Lab 5: Plant Diversity I
2n
Diploid. 2n. Having 2 sets of homologous chromosomes. Humans somatic cells are 2n and have 23 pairs, or 46 chromosomes.
Why are land plants so successful?
They evolved key diagnostic traits that provide increasing support of the embryo and allowed survival on land.
Seedless vascular plant; lycophyte, clubmoss (genus Lycopodium
club moss (genus Lycopodium)
phloem
conducts most of the sugars, amino acids, and other products through the plant.
xylem
conducts most of water and dissolved nutrients like minerals up from the roots
gemmae cups
cup-like structure growing on the thalli of liverworts
Seedless vascular plant; monilophyte, horsetail (genus Equisetum)
horsetail
True Ferns
true fern
cuticle
waxy covering that keeps cells from losing water
What seedless vascular plants can you see on campus?
whisk ferns (genus Psilotum) and true ferns.
What do the sperm and egg form when they combine?
zygote
thallus
stem-like and leaf-like, root-like plant body in the nonvascular plants (bryophytes)
vascular tissue
transport fluids, the xylem and phloem.
Is the zygote 1n or 2n?
2n. The sperm and egg are each 1n and combine to form the 2n zygote.
What is a true moss?
A land plant that is also in the clade of bryophytes. Sphagnum moss is a true moss because it is a bryophyte. Club mosses and spike mosses are seedless vascular plants and are not true mosses. Ball mosses are angiosperms and are not true mosses.
alternation of generations
A life cycle in with there are distinct multicellular stages. In land plants have a 2n multicellular sporophyte that produces spores and a 1n multicellular gametophyte that produces gametes.
What are the five evolutionary derived key traits for survival on land? These are synapomorphies.
Alternation of generations, multicellular embryos, sporangia produce walled spores, gametangia produce gametes, apical meristems allow growth.
What are the vascular plants with seeds and flowers?
Angiosperms (flowering plants)
Which group of plants have flagellated sperm that must swim to the eggs, requiring a water environment?
Bryophytes have flagelatted sperm and are dependent on water. Marchantia (liverwort), true mosses, hornworts.
Which group of land plants does not have vascular tissue?
Bryophytes. Represented by liverworts (genus Marchantia), true mosses and hornworts.
autotrophic
Can convert energy from non-living forms into biologically useful energy from light (photosynthesis) or inorganic chemicals (chemosynthesis).
mitosis
Cell division in which both daughter cells have the same number and kind of chromosomes as the parent cell. (Most cellular division in growth)
meiosis
Cell division in which the daughter cells have half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
epiphytic
Epiphytes use other plants as a substrate but they do not harm them. Epiphytes are not parasites.
What is the genus of the horsetail, and how is it descriptive?
Equisetum. Equis refers to horse, and the strobilus looks like a horse's tail.
What key character evolved on the lineage to the angiosperms?
Flowers
Of the four main groups of land plants, which two dominate the current landscape? (bryophytes, seedless vascular plants, gymnosperms, angiosperms)?
Gymnosperms and angiosperms
What are the first vascular plants with seeds (naked seeds)?
Gymnosperms are the conifers, ginkgos, and cycads
gametes
Haploid sex cells that unite to form the zygote.
1n
Haploid. 1n. Having a single set of homologous chromosomes. Human egg and sperm are 1n and have 23 chromosomes.
strobili
Hold the sporangia (spore bearing structures) in the seedless vascular plants (horsetail, club mosses and spike mosses). They are larger and more visible in the horsetail.
Sori - on fronds
Hold the sporangia in the true fern. Sori typically look like black disks on the back of fern leaves (fronds). The spornagia produce spores.
spores definition 1 for plants
In plants, a haploid reproductive cells that can develop into multicellular haploid organisms (the gametophyte).
zone of elongation
In the root tissue, the growth region or zone just behind the dividing meristematic cells, where the cells grow larger and elongate.
zone of maturation
In the root tissue, the region or zone just after the zone of elongation, where the newly elongated cells can differentiate into specialized cells (for example, epidermis, cortex, vascular tissue)
root cap
In the root tissue, the structure made of specialized cells that cover the tip of the root and protect it as it grows through the soil.
