Chapter 31: Plants and the Conquest of Land (Part 2, Week 6) Flashcards

1
Q

[Start 31.2 How Land Plants Have Changed the Earth]

A _______ years ago, Earth’s terrestrial surface was comparatively devoid of life. Green or brown crusts of _________ most likely grew in moist places, but there would have been very little soil, no plants, and no animal life.

A

Billion; cyanobacteria

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2
Q

What was key to development of the first substantial soils, the rise to modern levels of atmospheric oxygen, the evolution of modern plant communities, and the colonization of land by animals?

A

The origin of the first land plants.

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3
Q

What are the several types of

decay-resistant materials evolved in early seedless plants? (3)

A

Such as sporopollenin, cutin, and lignin.

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4
Q

What happens when the plants died, and the decay resistant materials were buried in sediments?

A

They eventurally transformed into rock.

Such fossil carbon can accumulate and remain buried for very long time periods with the consequence of lowering the level of atmospheric CO2.

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5
Q

What happened with fossil carbon accumalted over a large period of time?

A

CO2 is a greenhouse gas that causes global temperaturesto rise.

Therefore, the accumulation of fossil carbon is expected to lower global temperatures.

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6
Q

Give an example of how modern bryophytes play important roles by storing CO2 as decay-resistant organic compounds, suggesting that ancient relatives likewise played this role.

Kinda long but you should get it!

A
  1. Modern peat moss contain so much decay-resistant body mass that in many places, dead moss accumulated over long time periods has formed deep peat deposits.
  2. By storing very large amounts of organic carbon for a long time, diverse species of Sphagnum moss help to keep Earth’s climate steady.
  3. Under cooler than normal conditions, the mosses grow more slowly and thus absorb less CO2, allowing atmospheric CO2 to rise a bit, warming the climate alittle.
  4. As the climate warms, the mosses grow faster and take up more CO2, storing it in peat deposits. Such a reduction in atmospheric CO2
    returns the climate to slightly cooler conditions.
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7
Q

What do peat mosses also contain which also helps moderate the world’s climate?

A

Harbor bacteria that consume methane, another powerful greenhouse gas.

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8
Q

What has an important factor affecting the evolution of species on Earth?

A

Atmospheric O2

Eukaryotic species tend to have high demands for O2 because they use it to obtain energy via cellular respiration.

Photosynthetic bacteria were the earliest organisms to produce O2, and later in evolution, algae also contributed to atmospheric O2.

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9
Q

Why is the Carboniferous period (354-290 mya) considered the Coal Age?

A

Extensive forests dominated by tree-sized lycophytes, pteridophytes, and early seed plants occurred in widespread swampy regions.

As dead plants fell into the water, low oxygen levels there inhibited microbes that would have caused the plant matter to decay. The dead plants were then buried in sediments that later formed coal.

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10
Q

Why did giant dragonflies exist during the Carboniferous period, but not now?

A

During the Carboniferous period (Coal Age), atmospheric oxygen levels reached historically high levels, enough to supply the large needs of giant insects, which obtain oxygen by diffusion.

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11
Q

What was proposed about the Carboniferous proliferation of vascular plants?

A

Correlated with a dramatic decrease in atmospheric CO2, which reached the lowest known levels about 290 mya.

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12
Q

What favored extensive diversification of the first seed plants, the gymnosperms?

A

Cooler, drier conditions.

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13
Q

Diverse phyla of gymnosperms dominated Earth’s vegetation through what era? Also called the Age of the Dinosaurs.

A

Mesozoic era (245-65 mya)

In addition, fossils provide evidence that early mammals and flowering plants existed in the Mesozoic. Gymnosperms and early angiosperms were probably sources of food for early mammals as well as for herbivorous dinosaurs.

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14
Q

Where was the fateful day, 65 mya, when disaster struck from the sky, causing a dramatic change in the types of plants and animals that dominated terrestrial ecosystems?

