plants, fungi and the colonization of land hbio ch 17

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Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

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Page 1: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land

HBio Ch 17

Page 2: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

What is Kingdom Plantae??• strictly Multicellular –

specialized tissues and systems, including growth regions (meristems), true stems and leaves

• Chlorophylls a & b, plus accessory pigments

• Store food as starch, cellulose in cell walls

• Sexual & Asexual reproduction

Page 3: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Kingdom Protista vs. Kingdom Plantae

Page 4: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Alternation of GenerationsSexual Reproduction -

• Life cycle alternates between gametophyte generation (haploid) –makes gametes

• Sporophyte generation (diploid)

• makes spores

Page 5: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

–embryophytes – multicellular, dependent embryo at gametophyte stage; differs from algae

Page 6: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Algae life cyclealternation of generations

Page 7: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

How did life emerge from the sea?

Page 8: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Symbiosis led to invasion of land- Fungal Partners -

• Lichens– Cyanobacteria or algae

+ fungi

– Pioneer species• Make soil

– Ecological indicator

Page 9: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Kingdom Fungi

                                                             

Page 10: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Kingdom Fungi• Mostly multicellular, one

unicellular• Extracellular

digestion/absorbtion - DECOMPOSERS

• Sexual (mating strands) and asexual reproduction (fragmentation, budding)

• All mass of a fungus is one cell type– Hyphae (singular), mycelium

(mass of hyphae)• Mushroom is the “sexual organ”• Cell wall made of chiton (like

insect exoskeleton)• More closely related to animals

than to plants in physiology

Page 11: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17
Page 12: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Pathogenic Fungus (mycosis)

Page 13: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17
Page 14: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Where did plants come from?-green & red algae (K. Protista)

charyophyceans

Page 15: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

• What is needed to move out of the water environment of algae – What “concerns” do plants have that algae don’

t?

Page 16: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

                                                       

Page 17: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Earliest plants

• Bryophytes– One simple step up

from algae– Non-vascular

• O&D

– Haploid spores produced, not seeds

Page 18: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Later - Vascular plants (bigger, better, faster, more)

• Tracheophytes– Able to survive dryer conditions– A way to move water and nutrients

• Xylem & phloem• Roots, stems, leaves

– Symbiosis with fungi• mycorrhizae

Page 19: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Protection from dessication • Cuticle

• stomata

Page 20: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

And even later, a way to survive tough times…

• Non-seed plants vs. seed plants

Page 21: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

Sexual Reproduction

• Spore – Haploid tissue– can’t survive

long without water

• Seed– Embyro is diploid

tissue– Embryo +

endosperm (triploid tissue) + seed coat

– Can wait for conditions to be right for survival

Page 22: Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land HBio Ch 17

And more complex ways of making & distributing those seeds…

• Gymnosperm vs. Angiosperm (monocot/dicot)