Chapter 29: Plant Diversity

Major plant division

  • Vascular

    • Lycophyta

    • Monilophyta

  • Nonvascular: do not have vascular tissue 

    • Hepatophyta

    • Bryophyta

    • Anthocerophyta 

  • Seedless plants 

    • Gymnosperms

    • Angiosperms: biggest category 

  • There have been 5 key innovations during plant evolution

  • A few trends are evident in plant evolution

    • Get bigger with the evolution of vascular tissue

    • Growth of the sporophyte phase

    • Shrinkage of the gametophyte phase

    • Live in a wider range of habitats with the evolution of seed

  • Plants are important to the ecosystem in general

    • Oxygen 

    • Food

    • Create habitat

    • Fuel 

    • Medicine

Archaeplastida (=Plantae)

  • Archaeplastida consists of two major groups 

    • Red algae 

    • Green algae + land plants

    • Land plants are nested within green algae (i.e., green algae are paraphyletic with respect to land plants)

What is a Plant?

  • Multicellular, photosynthetic organisms

    • About 325,00 spp

    • Cell walls of cellulose 

    • Chloroplasts with chlorophylls a and b

    • These traits found among protists as well

  • True land plants (e.g., mosses, ferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms) are called embryophytes 

  • Their embryos are dependent on the maternal plant [all land plants have this is common]

Land plants synapomorphies

  • All land plants share 4 key features 

  1. Alternation of generations with multicellular dependent embryos 

  2. Walled spores that contain sporopollenin 

  • Spores produced in structures called sporangium 

  • Charophytes lack multi-celled sporangia; no sporopollenin in their spores (but present in their zygotes) 

  1. Multicellular gametangia: specialized structures where gametes are found 

  2. Apical meristems: areas of growth on shoot and root tips

  • Apical meristem cells can divide throughout the plant’s life, enabling its roots and shoots to elongate and increase exposure to environmental resources 

Five Key Events in Land Plant Evolution

  • Multicellularity (1.4 Bya) 

  • Invasion of land (470 Mya)

  • Vascular tissue (425 Mya) 

  • Seed plants (360 Mya)

  • Flowers (140 Mya)

Grades of plant morphology 

  • Nonvascular plants

    • Liverworts, hornworts, mosses

  • Vascular plants

    • Free-sporing plants: lycophytes (clubmosses) and monilophytes (ferns and friends)

    • Seed plants: gymnosperms (e.g., pine trees & cycads) and angiosperms (flowering plants)

Earliest Land Plants Lacked Vascular Tissue 

  • Vascular tissue: specialized cells that transport water, nutrients, etc.

  • Bryophytes are nonvascular plants

    • Three groups

      • Liverworts

      • Hornworts

      • Mosses

  • Form a “grade” rather than a clade; “bryophyta” is not monophyletic 

    • Typically form low “carpetes” rather than upright branches 

  • Bryophyte life cycles dominated by short gametophyte, with tall, slender sporophyte 

Plant Life Cycle

  • Alternation of generations: alternating, multicellular haploid (n) and diploid (2n) phases 

    • Sporophytes (2n) produces spores (n) by meiosis

    • Spores (n) development into gametophytes (n)

    • Gametophytes (n) produce gametes (n) by mitosis 

    • Gametes (n) fuse to produce sporophytes (2n)

Dominant phase varies among plant groups 

Bryophyte life Cycles Dominated by Gametophyte

  • Gametophytes (n) develop from spores (n)

  • Larger and longer living relative to sporangia

  • Gametophytes (n) have either female or male gametangia 

    • Archegonia: produce eggs

    • Antheridia: produce flagellated sperm 

  • Sperm must swim thru water to fertilize eggs

    • Limits mosses to moist habitats 

Innovations of Vascular Plants 

  • Vascular plant life cycle dominated by sporophyte, with reduction of the gametophyte 

  • Vascular tissue: xylem to transport water, phloem to transport organic molecules 

    • Reinforced with lignin: allowed plants to get bigger

  • Roots: organs to absorb water & nutrients from soil; not merely anchors 

    • Allowed plants to get bigger

  • Leaves: increase surface area for photosynthesis

    • Allowed plants to get bigger

    • Microphyll

      • Small, spine-shaped leaves with unbranched vasculature (lycophytes)

    • Megaphyll

      • Highly branched vasculature

    • Sporophylls: modified leaves bearing sporangia 

      • Many sporangia per plant

Seedless Vascular Plant Life Cycles Dominated by Sporophyte Stage

  • Fern life cycle similar to that bryophyte

    • Sporagnia organized into sori on the sporophylls 

  • EXCEPT that: 

    • The (hermaphroditic) gametophyte stage is much smaller than the sporophyte 

Two Extant Phyla of Seedless Vascular Plants

  • Phylum lycophyta, 1,200 spp. 

    • Club mosses, spike mosses, quillworts

  • Phylum Monilophyta, 12,000 spp.