A

That day, at least one large meteorite crashed into the Earth near the present-day Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico.

This collision is known as the Cretaceous-Paleogene event (also sometimes referred to as the K/T event).

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15
Q

What are the descedants of dinosaurs?

A

Birds

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16
Q

[Start 31.3 Evolution of Reproductive Features in Land Plants]

What serves as the earliest models that diverged into land plants?

A

Bryophytes

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17
Q

Since Streptophyte algae display a haploid-dominant life cycle, what happens?

A

The only diploid cell is the zygote, whose meiotic division produces relatively few spores.

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18
Q

How does land plant life cycle differ to the point it has an advantage over the Streptophyte algae?

A

By contrast, land plant zygotes do not undergo meiosis. (well meiosis is delayed, mitotic cell division happens first!)

Land plants undergo mitosis to form a multicellular sporophyte which allows many cells to undergo meiosis and thereby producing a large number of spores!

This life cycle difference allows bryophytes and other land plants to increase the number of spores generated per sexual cycle, an important advantage in terrestrial habitats.

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19
Q

What does producing more spores aid in? (2)

A

Dispersal but also increases the genetic diversity of progeny.

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20
Q

What are specialized structures produced by some fungi and many land plants in which developing gametes are protected by a jacket of tissue?

A

Gametangia (from the Greek, meaning gamete containers).

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21
Q

What does the jacket accomplish in gamtangium?

A

This jacket protects the delicate gametes from drying out and from microbial attack while they develop.

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22
Q

What is a flask-shaped gametangia that each enclose a single egg cell in plants?

A

Archegonia (singular, archegonium)

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23
Q

What are spherical or elongate gametangia that produce many sperm in plants?

A

Antheridia (singular, antheridium)

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24
Q

What happens when the sperm of antheridia mature and moist conditions exist?

A

The antheridia open and release sperm into films of water.

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25
Q

How does archegonia gametangium attract sperm from the antheridium gametangium to its single egg cell?

A

The influence of sex-attractant molecules secreted from archegonia…

The sperm swim toward the eggs, twisting their way down the tubular neck of the archegonium.

The sperm then fertilize egg cells to form diploid zygotes, which grow into embryos.

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26
Q

Explain the life cycle of the early-diverging moss genus Sphagnum (bryophyte). Do it 6 Steps!

The lifecycle of this bryophyte illustrates reproductive adaptations that likely helped early plants reproduce on land. Among modern bryophytes, Sphagnum
is the single most abundant and ecologically important genus.

A
  1. Meiosis within a sporophyte sporangium (2n) produces thousands of haploid spores (n) which are released in the wind once the sporangium (2n) pops open.
  2. Haploid spores (n) grow into young gametophytes (n). Bryophytes may have separate male and female gametophytes!
  3. Gametophytes (n) grow and mature, producing their respective gametes (n) in protective gametangia at their tips (jacket). (many sperm/one egg)
  4. If water is present, flagellate sperm (n) are released and swin toward the egg (n). Fertilization occurs.
  5. Delicate diploid zygote (2n) is protected and nourished by female gametophyte tissues while it grows into an embryo (2n).
  6. Embryo (2n) develops into a mature sporophyte, which remains attached to the female gametophyte (n).
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27
Q

What is a key reproductive advantage of the plant life cycle for the embryos and eventual growth into a zygote?

A

They remain enclosed by gametophyte tissues that provide protection and food.

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28
Q

What is the term in plants, is the phenomenon in which zygotes remain enclosed within gametophyte tissues, where they are sheltered and fed.

A

Matrotrophy (from the Latin,meaning mother, and the Greek, meaning food)

29
Q

Because all groups of land plants possess matrotrophic embryos, what are they known as?

A

Embryophytes (Em (for embryo) + bryophytes)

30
Q

Why does the formation of spores give land plants more reproductive advantages?

