Edition REECE TAYLOR SIMON DICKEY HOGAN Chapter 17.
Plant Kingdom. Chapter Vocabulary Cuticle Stoma Xylem Phloem Guard Cell Non-Vascular Plant Root Stem Leaves Seeds.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology: Concepts and Connections, Fifth Edition – Campbell,
The Plant Kingdom Chapter 4:1 and 2 (Photosynthesis)
Plants Unit. Evidence that plants & green algae shared a common ancestor  They both: Have cell walls containing cellulose Store food as starch Use same.
Non Vascular Plants Bryophytes.
Plant Diversity 22-1, 22-2, 22-3.
Plant Diversity What to know from Ch 29, 30, 35
How Plants Colonized Land
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Introduction to plants
Lecture #13 Date _______ Chapter #29 ~ Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land.
Plant Diversity.
22–1 Introduction to Plants
Do Now What do plants need in order to survive?
Plant Kingdom.
The Evolution of Plants
Lesson Overview 22.1 What is a Plant?.
PLANTS Chapter 22 p. 550.
Lesson Overview 22.1 What is a Plant?.
Presentation transcript:

Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land Chapter 29 Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land Questions prepared by Eric Ribbens Western Illinois University Michael Dini Texas Tech Univeristy

Which of the following are the closest algal relatives of land plants? a) psilophytes b) charophytes c) chrysophytes d) bacillariophytes e) rhodophytes Answer: b

The textbook describes the many similarities between the Charophyta and the land plants (Embryophyta). Then the textbook asserts that while this implies an evolutionary relationship, it is not necessarily true that the land plants evolved from the modern-day Charophyta. What is a likely alternative explanation? Land plants evolved from another group of algae. Both land plants and Charophyta have evolved from a more primitive group. Land plants are the ancestors of Charophyta. Land plants are paraphyletic. Land plants are polyphyletic. Answer: b

The relationship between a gametophyte and a sporophyte in a liverwort is like the relationship between a brother and a sister. a grandparent and a grandchild. an uncle and a nephew. a parent and a child. two cousins. Answer: d

Before land plants evolved, life on land probably consisted of rocks covered by thin films of cyanobacteria. This implies that before plants, photosynthesis did not happen. plants evolved from cyanobacteria. rocks did not contain nutrients. there were no eukaryotes. terrestrial ecosystems were very simple. Answer: e

Plants that evolved vascular tissue are more advanced than plants without vascular tissue. One of the consequences is that vascular tissue enabled plants to reproduce via spores. store water. grow taller. develop stomata. support large gametophytes. Answer: c

One thing you should be able to conclude from this figure is that gametophytes have less DNA than sporophytes. gametophytes evolved before sporophytes. gametophytes are less important than sporophytes. gametophytes grow from sporophytes. gametophyte cells come about by mitosis; sporophyte cells come about by meiosis. Answer: a Gametophytes, being haploid, have half as much as diploid sporophytes

The following graph describes Richard Bowden’s experiment The following graph describes Richard Bowden’s experiment. If the two bars were the same height, we could conclude that moss doesn’t use nitrogen. gets its nitrogen from the soil. doesn’t accumulate nitrogen. gets its nitrogen from photosynthesis. doesn’t affect other plants growing there. Answer: c

The bars in the graph are very different The bars in the graph are very different. The fact that, without moss, nitrogen loss is much higher implies that Richard Bowden should have known moss was important. sandy soils with moss probably have more nitrogen available than soils without moss. moss is able to capture nitrogen from the atmosphere. moss uses so much water that leaching doesn’t happen. mosses harbor nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria. Answer: b

Stomata are found in every group of sporophyte plants except the liverworts. According to the hypothesis that stomata evolved only once among the bryophytes, this is evidence that liverworts resemble the most primitive plants. liverworts don’t need to exchange gases with the atmosphere. liverworts have lost the ability to make stomata. liverworts are able to fix nitrogen. gametophytes are more important in liverworts. Answer: a

This figure implies that red algae and chlorophytes form a monophyletic clade. if the three groups of algae (red algae, chlorophytes, and charophytes) formed a kingdom, it would be paraphyletic. alternation of generations unites all four taxa into a monophyletic kingdom. all organisms that have chlorophylls a and b belong to a monophyletic kingdom. Answer: b

There are several pieces of evidence that ferns are derived from more primitive plants. Of the following fern characteristics, which one does NOT link them to more primitive plants? homospory stomata in sporophytes megaphylls separate free-living gametophytes lack of seeds Answer: c

Protonema have large surface-area-to-volume ratios Protonema have large surface-area-to-volume ratios. From this, you can predict that protonema should be big. probably are important in reproduction. secrete digestive enzymes. have stomata and other openings. are absorptive interfaces with the environment. Answer: e