Lecture 8: plants and fungi Flashcards
1
Q
Charophytes
A
- sister group to land plants
- type of green algae
- gives us clues as to how land plants evolved
2
Q
Plant synapomorphies
A
- alternation of generations
- produce haploid spores in sporangia
- have multicellular gametangia (structure that encloses gametes)
- have apical meristem– localized region where cell division occurs
3
Q
When did plants colonize land?
A
500 MYA
4
Q
When did the first forests appear?
A
370 MYA
5
Q
When was the origin of vascular plants?
A
425 MYA
6
Q
When was the origin of seed plants?
A
360 MYA
7
Q
Bryophytes
A
- Non vascular plants
- different than all other land plants because the gametophyte is the dominant generation
- non woody, herbacious plants
- often found in moist environments, need water to reproduce
- form low mats, lack of vascular tissue limits size
- EX: liverworts, mosses and hormworts
8
Q
Seedless vascular plants
A
- gametophyte is the reduced stage
- sporophyte tends to be the dominant stage
- found in moist environments, less tied to water, don’t need water for fertilization
9
Q
Gymnosperms
A
- seed plants
- plants that have cones
- sporophyte is dominant stage
- naked seeds—> not enclosed in ovary, exposed on modified leaves that form cones
- EX: pine trees, Douglas fir, Juniper, Grinkos
10
Q
Angiosperms
A
- seed plants
- sporophyte is the dominant stage
- flowering plants
- largest group today
11
Q
Cells that make up vascular tissue
A
- Xylem and phloem
- Xylem= water and minerals
- phloem= sugar, amino acids, etc
12
Q
Seed
A
- embryo + food supply in a protective coat
- can withstand harsh conditons
- Advantages: detachable, have their own food source
- produced from the female gametophyte stage
13
Q
Pollen
A
- male gametophyte within sporophyte
- Advantages: can be carried long distances by water, wind or animals
- no reliance on water for fertilization
- haploid male stage but contained with some sporophyte diploid tissue
14
Q
Characteristics of fungi
A
- widely dispersing spores
- heterotrophs– not photosynthetic, get their food by absorbing it from environment
- many parasites (some pathogenic) and mutalists
- unicellular (yeasts and filamentous forms) and multicellular
- sexual and asexual
- fungal walls contain chitin, a nitrogen rich polysaccharide
- multicellular fungi are composed of hyphae= tubular cells that maximize volume to surface area ratio
15
Q
Opisthokonts
A
- larger phylogenetic group that includes animal and fungi
- monophyletic group
- evolved from a unicellular flagellated ancestor
- multicellularity appears to have independently evolved in lineages leading to animals and fungi