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Chapter 29 Plant Diversity I: The Colonization of Land AP Biology Requirements for Successful Life on Land  Supporting mechanism (vascular tissue, lignin)  Absorptive structures (above & below ground)  Conducting tissues (move fluids)  Anti-desiccation (drying out) adaptations for body of plant (cuticle) & gametes (pollen & spores)  Airborne gamete dispersal General Characteristics of Plants  Includes mosses, ferns, conifers, flowering plants  Multicellular, eukaryotic, photosynthetic autotroph  Chlorophyll a, b, and carotenoids  Cellulose  Starch General Characteristics of Plants, cont.  Alternation of generations (more next)  Most have stomata for gas exchange (Liverworts the exception)  Secrete cuticle to reduce desiccation  Most have vascular tissue for bulk transport of water and materials  Exchange of materials between adjacent cells through opening in cell walls (plasmodesmata)  Most have seeds (embryo with food & protective covering) Alternation of Generations  Gametes produced & protected within gametangia (nonreproductive cells to prevent desiccation & for protection)  Fertilization of egg takes place here (Female = archegonium; Male = antheridium) Alternation of Generations, cont.  Sporophyte & gametophyte are structurally (look & develop) different (heteromorphic)  Both structures are multicellular (unlike animals)  Sporophyte dominant in most species  Meiosis in sporophyte produces haploid reproductive cells (spores)  Spores can develop into a new organism without fusing with another cell Proposed Ancestors of Plants  Charophyceans are the green algae most related to land plants  Several lines of evidence support this including:  Homologous chloroplasts, cell walls, peroxisomes, sperm  Phragmoplasts – microtubules form perpendicular to cell plate and guide deposition of cellulose to form wall  Molecular systematics  Charophyceans had a layer of sporopollenin to prevent exposed zygotes from drying out until they are in water again Classified Into 2 Major Groups 1. Nonvascular plants (aka Bryophytes)    Bryophyta: mosses Anthocrophyta: Hornworts Heptophyta: Liverworts 2. Vascular Plants (aka Tracheophytes)  Seedless vascular plants (Pteridophytes)   Lycophyta: Lycophytes Pterophyta: Ferns & Horsetails  Seeded vascular plants  Naked seeded plants (Gymnosperms)     Coniferophyta: Conifers Cycadophyda: Cycads Gnetophyta: Gnetae Ginkgophyta: Ginko  Flowering plants and enclosed seeds (Angiophyta)  Flowering plants Nonvascular Plants: Bryophytes  Gametophyte dominant form  Lack vascular tissues  Limits size (can’t grow tall)  Rely on diffusion  Rhizoids – analogous to roots; used for anchorage  Male flagellated sperm produced by the gametangium (antheridium)  Female egg produced by the gametangium (archegonium)  Sporophyte produces haploid spores within sporangium  3 Divisions:  Bryophyta (mosses); ex: Sphagnum (peat moss)  Heptophyta (Liverworts); sexual and asexual reproduction  Anthocerophyta (hornworts) Vascular Plants: Tracheophytes  Key adaptations to success on land:  Seeds – protect embryo & provide food for initial growth  Pollen – airborne dispersal; Sporopollenin in walls of spores  Sporophyte dominant  Vascular tissues – phloem & xylem; specialization of parts of plant for specific functions (true roots, stems, and leaves)  Ligninfied cell walls – supports plant in air Seedless Vascular Plants  Division Lycophyta  Club mosses  Many are epiphytes – grow on other plants but not parasitic  Sporangia produced on specialized leaves for reproduction called sporophylls  Most species are homosporous – produce a single type of spore that can produce a gametophyte with antheridia and archegonia  Heterosporous species – have sporophytes that produce separate spores  Megaspores – produce female archegonia on female gametophyte  Microspores – produce male antherdia on male gametophyte Seedless Vascular Plants  Division Sphenophyta  Horsetail (Equisetum) – only extant genus  Homosporous  Silica in cell walls make stems abrasive  Gametophyte is free-living; can photosynthesize and not dependent on sporophyte for nutrients Seedless Vascular Plants  Division Pterophyta  Ferns – dominant seedless vascular plant  Large leaves (fronds) – compound with smaller leaflets  Leaves are megaphylls – leaves with branched vascular tissues/veins  Homosporous  Sporangia develop on specialized sporophylls  Sporangia grow in clusters (sori) on underside  Flagellated sperm – require water & fertilization of egg in archegonium  Sporophyte protected in archogonium and emerges from ground as fiddlehead