What are the four important features of land plants the embryophytes?
Like all protists they are eukaryotes. Like some protists they have chloroplasts, and are multicellular. They are a clade derived from protists (green algae).
What are three non-vascular plant groups?
Liverworts (genus Marchantia), mosses, hornworts
In which group are the female and male gametophytes separate plant structures?
Marchantia which is a liverwort, a bryophyte or non-vascular plant
What bryophytes can you see on campus?
Mosses on trees and around downspouts or wet shaded areas.
sporangia
Multicellular diploid organs that produce spores
gametangia
Multicellular haploid organs that produce gametes.
Are all plants also land plants?
No, the group we call plants all have chloroplasts, while the group we specify as land plants have four additional features and five derived key traits for survival on land.
Can bryophytes grow to be very large?
No, they lack vascular tissue. Because fluids must move from cell to cell by diffusion, they cannot grow large.
Do humans show alternation of generations?
No. Humans and animals have haploid cells, but they never produce a multicellular gametophyte structure. Animals only produce single-celled gametes, not a separate multicellular generation.
Sori closeup of sporangia
Note the closeup of the sporangia. You can see the dark spores in the sporangia.
bryophyte; liverwort. genus Marchantia
Note the thalli (leaf-like) and the archegonia (female gametophytes)
chloroplasts
Organelles that conduct photosynthesis or conversion of light energy to food energy. Allows cells to be autotrophic.
eukaryote (Eukarya)
Organisms in the domain Eukarya; cells with a true nucleus (or "kernal").
rhizoids
Root-like structures in the non-vascular plants (bryophytes). The gametophytes of true ferns are non vascular and also have rhizoids. Note that the sporophytes of true ferns have vascular tissue and have true roots.
What key character evolved on the lineage to the gymnosperms and angiosperms?
Seeds. Both have seeds, but the seeds are naked in gymnosperms, and protected within angiosperms.
Ranunculus root - note the vascular tissue
Similar but not identical to the slide you saw in class. Note the xylem and phloem in the central core of the root. The xylem forms a cross and surrounded by phloem.
corn prop root - note the vascular tissue
Similar but not identical to the slide you saw in class. Note the xylem and phloem in the internal ring of the root. The xylem makes up the larger circles in the internal ring and is surrounded by the smaller phloem cells. The pith is centrally located in the root.
What are the seedless vascular plants?
There are two groups 1) the lycophytes: club "mosses", spike "mosses", and quillworts (no specimen), and 2) the monilophytes: whisk "ferns", horsetails, and true ferns
What are the bryophytes?
These are the nonvascular land plants; liverworts (genus Marchantia), mosses, hornworts
What does the word moss refer to?
Soft, small, and green type of plant. Club mosses and spike mosses are seedless vascular plants that are soft, green but are not true mosses in the Clade Bryophyta. Ball mosses are in the clade of angiosperms because they have flowers.
What are gemmae cups?
Structures that grow on the upper side of the leaf-like thalli of Marchantia (bryophyte liverwort). Gemmae give rise to the antheridia and archaegonia structures.
Name two epiphytes
The club moss Lycopodium, and many of the ferns you saw outdoors that grow on trees such as the resurrection fern (pointed out on the walk and in the photo).
What structure produces eggs?
The female gametangia is the archegonia
archegonia
The female gametangia that produce eggs
gametophyte
The generation that produces the gametes. 1n.
sporophyte
The generation that produces the spores. 2n
embryophytes (Embryophyta)
The land plants. The term refers to the multicellular embryos that are dependent on the female parent. The most successful groups provide the greatest support for the embryo.
frond
The leaflike part of a fern.
