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Non-Vascular Plants

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Non-Vascular Plants Evolution of Land Plants Land plants evolved from green algae The green algae called charophyceans are the closest relatives of land plants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Non-Vascular Plants


1
Non-Vascular Plants
2
Evolution of Land Plants
  • Land plants evolved from green algae
  • The green algae called charophyceans are the
    closest relatives of land plants
  • Comparisons of both nuclear and chloroplast genes
  • Point to charophyceans as the closest living
    relatives of land plants

3
Origin and Diversification of Plants
  • Fossil evidence indicates that plants were on
    land at least 475 million years ago
  • Whatever the age of the first land plants those
    ancestral species gave rise to a vast diversity
    of modern plants

4
Plant Evolution
5
Bryophytes
  • Life cycles of mosses and other bryophytes are
    dominated by the gametophyte stage
  • Bryophytes are represented today by three phyla
    of small herbaceous (nonwoody) plants
  • Liverworts, phylum Hepatophyta
  • Hornworts, phylum Anthocerophyta
  • Mosses, phylum Bryophyta

6
Bryophytes
  • Nonvascular (pass water cell-to-cell)
  • Seedless (reproduce by spores)
  • Low growing
  • Phylum Bryophyta (also includes liverworts
    hornworts)
  • Grow on moist brick walls, in sidewalks, as thick
    mats on forest floors, and on the shaded side of
    trees

7
Bryophytes
  • Can survive periodic dry spells, reviving when
    water becomes available
  • Require water for fertilization so sperm can swim
    to egg
  • Rhizoids (root like structures) anchor mosses
  • Have waxy covering called cuticle on aerial parts
    to prevent desiccation

8
  • Dominant form of a moss is a clump of leafy
    green gametophytes 
    (photosynthetic)
  •  Moss alternates between a haploid (1n)
    gametophyte and diploid (2n) sporophyte
  • Gametophyte generation produces gametes (eggs
    Sperm)
  • Sporophyte generation forms at the top of the
    gametophytes and produces spores 
  • Stalk-like sporophytes lack chlorophyll
  • Capsule at the top of the sporophyte forms
    haploid (1n) spores

 a Diploid (2n) sporophyte stage (contains two
sets of chromosomes, one from male and one from
female) and a Haploid (1n) gametophyte stage
(contains one set of chromosomes) This type of
life cycle is called Alternation of Generations
9
  • Sexual reproduction in Moss
  • Moss produce 2 kinds of jacketed gametes --- eggs
    sperm
  • Egg producing organ is called the archegonium
  • Eggs are larger and nonmotile
  • Sperm producing organ is called the antheridium
  • Sperm are smaller, flagellated cells
  • Antheridia archegonia are both part of the
    gametophyte plant
  • Fertilization can occur only during or soon
    after RAIN  when the gametophyte is covered with
    Water
  • Sperm swim to the egg by following a trail of
    chemicals released by the egg in the water
  • Fertilization produces a zygote that becomes
    a sporophyte
  • Mature sporophytes produce homosporous spores
    (all the same type)
  • Mature capsules open release spores spread
    by wind
  • Spores landing on moist places germinate
    into protonema that become new gametophytes

10
Only the zygote is 2n
11
Liverworts
  • Have no true roots or shoots
  • Non- vascular
  • Require water to reproduce
  • Have no or very little leaf structure
  • Cannot live in sporophyte form

12
Hornworts
  • Free-floating aquatic plant, or land plant
  • No vascular tissue
  • No true leaves or roots
  • Can live in both gametophyte and sporophyte forms

13
Mosses
  • Land plant
  • Most have no vascular tissue
  • Majority of life spent in gametophyte stage
  • Need water to breed
  • No leaves or roots
  • Sporophytes are capsules on stalks
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