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Carolus Linnaeus - late 18thC Species Plantarum 1753 Systems Naturae 1767 - (24) major categories of plants (Divisions) - (23) vascular (Phanerogams); - (1) non-vascular & vascular (Cryptogams)
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K: Plantae - Ordovician - Non-vascular - Silurian - Vascular
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Continental Positions During Early Plant Evolution
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Vascular Plants - The Tracheophytes 1. Have specialized cell type for conducting water - tracheids (early xylem tissue). Also has specialized cell type for conducting sugar - seive cells (phloem tissue). 2. Lignin in xylem for rigid structural support. 3. A branching, independent sporophyte.
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Vascular Plants - The Tracheophytes
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Vascular Plants - The Tracheophytes (300 mya) Non-seed Tracheophytes - haloid & diploid generations totally independent - spores most prominent resting state
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Rhyniophyta - the earliest Tracheophytes (extinct by Devonian Period 400 mya) 1. Simple vascular system (xylem & phloem) in stem. 2. “Leaves” flattened scales - no vascular tissue. 3. No roots - but rhizomes. 4. Dichotomous stem branching. 5. Aerial branches and sporangia at branch tips. 6. Spores were in groups of four (?) tetrads - indicate meiosis plant body - a sporophyte (2n) spores - (n) ---> gameophyte (n)--> sexual reproduction--> sporophyte (2n) (fossil)
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Lignier’s Hypothesis (1903) How Roots Evolved from Stems ancestoral form --->
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Evolution of Leaves Leaf - a flattened photosynthetic structure emerging from the stem and possessing true vascular tissue. Probably evolved from sterile sporangia.
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Evolution of Leaves Leaf - a flattened photosynthetic structure emerging from the stem and possessing true vascular tissue. Complex leaves arose as photosynthetic tissue developed between complex branching patterns
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Homospory The Most Primitive Spore Process one type of spore; one type of gametophyte
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Heterospory The Most Advanced Spore Process two types of spores; two types of gametophytes heterospory probably evloved several times
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” 1. Leaves small and sessile; no ligule at base. 2. Stems with aerial branches and rhizomes; dichotomous branching. 3. Branch roots originate deep within main root. 4. Mainly perennial. 5. Low growing in temperate forest or epiphyte in Tropical forest. 6. Homosporous.
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” Plectostele - dissected xylem with phloem branches in between. –Xylem - all tracheids. –Phloem - all seive cells Epidermis - contains stomata.
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” Plectostele - Always a layer of parenchyma cells between xylem and phloem.
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” Plectostele - dissected xylem with phloem branches in between. –Xylem - all tracheids. –Phloem - all seive cells –mucilaginous canal Epidermis - contains stomata. Exarch Stele -
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” A. Exarch Stele - B. Mesarch Stele C. Endarch Stele
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” Sexual Reproduction: sporophyte (2n) ---- meiosis ----> ------> spores (n) --> gametophyte (n) --> antheridia (n) & archegonia (n) (homospores) antheridium ----> sperms (n) -- fertilization --> zygote (2n) --> sporophyte (2n) Archegonium ----> egg (n)
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines”
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” Sexual Reproduction: sporophyte (2n) ---- meiosis ----> ------> spores (n) --> gametophyte (n) --> antheridia (n) & archegonia (n) antheridium ----> sperms (n) -- fertilization --> zygote (2n) --> sporophyte (2n) Archegonium ----> egg (n)
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” MALE GAMETOPHYTE: Antheridia (n) on crown. Embedded (like Anthoceratophyta) Biflagellated sperms (n) FEMALE GAMETOPHYTE looks much the same.
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines”
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” strobilus (2n) - stem with short internodes and fertile appendages sporophyll (2n) sporangium (2n) spores (n) l
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” sporophyll & sporangium adaxial view
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines”
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Lycopodium “ground pines” gemmae or bulbils (2n) (asexual reproduction) axial sporophylls g
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” Mainly in tropical areas g
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” 1. Herbaceous: perennial. 2. Ligulate* leaves; microphyllous; spirally or alternately arranged. 3. Abundant branching. 4. Some vessels* in xylem. g
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” 1. Herbaceous: perennial. 2. Ligulate*leaves; microphyllous; spirally or alternately arranged. 3. Abundant branching. 4. Some vessels* in xylem. 5. Strobilus composed of sporophylls each bearing a single sporangium on the adaxial surface. 6. Heterosporous* reproduction. g
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” 6. Heterosporous* reproduction. Strobilus (2n) --> microsporophylls (2n) --> microsporangium (2n) --> megasporophylls (2n) --> megasporangium (2n) --> meiosis microsporangium (2n) --> microsporocytes (2n) ---------------> microspores (n) megasporangium (2n) --> (4) megasporocytes (2n) ----------> (4) megaspores (n) g
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” meiosis microsporangium (2n) --> microsporocytes (2n) ---------------> microspores (n) megasporangium (2n) --> (4) megasporocytes (2n) ----------> (4) megaspores (n) --> microspores (n) --> male gametophytes (n), antheridium --> sperms (n) --> (4) megaspores (n) --> female gametophytes (n), archegonium --> egg (n) dioecious triradiate walls --> g
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” fertilization - -> zygote (2n) --> adult sporophyte (2n)
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” fertilization - -> zygote (2n) --> adult sporophyte (2n)
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Selaginella “ground pines” g
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Isoetes “quillworts” 1. Quill-like leaves spirally attached to a corm; microphyllus and ligulate. Corm - thickened underground stem. Nodes very close together. Lacunae --->
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Isoetes “quillworts” 1. Quill-like leaves spirally attached to a corm; microphyllus and ligulate. Corm - thickened underground stem. Nodes very close together. 2. Each leaf has 4 lacunae; stomata in epidermis. * 3. Some seive cells lack nucleus at maturity - plasmodesmata with adjacent cells. 4. Stem and root protostelic. 5. Xylem consists of large numbers of parenchyma cells with few tracheids. * 6. Delicate roots grow from base of corm (rhizophores); stele bound by well defined endodermis*; have root caps.
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Isoetes “quillworts” 7. Heterosporous. 8. Every leaf of Isoetes is potential a sporophyll; per season - sterile leaves 1st; then megasporophylls; then microsporophylls. --> 1 million microspores; 50 - -> 300 megaspores.
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Isoetes “quillworts” Sporangium massive > 7mm. Velum - covering over sporangium. Trabecula - strands of sterile tissue extending from the sporangial wall. Tapetum - innermost layer of the sporangial wall. Indistinguishable.
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Isoetes “quillworts” meiosis (all spores set free) microsporangium (2n) ---------> microspores (n) --> male gametophyte (n) megasporangium (2n) --------> megaspores (n) --> female gametophyte (n) male gametophyte (n) --> antheridium (4 sperms) multiflatelated female gametophyte (n) --> archegonium (1 egg) *further reduction of gametophyte!* colorless, saprophytic
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Isoetes “quillworts” male gametophyte (n) --> antheridium (4 sperms) female gametophyte (n) --> archegonium (1 egg) *further reduction of gametophyte!* colorless, saprophytic no suspensor 1 embryo develops from each gametophyte
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K: Plantae Div: Lycophyta G: Isoetes “quillworts” No suspensor; delayed development of the stem.
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