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Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

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Page 1: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Sexual Life cyclesPlant structure and Phylogeny

The Angiosperms

Page 2: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Outline

• Brief review• 9. ALTERNATION OF GENERATIONS• 8. PLANT EVOLUTION• 7. ANGIOSPERM LIFE HIST.

Page 3: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Define sex cell.

Page 4: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

All life is organized into 3 domains

• 2 Domains of prokaryotes, 1 of all eukaryotes

• Bacteria & Archaea- prokaryotic

• Eukaryota- Includes all 4 eukaryotic kingdoms: protista, animalia, plantae, fungi

Page 5: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Most of the many

Eukaryotic species

reproduce sexually

Page 6: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Despite an inherent twofold cost, higher species reproduce sexually

• Sexually reproducing species must have 2 offspring to “break even”

• 2 offspring from an asexually reproducing species doubles the population

Page 7: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Animal species alternate between diploid (mitotic) and haploid (meiotic)

In animals, only the diploid stage is multicellular

Page 8: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Sexual life cycle of Animalsgametic or diplontic- meiosis forms gametes, no

spores- mainly like a sporophyte (2n)- produce gametes (1n) via

meiosis- fertilization results in zygote

(2n)- sporophyte grows via mitosis

Page 9: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Schematic gametic life cycle

Sporophyte

Page 10: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Many fungi work the opposite wayzygotic or haplontic- zygote undergoes meiosis- mainly like a gametophyte

(1n)- produce gametes (1n) via

mitosis- fertiliz. results in zygote

(2n)- produce spores (1n) via

meiosis- gametophyte grows via

mitosis

Page 11: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Most plants have two multicellular life cycle stages- gametophyte and sporophyte

plants - sporic or diplohaplontic- alternate sporo- &

gametophyte- meiosis forms spores- sporophytes (2n) dominate- produce spores (1n) via

meiosis- gametophyte (1n) develops

inside cone/flower via mitosis- prod. gametes (1n) via mitosis- fertiliz. results in zygote (2n)- sporophyte grows via mitosis

Page 12: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

8. PLANT EVOLUTION

Page 13: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Plant phylogeny

Page 14: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The Phylum Bryophyta includes liverworts and mosses

Simplest terrestrial plants- avascular

evolve multicell. & terrestrial

- adapt to gravity, so small/low

- no roots, rhizoids only anchor

- sperm needs H2O to fertilize ova

Page 15: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

In mosses, the sporophyte and gametophyte are similar in size

Page 16: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Ferns are vascular plants

ferns (Phylum Pterophyta) evolve vasculature

(vessels),allows fronds to grow large- true roots absorb H2O,

minerals- no seeds, sperm still

needs H2O

Page 17: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The gametophyte is smaller in the fern life cycle

Page 18: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The gametophyte nurtures the young sporophyte

Page 19: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Conifers are the prototypical gymnosperm

gymnosperms (Phy. Coniferophyta)

- evergreen needles reduce evap.

• ova in larger female cones• sperm in pollen grains from

male cones, dispersed by wind

• no fruit, naked seeds protect + provide nutrients to embryo

Page 20: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Gymnosperms include cycads & ginkoes

Page 21: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Gymnosperms have no flowers

or fruits• Mostly wind-

pollinated• The most massive

indiviual living things- Giant sequoia

Page 22: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The tallest and most massive- here in CA

Page 23: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Male & Female Gametophytes are greatly reduced in gymnosperms

Page 24: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Angiosperms are flowering plantsangiosperms (Phylum Anthophyta)- deciduous leaves drop off in

winter, surv. low temp/H2O• flowers attract animal pollinators

with color-smell-nectar,• more efficient for fertilization• endosperm in seeds stores

nutrients, esp. in grains/nuts• fruit attracts animals to disperse

& fertilize seeds, reduces comp.

Page 25: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Basic (monoecious) Flower structure

Page 26: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The male angiosperm gametophyte is even smaller

inside anthers- meiosis prod. microspore

(1n)- becomes the pollen grain= male gametophyte (1n)- with 2 sperm cells + tube

cell

Page 27: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The female gametophyte houses the seed

• inside carpels- meiosis prod.

megaspore (1n)becomes the ovary= female gametophyte

(1n)• = ovum + central cell

(n+n)

Page 28: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Pollination

• pollination - pollen grain to stigma

- tube cell grows pollen tube to reach ovary

• double fertilization • - 1st sperm cell (1n) +

ovum (1n)• = zygote (2n

sporophyte)

Page 29: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The seed is a capsule containing a plant embryo

• - 2nd sperm cell + central cell (n+n) = endosperm (3n, food in seed)

• seed - seed coat around

endosperm- zygote grows into embryo via mitosis- ovary around seed

becomes fruit

Page 30: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

The plant embryo is already formed

• embryo - epicotyl becomes shoot• - hypocotyl becomes root• - cotyledons becomes

leaves

Page 31: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Plant phylogeny

Page 32: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

6. MONOCOTS VS. DICOTS• angiosperms - flowering plants• - divided into 2 major groups• monocots - corn, grasses• - 1 cotyledon (embryonic leaf)• - narrow leaves with parallel veins• - flower parts in 3’s, fibrous roots• - vascular bundles scattered,• primary growth only• dicots - most other angiosperms• - 2 cotyledons absorb endosperm• - broad leaves with network veins• - flower parts in 4 or 5’s, taproot• - vasc. bundles arranged in ring, • secondary growth possible

Page 33: Sexual Life cycles Plant structure and Phylogeny The Angiosperms

Monocots vs. Dicots