Lecture 3: Lycopsids: Ancient plants in a modern world Flashcards

1
Q

3 facts about lycopsids

A
  • most primitive extant vascular plants (lignified &most basal)
  • sister group to all other vascular groups
  • till present today &therefore be easily studied
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2
Q

The _____ is the dominant generation in all vascular plants. Lycopsids have ______ and______ reproductive strategies.

A

sporophyte
homosporous
heterosporous

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3
Q

Tracheophytes:

A

vascular plants

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4
Q

Are tracheophytes or Bryophytes better adapted for life on land?

A

Tracheophytes because the sporophyte phase of the life cycle is dominant over the gametophyte phase and the sporophyte has lignified conducting tissues

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5
Q

why are lignified conducting tissues beneficial?

A

provide greater support and are a more efficient transportation system (i.e. vascular system)

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6
Q

Due to lignified conducting tissues tracheophyte sporophytes can

A

grow larger and exploit different body plans

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7
Q

Reproduction example: Homosporous. Dominant Sporophyte generation

A

1) Sporophyte grows (2n)
2) Spores release
3) Meiosis occurs (=4 Xn)
4) Lands on damp soil
5) Sperm swims over to egg, gametophyte forms
6) Grows and produces sporophyte spores
7) & REPEAT

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8
Q

What must be present for reproduction to occur?

A

H2O

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9
Q

The living Lycopsids

A
  • Lycopodium
  • Phylloglossum
  • Selaginella
  • Isoetes
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10
Q

The living Lycopsids : Lycopodium

A
  • sometimes subdivided into 3 genera; 200 species; worldwide distribution
  • roots
  • leaves eligulate (not ligulate) (no scale inserted in the upper surface of the microphylls & sporophylls)
  • microphylls
  • Sporophylls
  • HOMOSPOROUS
  • Gametophytes may form at the surface or be subterranean.
  • Archegonia have a relatively conspicuous neck
  • spermatozoids are biflagellate
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11
Q

Lycopodium if gametophytes are underground:

A

spores are long lived and washed deep into the soil before they germinate. The gametophyte is subterranean. IT is saucer-shaped with sex organs produced on a cushion in the central region.

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12
Q

The living Lycopsids:

Phylloglossum

A
  • 1 species : Australia

- Noteworthy features: Forms tubers; spermatozoids multi flagellate

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13
Q

The living Lycopsids: Selaginella

A
  • 700 species
  • Microphylls ligulate (minute tongue-like ligule inserted into the upper side of the leaf close to the axis)
  • always have strobili (reproductive cone like structure)
  • HETEROSPOROUS
  • stobili contain both micro&megasporangia located in different parts of the strobilus
  • spermatozoids are biflagellate
  • Female gametophyte protrudes from megaspore as an irregular cushion bearing rhizoids and archegonia in the central region. The archegonia have short necks.
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14
Q

Reproduction example 3:

Dominant Sporophyte generation. HETEROSPOROUS

A

1) Sporophyte (2n) grows but has two different types of spores (mega and micro)
2) Micro spores are released and meiosis occurs (4n)
3) Mega spores are released and meiosis occurs forming 4n
4) If mega land near micro spores can swim over to mega (male to female) H2O required
5) produces sporophyte and REPEATS

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15
Q

Pros to HETEROSPOROUS reproduction

A
  • megaspores contain lots of H2O & starch
  • Meaning they can survive for longer, living off their reserves
  • can grow in periodically damp environments, still relies on water
  • into of outbreeding, reproduction between different plants. Unlikely mega&micro spore from sae plant will land next to each other.
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16
Q

The living Lycopsids: Isoetes

A
  • 150 Species; aquatic
  • These plants have a distinctive & remarkable rush-like habit. They are either aquatic or subject to periodic inundation.
  • They have a short, fleshy, upright rootstock (that occasionally dichotomizes [splits in two]). Each branch bears a tuft of quill-like microphylls that are ligulate. In aquatic species the microphylls lack stomata.
  • Heterosporous. The leaves first formed in a seasons growth bear megasporangia while those formed later bear microsporangia.
17
Q

Early land plant fossils can be very informative:

A
  • many fossils can be found and compared to living organisms
  • comparison of extant and extinct organisms
  • well preserved, such as from the equatorial rainforest of the carboniferous, which were full for arborescent (tree like) lycopsids
18
Q

microphylls

A

small leaf

19
Q

Origin of leaves:

A

1) reduction
2) Enation
3) Sterilisation