What structure produces sperm?
The male gametangia is the antheridia
antheridia
The male gametangia that produce sperm
leaf anatomy
The model in class showed the top layer of cuticle, then epidermis, palisade parynchyma cells, spongy parenchyma cells with the xylem and phloem, then lower epidermis and lower cuticle. Note the stomata and guard cells in the lower epidermis.
cellulose
The primary component of cell walls of green plants.
parasitic
The process when one organism (the parasite) lives on or in another organism (the host) and harms the host.
How is the female organism defined in biology?
The sex that produces the large gamete
sporangia
The structure that produces spores
meristematic tissue
Tissue in which there is active cell division and in which tissue that can differentiate into other tissues.
roots, true roots.
True roots have vascular tissue and anchor plants.
What key character evolved on the lineage to the seedless vascular plants, gymnosperms, and angiosperms?
Vascular tissue. Vascular tissue evolved early in the lineage shared by the three groups.
Seedless vascular plant; monilophyte, whisk fern (genus Psilotum)
Whisk fern - you can see them on campus in the landscaped beds, especially among the rocks.
Are humans related to plants?
Yes, all life has arisen from one or a few forms and all are related to one another, however distantly. Both plants and animals belong to the same domain, Eukarya and are more closely related to each other than they are to the bacteria or archaea (the other two domains of life).
Are plants alive?
Yes. Plants are alive. It is a common misconception that living things must move. Although plants do move (some track the sun, some have motile sperm) movement is not a requirement for life.
fragmentation
a kind of asexual reproduction where a portion of the plant can break off and produce a new plant. For example, the thalli of Marchantia can propagate by asexual reproduction.
spores definition 2 - more general.
a reproductive cell capable of developing into a new individual without fusion with another reproductive cell. Spores thus differ from gametes, which are reproductive cells that must fuse in pairs in order to give rise to a new individual. May be able to withstand dry environments.
protected spores (protected with tough cell walls).
allow for survival for many years in times of drought, can travel far by wind or animals such as insects.
Are land plants autotrophic or heterotrophic?
autotrophic
What are the four main groups of land plants?
bryophytes, seedless vascular plants, gymnosperms, angiosperms
synapomorphy
characteristics present in an ancestral species & shared by its evolutionary descendants. Same as shared derived characters.
What structure are gametes produced in?
gametangia in the gametophyte generation
Which generation is dominant in the bryophytes?
gametophyte is dominant in the bryophytes (liverworts, mosses)
What group did the land plants evolve from?
green algae (a protist)
mega
means large, often referring to female structures (megaspores, megasporangium, megagametophyte)
micro
means small, often referring to male structures (microspores, microsporangium, microgametophyte)
What are some vegetative and reproductive structures that are adaptations to dry land?
meristematic tissue, thallus and rhizoids, stomata, cuticles, vascular tissue, stiff cell walls, roots, leaves, stems, protected spores, tissues to support the embryo.
Apical meristem (meristematic tissue: corn prop root)
meristematic tissue: corn prop root
embryo
once the zygote cell begins to divide and multiply it becomes the embryo.
stomata
openings that regulate gas exchange and control water loss
heterosporous
produces both megaspores and microspores
homosporous
produces only one kind of spore (mega or microspores)
apical meristems
regions of cell division at the tips of roots and shoots (and sometimes on the sides of shoots that grow branches).
apical meristems (meristematic tissue)
regions of cell division at the tips of roots and shoots (and sometimes on the sides of shoots that grow branches). These can differentiate into multiple tissues.
Seedless vascular plant; lycophyte, spike moss (genus Selaginella)
spike moss (genus Selaginella)
What structure produces spores?
sporangia in the sporophyte generation
Which generation is dominant in all land plants except the bryophytes?
sporophyte
What are the two generations that alternate in plant life cycles?
sporophyte (2n) and gametophyte (1n)