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Million years of evolution: Angiosperm Cooksonia Angiosperms and plant anatomy tical # 3 term evaluations (lab 6 of 10) ure enger Hunt in cladistics worksheet p 123-4 week: lab practical 400mya

Lab 6 - Angiosperms

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Page 1: Lab 6 - Angiosperms

Million years of evolution:

Angiosperm

Cooksonia

Angiosperms and plant anatomy

Practical # 3Mid-term evaluations (lab 6 of 10)LectureScavenger HuntTurn in cladistics worksheet p 123-4

Next week:Last lab practical

400mya

Page 2: Lab 6 - Angiosperms

• http://www.johnkyrk.com/evolution.html

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Paleo plant and insect interactions

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Older Younger

Insects and plants evolved together

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The unique character of angiosperms is that the ovules are

completely enclosed in a carpel

1. gametophytes only a few cells

2. immotile sperm- carried to ovule by pollen tube

3. No “spores” because reduced gametophyte

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Controversy about its floral morphology interpretation

Extinct

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/flower/anat-flash.html

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/flower/

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Knowing the flower anatomy…let’s review the fossil record of earliest angiosperms

keep in mind:

• To date, the origin of the angiosperms remains controversial

• No consensus about the ancestral relative

• Molecular evidence suggest a Jurassic origin (>150 Ma), but the oldest fossils is early Cretaceous (~125 Ma)

MORE INFO: http://www.mobot.org/mobot/research/apweb/welcome.html

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UF grad student found this one!

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Extinct

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Many early flowers arerelated to living

Angiosperms families

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Pollination of ‘primitive’ flowers

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Flowers adapted for pollination by "smart" insects

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Insects can see uv light

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Insects can see uv light

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What pollinates these?

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Wind-pollinated flowerssecondarily derived in Angiosperms

-- flowers are green, small, and often lack petals. Wind pollinated flowers of deciduous trees species open in early spring –

why?

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Pick the Pollinator

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/flower/pollinator.html

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Plant parts

Take a look…

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Primitive vs Derived characters

• http://botany.csdl.tamu.edu/FLORA/tfplab/primder.htm

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Fruit and seed dispersal

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Don’t forget…

Also: ichthyochory

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?

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What disperses these?

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Pleistocene extinction

Gomphothere

Late Pleistocene Extinctions

– 13,000 years ago, N & S America

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“Re-wilding of N. America?”

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Angiosperms often used for medicine – why?

Preparing ayahuasca

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3 clades

A. Monocotyledones (monocots)

B. Magnoliids

C. Eudicotyledones (dicots)

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ANGIOSPERMS

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Generalized distinguishing characteristics:

MONOCOTSone cotyledon

parallel venation

scattered vascular bundles

floral parts in 3's

adventitious roots

pollen monosulcate

EUDICOTStwo cotyledons

reticulate venation

vascular bundles in rings

floral parts in 4's or 5's

taproots common

pollen tricolpate

MAGNOLIIDStwo cotyledons

reticulate venation

vascular bundles in rings

parts in 3's or numerous

taproots common

pollen monosulcate

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A comparison of monocots and dicots -- know this for lab practical

Lab exercise – can you tell them apart?

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All flesh is grass” -- Isaiah

Grasses evolved directly with mammals

MONOCOTS

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Bamboo

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Pineapple Onion

Banana

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Palms!

Harvesting palm hearts

‘ivory palm’

Coconuts

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Bactris gasipaes

‘peach palm’

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One apical bud!!

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Monocot stem -- vascular bundles

xylem

phloem

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Dicot stem

Dicots have secondary growth

Xylem and phloem in rings

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Which tree has a better chance to

live?

Monocot (palm)Dicot

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Annual growth rings?

Illegal mahagony logging

Dicot stems

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We eat many, many dicot fruitsExamples?

Theobroma cacao

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Page 51: Lab 6 - Angiosperms

In common?

Chinese kale

cabbage

Kale

Collard greens

Califlower

Brussel sprouts

Broccoli

Kohlrabi

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Brassica oleracea

Chinese kale

cabbage

Kale

Collard greens

Califlower

Brussel sprouts

Broccoli

Kohlrabi

‘wild mustard’

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Brassica oleracea

‘wild mustard’

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Vavilov Centers of origin

for crop plants

http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/history/lecture05/lec05.html

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Anatomy study slides

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The life cycle of an angiosperm

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Angiosperm life cycle

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Plant morphology/anatomy

Primary vs. secondary growthA. Apical meristems - primary growth

B. Cambium (vascular or cork) - secondary growth

C. In lab -. Apical meristems1. Coleus - stem tip (no. 3) - herbaceous dicot

2. Zea - root longitudinal section (no. 4) - monocot

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Seed anatomy Scan

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StemsA. Anatomy

1.parenchyma (pith) 6. xylem2.sclerenchyma 7. phloem3.epidermis 8. vascular cambium4.cork & cork cambium 9. meristem5.cortex 10. node

B. In lab:1.Helianthus - stem (no. 5) - herbaceous dicot2.Tilia - stem cross sections (no. 6) - woody dicot3.Zea - stem cross section (no. 7)

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Morphology of a flowering plant

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Morphology of a winter twig

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Anatomy of a tree trunk

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Organization of primary tissues in young stems

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Leaves

A. Anatomy1. palisade mesophyll 5.

stomata

2. spongy mesophyll 6. xylem

3. epidermis 7. phloem

4. cuticle

B. In lab:1. Ligustrum - leaf section (no. 8)

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Leaf anatomy

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Simple versus compound leaves

a. Simpleb. Compound

i. palmateii. pinnate

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RootsA. Anatomy

1.epidermis 5. casparian strip2.cortex 6. pericycle3.stele 7. xylem4.endodermis 8. phloem

B. In lab:1.Ranunculus - root (no. 9)2.Salix - branch root (no. 10)3.radish root hairs4.sweet potato demo - storage root5.carrot - root stores sugars

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Primary growth of a root

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Organization of primary tissues in young roots

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The formation of lateral roots

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Root hairs of a radish seedling

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Storage organs

A. white potato demo - modified stem

B. green onion demo - leaves modified for storage

C. celery - leaf petiole modified

D. sweet potato demo - storage root

E. carrot - root stores sugars

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Principal Biological Concepts this lab:

A. Angiosperms as dominant plant taxon.B. Ovules enclosed within two integuments and a carpel

wall.C. Structure and function of flowers, and importance of

pollinators.D. Carpel wall may ripen as pericarp = fruit.E. Monocots versus dicotsF. Double fertilization.G. Plant tissues.H. Primary and secondary growth.I. Structure and function of shoots, roots, and leaves.

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To study for next lab practical

• Moncots vs dicots• Flower parts• Leaf structures• Stem structures, xylem vs phloem,

monocots vs dicot vasculature• Root tissues & functions• Xylem vs phloem

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Complete Plant Cladistic Exercise

A. Follow directions in Plant Cladistics data sheet (pp. 123-124).

B. Complete the cladogram and hand in before you leave.