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Plants Overview of PLANTS Chapter 22 Overview of Plants The plant kingdom’s impact on our lives cannot be overstated. A broad understanding of plants.

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Presentation on theme: "Plants Overview of PLANTS Chapter 22 Overview of Plants The plant kingdom’s impact on our lives cannot be overstated. A broad understanding of plants."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Plants

3 Overview of PLANTS Chapter 22

4 Overview of Plants The plant kingdom’s impact on our lives cannot be overstated. A broad understanding of plants as organisms – their anatomy, physiology, evolution, and diversity – is required for a complete understanding of biology. Life on earth would not be possible without plants converting solar energy to chemical energy by photosynthesis.

5 Before plants were able to live in terrestrial habitats, they needed ways to absorb minerals, conserve water, and reproduce on land. Vascular Tissue is the tissue that transfers water and other materials within the plant. The nonvascular plants, commonly referred to as bryophytes, represent the earliest stages in plant evolution. They are referred to as nonvascular because they either have no vascular system or have only very simple vascular tissue.

6 Nonvascular Plants or Bryophytes Do not have roots, stems or leaves Water and food move through the body of nonvascular plants by osmosis and diffusion (because they do not have a system of tubes or vessels) Characteristic = small, live in cool, wet environment Example = Liverworts, Hornworts and Mosses

7 Many plants have vascular tissues that act as pipelines for carrying water from roots to leaves and for moving carbohydrates from leaves to roots.

8 Vascular Plants or Tracheophytes Have roots, stems and leaves Since they have conducting cells with reinforced walls, vascular plants are able to grow much larger than nonvascular plants. Developed a waxy, watertight covering called a cuticle to aid during drought

9 The Cuticle Covers the above ground parts of the plant. Prevents the tissues of the plant from drying out and losing water to the air. It is impermeable to water. It is impermeable to gasses required by plants for photosynthesis and cellular respiration. Passages through the cuticle, specialized pores called stomata, enable gas exchange in the plant. Guard cells control the opening and closing of the stomata by expanding and contracting.

10 Plants exhibit a life cycle in which a haploid individual that produces gametes alternates with a diploid individual that produces spores. This is called Alternation of Generation. Gametophyte (n) Spores Sporophyte (2n) Gametes Fertilization Meiosis

11 Plants exhibit a life cycle in which a haploid individual that produces gametes alternates with a diploid individual that produces spores. This is called Alternation of Generation. The first plants to invade land lacked roots, stems, and leaves. They took in water and other substances by osmosis and diffusion. Nonvascular plants, such as mosses, liverworts, and hornworts, have vascular tissue that is very simple in design. Modern vascular plants are distinguished by the following features: a dominant sporophyte, specialized conducting tissues, and a distinctive body form.

12 The first vascular plants, such as ferns, were seedless and required a film of water for fertilization. The Evolution of Seeds

13 The first seed-bearing plants were gymnosperms, which produced seeds that develop in cones. The Evolution of Seeds

14 Angiosperms are flowering plants, which produce seeds that develop within fruits. The Evolution of Seeds

15 A seed is a sporophyte plant embryo surrounded by a protective coat. The Evolution of Seeds

16 The Evolution of Flowers Angiosperms are the most successful plants, comprising 90 % of all living plant species. Flowers are reproductive structures that generally consist of four whorls of appendages. In many angiosperms, flower structure is suited for a particular type of pollination.

17 The typical angiosperm undergoes double fertilization, a process in which two sperm fuse with cells in the megagametophyte to produce both a zygote and endosperm. Angiosperms are classified as either monocots or dicots, depending on the number of cotyledons in their seeds. Fruits are specialized for seed dispersal by agents such as animals, wind, and water.

18 General Plant Characteristics Multicellular, eukaryotic, autotrophic (photosynthesis occurs in chlorophyll of chloroplasts) nonmotile (not mobile) Common Name Classifi- cation Vascular Tissue StructureLife CycleHabitatSimple or Complex Plant Mosses, Liverworts Phylum Bryotphyta Absent No true roots, stems or leaves Gametophyte dominant sexual reproduction by fusion of sperm and egg Moist areas Simple FernsPhylum Psilotophyta PresentTrue roots, stems and leaves Sporophyte dominant, distinct, multicellular gametophyte Moist areas Simple ConifersPhylum Coniferophyta PresentTrue roots, stems and leaves Sporophyte dominant, sexual reproduction in cones, seeds- Gymnosperms Wide spread Complex Flowering plants Phylum Anthophyta PresentTrue roots, stems and leaves Sporophyte dominant, sexual reproduction in flowers, seeds- Angiosperms Wide spread Complex

19 Kingdom Plantae Seedless GymnospermsAngiosperms ferns horsetails whisk ferns mosses Seeds monocots dicots club mosses gnetophytes cycads ginkgo conifers

20 Don’t forget to study for your Chapter __ “Overview of Plants” Quiz #1 When? THE FIRST OF NEXT CLASS


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