Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCharlotte Anthony Modified over 9 years ago
1
origin of seeds late Devonian, 360 mya seed = embryo + food + protective coat advantage: protection from desiccation wait for good conditions own food to get started
2
reproductive adaptations of seed plants gametophytes smaller female gametophyte retained on parent sporophyte male gametophyte transports sperm water not required for fertilization seeds are means of dispersal
3
2 types of seed plants 1. Gymnosperms “naked seeds” –seeds exposed (on cones) 2. Angiosperms “vessel seeds” –seeds inside fruits
4
gymnosperm life cycle heterospory w/2 types of cones: 1) small cones w/microsporangia microspores develop into pollen pollen = immature male gametophyte reduced in size—no antheridia whole gametophyte travels (pollination) fertilization without water
5
gymnosperm life cycle 2) large cones have megasporangia megasporangium protected by integuments ovule = megasporangium + integuments seed = mature ovule integuments become seed coat megaspore stays in megasporangium
6
gymnosperm seed example: Pine embryo (2n) female gametophyte (n) seed coat (2n) embryo is new sporophyte female gametophyte is stored food
7
pine life cycle 3 years to make seed pollination & seed dispersal by wind
8
gymnosperms--cycads prominent w/dinosaurs today 11 genera 130 sp tough leaves look like ferns but have cones w/seeds roots assoc. w/cyanobacteria plants defended by toxic compounds
9
gymnosperms--Ginkgo only genus in group Ginkgophyta thought extinct good urban tree stinky seeds veins dichotomously branched
10
gymnosperms--Gnetophyta 3 very different genera, 70 sp 1) Ephedra desert “mormon tea” ephedrine
11
gymnosperms--Gnetophyta 2) Gnetum tropical vine flat leaves
12
gymnosperms--Gnetophyta 3) Welwitschia mirabilis Namib desert, 2 leaves, ~1500 yrs old
13
gymnosperms--conifers very successful. 50 genera, 550 sp most evergreen needle leaves adapted for drought –small surface area, thick cuticle –stomata sunken in valleys
14
Taxodium distichum bald cypress Heron Pond, Cache River State Natural Area, S IL deciduous relative of redwoods & sequoias
15
oldest plants Bristlecone Pines 4600 years old
16
gymnosperms--conifers most massive plants Giant Sequoia 26 m circumference, (8.3 m diameter!) 3000 years old tallest living plants Coast Redwoods 367 ft tall, 600-800 yrs old Watterson Towers only 281 ft
17
types of growth primary growth (up or down): shoot & root apical meristems secondary growth (out): cambium— meristem makes shoot & root thick
18
secondary growth vascular cambium: –xylem to inside, phloem to outside wood is secondary xylem cork cambium makes cork to outside bark = cork + phloem –everything outside of vascular cambium
19
tree rings: seasonal changes in xylem cell size
20
dendrochronology tree rings date historical events similar patterns in neighboring trees overlap rings: to get complete record need consistent rings regular wet & dry cycles
21
Plant tissue culture Fig 38.14 plant cells are totipotent: –any cell can grow into whole new plant new plant is clone (same genes) examples: leaf cutting, Wollemi Pine callus = undifferentiated tissue (wound) develops roots and shoots balance of hormones required biotech: insert gene into callus
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.