    • fern, horsetails, and whisk ferns

    • More closely related to seed plants: share derived characters related to leaf and root growth  

Lycophyta

  • Clubmoss

  • Quillwort

  • Spikemoss

Monilophyta

  • Fern

  • Horsetail

  • Whisk fern 

Five Key Events in Land Plant Evolution

  • Multicellularity (1.4 Bya) 

  • Invasion of land (470 Mya)

  • Vascular tissue (425 Mya) 

  • Seed plants (360 Mya)

  • Flowers (140 Mya)

Three Evolutionary Innovations of seed plants

  1. Further reduction of the gametophyte stage 

  2. Variation in spore size

  • Most seedless plants homosporous

  • Heterosporous: male and female spores of different sizes 

    • Female megaspores produced by megasporangia 

      • Larger spore

  • Male microspores produced by microsporangia 

    • Smaller spore 

  1. Seeds: embryo + food supply in protective coat 

Male Gametophyte = Pollen

  • Seedless plants: flagellated sperm swim from male gametophyte (antheridium) to female gametophyte (archegonium)

  • Seed Plants: tiny male gametophyte transported to female gametophyte 

    • Microspore develops into pollen grain: male gametophyte in sporopollenin coat 

      • Sporopollenin coat: helps prevent drying out

    • Pollination: transport by wind or animal (e.g. bees) to female reproductive structure 

Two Major Extant Clades of Seed Plants

  • Gymnosperm, “naked seeds” on cones 

    • Phylum Cycadophyta 

    • Phylum Gnetophyta

    • Phylum Ginkophyta 

    • Phylum Coniferophyta 

  • Angiosperms, flowering plants, seeds “contained” in fruits 

    • Phylum Anthophyta 

      • Basal angiosperms (paraphyletic ambarella, water lilies, etc.)

      • Magnoliids 

      • Monocots

      • Eudicots 

The Gymnosperm Life Cycle Allows Them to Live in Drier Habitats

  • Pine tree= mature sporophyte 

    • (male) pollen cones with microsporocytes 

    • (female) ovule comes with megasporocyte

  • Microsporocyte develops into male gametophyte [pollen (haploid)] than makes sperm  

  • Normally transferred by wind for gymnosperms 

  • Megasporocyte develops into female gametophyte that makes eggs 

  • Pollination leads to fertilization

    • No need for swimming

    • Seed contains embryo (2n), food reserve (n), maternal seed coat (2n) 

  • Seed germinates to become seedling

  • Whole cycle takes 3 years 

Fertilized Female Ovules Become Seeds

  • Ovule = megaspore + megasporangium + integument 

    • Integument: sporophyte tissue (2n)

    • Megasporangium: sporophyte tissue (2n) 

    • megaspore  develops into female gametophyte 

    • Female gametophyte (n) produces egg (n)

    • Egg (n) fertilized by sperm (n) produced by male gametophyte (n) following pollination 

      • Sperm transported  via pollen tube thru the micropyle

      • Seed: sporophyte embryo (2n) encased in maternal sporophyte tissue 

What are the Advantages of Seeds?

  • Seeds are better for dispersal than spores; can remain viable longer  

    • Spore single cells

    • Seeds have multicellular coats & a store of food

  • Seeds can remain dormant until conditions are right for germination 

  • Seeds can be dispersed farther 

Angiosperms take these Advantages Further with Flowers and Fruits

  • Flowers: sex-organs made of up to 4 rings of specialized leaves (sporophylls)

    • Sterile 

      • Sepal: outermost ring, usually green 

      • Petals: may be brightly colored to attract pollinators (e.g., bees, hummingbirds)

    • Fertile 

      • Stamens: males flower-parts

        • Anthers on filaments; produce pollen 

      • Carpals: female flower-parts (1+ per flower)

        • Sticky stigma binds pollen; style connects it to ovary (1+ ovules

  • Fruits: mature ovary

    • Many forms: fleshy, dry, etc. 

    • Aid in dispersal: can be carried by animals 

The Angiosperm life cycle is highly specialized

  • The steps of the process should be familiar, with a few interesting modifications

  • Female gametophyte has large central cell with 2 nuclei (n+n)

  • Pollen releases 2 sperm

    • 1 fertilizes embryo (2n)

    • 1 fuses with 2 nuclei in central cell: endosperm (3n)

  • Endosperm is the food supply for the seed 

Angiosperm Phylogeny

  • Angiosperms are a monophyletic group

  • Bennettitales are an extinct group that had a reproductive structure reminiscent of the flower 

Ancestral Angiosperm Flower

  • Sauquet et al. 2017 reconstructed a hypothetical ancestral flower

  • Characteristics

    • Hermaphroditic 

    • Petal-life organs in whorls

  • Magnolia flowers are probably similar to the ancestral angiosperm flower

Animals are dependent on plants, and vice versa

  • Herbivory: animals feeding on plants; plants have various adaptation to keep from being eaten

    • E.g., chemical: caffeine, nicotine, morphine, cyanide

    • E.g., mechanical: thorns, silica crystals 

  • Many fruits are adapted for animal transport 

  • Plant-pollinator relationships maybe highly specialized 

    • Co-evolution of insects and flowering plants may explain their great diversity 

Plants have many uses

  • Food: 80% of our calories come from only 6 crops (mostly rice, corn, and wheat)

  • USA: we use corn in everything 

  • Food for other food: plants to feed livestock

  • Wood (shelter, fuel), fibers (clothing), moss for peat

  • Herbal medicines (2° compounds)

  • Nutrient cycling

  • Fix carbon, use excess CO2

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