ch. 30 plant diversity ii the evolution of seed plants diversity ii the evolution of seed plants ......

Post on 03-May-2018

225 Views

Category:

Documents

5 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

1Jan 29­8:44 AM

Ch. 30 Plant Diversity II

The Evolution of Seed plants

ancient squash seed

2Jan 29­8:48 AM

Essential Question:

How did the emergence of seed plants change the course of evolution?

3Mar 15­8:51 AM

Common traits of all seed plants

1. gametophyte reduction in size

2. heterospory

3. Ovules and production of eggs

4. Pollen and production of sperm

5. Seeds

4Jan 29­8:50 AM

Common traits of all seed plants:

1. reduced gametophytes ­ can be microscopic

5Jan 29­8:53 AM

advantages of reduced gametophyte

a. protection of female gametophytes from environmental changes

b. help prevent drought

c. protect from UV radiation

d.can obtain nutrients from sporophytes

6Jan 29­8:58 AM

2. Heterospory

• each megasporangia produces 1 megaspore (spore from a heterosporous plant species that develops into a female gametophyte)

• each microsporangia produces many microspores (a spore from a hetersporous plant species that develops into a male gametophyte)

7Jan 29­9:01 AM

3. Ovules and production of eggslayers of integument enclose megasporegymnosperms ­ 1 integumentangiosperms ­ two integumentswhole structure = ovule

8Jan 29­9:03 AM

4. Pollen and production of sperm• microspores become pollen grains (male gametophytes)• protected by sporopollenin (tough coat polymer)• carried by wind, animals for pollination• Purpose: reproduction over long distances• advantages: long distance, no motility needed

yellow iris pollen

http://www.microscopy­uk.org.uk/mag/indexmag.html?http://www.microscopy­uk.org.uk/mag/artjul99/pollen.html

9Jan 29­9:08 AM

5. Evolution of seeds

Advantages:• multicellular layer of tissue (seed coat) ­ extra protection for embryo ­can resist harsh conditions

• Supply of food within ­ can remain dormant for years

• disperse widely

10Jan 29­9:18 AM

Gymnosperms = plants that have naked seedsnot enclosed in ovaries

evolution of gymnosperms360 million years ago, became extinctCarboniferous period started, then Permian period (more dry

so favored gymnosperms)­needle shaped leaves, thick cuticles helped with water conservation

dominate the Mesozoic Era

11Jan 29­9:11 AM

Phylum Cycadophyta

http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/seedplants/cycadophyta/cycads.html

Have large cones and palmlike leaves

most prevalent duringMesozoic era

~130 species today

12Jan 29­9:16 AM

Phylum Ginkophyta

Ginkgo biloba

fanlike leaves that turn gold in autumn

ornamental tree

seeds smell rancid when decay

13Jan 29­9:18 AM

Phylum Gnetophyta

Welwitschia ­ SW Africa

Gnetum subtropical Africa/Asia

some tropical and desert species

3 genera

Ephedra Desert shrubsproduce ephedrine (decongestant)

14Jan 29­9:28 AM

Phylum Coniferophyta

SequoiaDouglas Fir

15Jan 29­9:30 AM

Largest of gymnosperm phyla

600 species

most are evergreens

bristlecone pineoldest living tree4,600 years old

Pacific yew ­ source of taxolovarian cancer drug

16Jan 29­9:33 AM

Life Cycleof a pine

17Jan 29­9:36 AM

male pollen cone

female cones

http://oregonstate.edu/trees/con/spp/big/lppbg064.GIF

18Jan 29­9:38 AM

Angiosperms ­ Flowering plants

19Jan 29­9:45 AM

Angiosperms ­ are seed plants that produce reproductive structures called flowers or fruits

Evolution140 million years ago ­ late Mesozoic

hypothesis of carpel from early reproductive leaf

20Jan 29­9:39 AM

flower ­ specialized for sexual reproduction

sepals ­ enclose flower before it opens

petals ­ aid to attract pollinators

stamen ­ produce microsporesthat develop pollen grains

carpels ­ make megaspores which make female gametophytes

21Jan 29­9:49 AM

Fruits= mature ovary

22Mar 15­9:35 AM

Types of fruit:

fleshy = wall of ovary is soft during ripeningEx. oranges, plums, grapes

Dry fruits = wall is hard during ripeningEx. beans nuts, grains

23Mar 15­9:32 AM

fleshy fruit

dry fruit

24Jan 29­9:45 AM

Pollinator relationships

25Mar 15­9:38 AM

adaptations for dispersal:

• parachutes/propellers ­ dandelions, maples

• water dispersal ­ coconuts

• barbs ­ so animals carry them

• animals eating ­ seeds come out in feces

26Mar 15­9:43 AM

Life cycle of angiosperm

27Mar 15­9:44 AM

28Mar 15­9:45 AM

29Jan 29­9:41 AM

double fertilization

30Mar 15­9:50 AM

Angiosperm Diversity

Monocots ­ species with on cotyledon

Eudicots ­ species with two cotyledons

Basal Angiosperms ­ three lineages, formerly grouped with dicots; oldest lineages

Magnoliids ­ evolved later; more closely related to eudicots and monocots

31Mar 15­10:00 AM

Basal Angiosperms

32Mar 15­10:02 AM

magnoliids

33Mar 15­10:04 AM

Monocots Dicots

34Mar 15­10:03 AM

Monocots Dicots

35Mar 15­10:06 AM

Monocots

36Mar 15­10:08 AM

Dicots

37Jan 29­9:53 AM

Products from seed plants for Humans

1. food

2. tea, coffee

3. spices (ex. cloves, saffron, vanilla, black pepper)

4. sources of wood

5. medicinesex. atropine (pupil dilator) ­ belladonna plant menthol (cough medicines)­ eucalyptus tree

morphine (pain reliver) ­ Opium poppydigitalin (heart medication) ­ Fox glove

38Mar 15­10:11 AM

How did the emergence of seed plants change the course of evolution?

39Feb 25­8:48 AM

top related