A

To produce haploid spores, meiosis occurs in cells that are within enclosures known as sporangia (from the Greek, meaning sporecontainers).

Remember: They are structures that produce and disperse the spores of plants, fungi, or protists.

Answer: The cells of such enclosures are surrounded by tough cell walls that protect developing spores from harmful UV radiation and microbial attack. Bryophyte sporangia open in specialized ways that foster dispersal of mature spores into the air, allowing spore transport by wind.

31
Q

What is a reproductive advantage of the spores themselves!?

A

The cell walls of mature plant spores contain a tough material, known as sporopollenin, that helps to prevent cellular damage during transport in air.

If spores reach habitats favorable for growth, their cell walls crack open, and new gametophytes develop by mitotic divisions.

32
Q

Bryophytes illustrate a number of valuable reproductive features that appeared early in plan evolution and were inherited by their vascular plant descendants. What were these features?

This is review! A total of 6 terms already learned.

A

Alternation of generations, gametangia, embryos, matrotrophy, sporangia, and sporopollenin-enclosed spores.

Alternation of generations - life cycle alternates between multicellular diploid organisms, called sporophytes, and multicellular haploid organisms, called gametophytes.

Gametangia - Specialized structures produced by some fungi and many land plants in which developing gametes are protected by a jacket of tissue. (archegonia (egg enclosure) & antheridia (sperm enclosure))

Embryos - The embryo develops from the zygote. When a male gamete fuses with the egg cell.

Matrotrophy - In plants, the phenomenon in which zygotes remain enclosed within gametophyte tissues, where they are sheltered and fed. (This led to the name embryophytes)

Sporangia - Structures that produce and disperse the spores of plants, fungi, or protists.

Sporopollenin-enclosed spores - A tough material found in the walls of plant spores that helps to prevent cellular damage during transport in air.

33
Q

How has the size of gametophytes and sporophytes in bryophytes changed because of the evolution of vascular plant descendants?

_____________________________________

With that said, what is the advantage to ferns and seed plants of having larger sporophytes relative to those of bryophytes?

A

For bryophytes, gametophyte is relatively large and the mature sporophyte is usually small and depends on the gametophyte for its nutrition.

The evolution of vascularity shifted the relative sizes.

The gametophyte generation has become smaller in later-diverging phyla, whereas the sporophyte generation has become larger and more complex.

Larger sporophytes are able to capture more resources for use in producing larger numbers of progeny and therefore increase the fitness of ferns and seed plants.

34
Q

Even though sporophyte embryos of vascular plants are dependent upon supportive gametophytes, how do these embryos eventually become independent, free-living organisms?

A

Vascular-plant sporophytes canbranch, continue to grow, and produce sporangia on lateral branches, often for many years. (hence trees and bushes!) Their lifspan can range from a few decades to more than 5,000 years!

These features allow vascular plants to produce more progeny than bryophytes, whose sporophytes remain small, never become independent of parental gametophytes, are unable to branch, and have short lifetimes.

35
Q

What is the dominant generation in vascular plants meaning that it is larger, more complex, and longer-lived than the other?

A

The sporophyte generation.

The evolutionary shift toward sporophyte dominance explains why vascular plants are more prevalent in most modern terrestrial habitats.

36
Q

What seedless vascular plants exhibit a life cycle in which the sporophyte is the larger, more conspicuous organism whereas the gametophyte is smaller?

A

Lycophytes and pteridophytes

Life cycle of a fern, which is a pteridophyte. The organism that we associate with the name fern is the sporophyte.

Stem branching allows adult plants to produce many leaves, and roots supply stems with large amounts of soil water and minerals.

Lycophytes and pteridophytes use such resources to produce large numbers of sporangia. You might have seen clusters of sporangia as dark brown dots or lines on the undersides of fern leaves.

37
Q

Describe the life cycle of the typical fern!

In eight steps!

A
  1. The diploid sporophyte (2n) is the dominant generation in the life of ferns and other vascular plants.
  2. Sporangia (2n) are multicellular structures that develop on the undersides of the mature sporophyte leaves. Sportangia (2n) occur in clusters known as sori (singular, sorus).
  3. Meiosis occures in cells within sporangia to produce haploid spores (n), which are dispersed by the wind.
  4. Under favorable conditions spores undergo mitosis to produce gametophytes. These are often thumbnail-sized and heart shaped, anchored by cells known as rhizoids.
  5. Mature gametophytes produce eggs (n) in female gametangia and sperm (n) in male gametangia.
  6. When water is present, the maile gametangia release the flagellate sperm, which swim to the female gametangia and fertilize the eggs.
  7. The resulting diploid zygote (2n) is retained on the gametophyte, undergoes mitosis, and grows into a multicellular embryo that recieves essential nutrients from the gametophyte.
  8. The embryo matures into a sporophyte (2n). After developing a root and leaf, fern sporophytes become independent of their gametophyte (n) parent, which eventually rots away.
38
Q

Lycophyte and pteridophytesperm are flagellate, where did this feature originate from?

A

Inherited from algal and bryophyteancestors.

39
Q

[Start 31.4 Evolutionary Importance of the Plant Embryo]

What was on of the first critical innovations acquired by land plants?

A

The embryo

Recall that plant embryos are young sporophytes that develop from zygotes and are enclosed by maternal tissues that provide nutrients and protection.

Drought, heat, UV light, and microbial attack could kill delicate plant egg cells, zygotes, and embryos if these were not protected and nourished by enclosing maternal tissues.

40
Q

T/F Plant embryos are unicellular and haploid.

A

False. They are multicellular and diploid.

Plant embryos develop by repeated mitotic divisions from a single-celled zygote

41
Q

What are nutritive tissues in plants that aid in the transfer of nutrients from maternal parent to embryo?

A

Placental transfer tissues

42
Q

What do placental transfer tissues function in plants function similarily as?

A

Placental transfer tissues function similarly to the placenta present in most mammals, which fosters nutrient movement from the mother’s bloodstream to the developing fetus.

43
Q

Where does the plancetal transfer tissues typically occur? (2)

A

Haploid gametophyte tissues that lie closest to the embryo.

Diploid tissues of embryos themselves.

For example, the cells of placental transport tissues display complex arrays of finger-like cell-wall ingrowths.

Because the plant plasma membrane lines the plant cell wall, the ingrowths vastly increase the surface area of the plasma membrane. This increase allows for more abundant membrane transport proteins, which move solutes into and out of cells.

With more transport proteins present, materials can move at a faster rate from one cell to another. (Similar finger-like structures in animal intestines and placenta likewise foster nutrient flow by increasing cellular surface area.)

44
Q

[Start 31.5 The Origin and Evolutionary Importance of Leaves and Seeds]

What are two more critical innovations that increases plant fitness and fosters diversification?

A

Leaves and seeds (just like embryos)

Unlike the plant embryo, which likely originated just once at the birth of the plant kingdom, leaves and seeds may have independently evolved several times during plant evolutionary history.

Comparative studies of diverse types of leaves and seeds in fossil and living plants suggest how these critical innovations originated.

45
Q

Among the vascular plants, what produces the simplest and most ancient type of leaves?

A

Lycophytes

Modern lycophytes have tiny leaves, known as
lycophylls (also known as microphylls), which typically have only a single unbranched vein.

46
Q

What is a leaf that is bigger than lycophylls (or microphylls), has more than one branched vein, and is typical of ferns and seed plants (from the Greek, meaning true leaves)?

A

Euphylls

47
Q

What is a benefit of Euphylls (AKA megaphylls) over Lycophylls?

A

Branched veins of euphylls are able to supply relatively large areas of photosynthetic tissue with water and minerals. (which, makes them much larger and much bigger than euphylls)

48
Q

In the studying of fern fossils, what is indicated on how Euphylls arose?

A

From leafless, cylindrical, branched-stem systems.

The Steps!

  1. one branch assumed the role of the main axis, while the other was reduced in size and became flattened in one plane.
  2. the spaces between the branches of this flattened system became filled with photosynthetic tissue.

Such a process explains why euphylls have branched vascular systems; individual veins apparently originated from the separate branches of an ancestral branched stem.

49
Q

Why could you suggest that seeds offer reproductive advantages?

A

Because seed plants dominate modern ecosystems!

Seed plants are also the plants with the greatest importance to humans.

50
Q

What do you call the process, in seed plants, where the production of two different types of spores: microspores and megaspores; microspores produce male gametophytes, and megaspores produce female gametophytes?

A

Heterospory

As mentioned earlier, plants produce spores by meiosis within sporangia, and seed plants are no exception. However, seed plants produce two distinct types of spores in two types of sporangia.

51
Q

What in seed plants and some seedless plants, a relatively small spore that produces a male gametophyte within the spore wall?

A

A microspore!

Give rise to male gametophytes, which develop into pollen grains.

52
Q

What in seed plants and some seedless plants, a large spore that produces a female gametophyte within the spore wall?

A

A megaspore!

Give rise to female gametophytes, which develop and produce eggs while enclosed by protective megaspore walls.

53
Q

Since the enclosed female gamteophytes are not photosynthetic, how do they get help in feeding the embryos that develop from fertilized eggs?

A

Female gametophytes get this help by remaining attached to the previous sporophyte generation, which provides gametophytes with the nutrients needed for embryo development.

54
Q

What reproductive structures are UNIQUE to seed plants which help them produce seeds?

A

Ovules and pollen.

55
Q

What is in a seed plant which is a megaspore-producing sporangium with enclosing structures known as integuments?

A

An ovule.

They typically contain only a single spore that develops into a very small egg-producing gametophyte; the entire structure is enclosed by leaflike structures known as INTEGUMENTS!

Integuments are leaflike structure that encloses the sporangium to form an ovule.

56
Q

What is an excellent example of how to explain an ovule using a russian nesting doll? (the dolls that have smaller dolls inside)

A

You can think of an ovule as being like a nesting doll with four increasingly smaller dolls inside.

The smallest doll corresponds to an egg cell

Intermediate-sized doll represents the gametophyte, spore wall, and mega sporangium

Largest doll represents the integuments.

57
Q

How does the layered ovule convert into seeds?

In seed plants, how does the needed sperm for ____________ supplied?

A

By fertilization.

fertilization; It is supplied by pollen, which tiny male gametophytes enclosed by protective sporopollenin-containing microspore walls.

58
Q

For the seed plants, where is food stored in developing seeds for gymnosperms (without flowers) and for angiosperms (flowers, fruits)?

Review: These seed plants are called spermatophytes! While all vascular plants, which includes the lycophytes and pteridophytes, are called tracheophytes.

Land plants combined, including the non-vascular Byrophytes such as liverworts, mosses, and hornworts, in the Kingdom Plantae are called embryophytes.

A

In gymnosperms seeds, the food is stored in female gametophytes.

In angiosperm seeds, the food is stored in the endosperm.

These seeds and their food storages are all within the seed coat.

59
Q

Can you hypothesize why the mature angiosperm seed does not show obvious endosperm tissue?

A

Although some angiosperm seeds, such as those of corn and coconut, contain abundant endosperm, many angiosperm embryos consume most or all of the nutritive endosperm during their development.

60
Q

What is the process in which pollen grains are transported to an angiosperm flower or a gymnosperm cone primarily by means of wind or animal pollinators?

A

Pollination

61
Q

For pollination to occur, a male gametophyte extends a slender pollen tube that carries two sperm toward an egg which then the tube enters through an opening in the integument of the megasportangium in which as access to the multicellular female gametophyte? What is the opening called? (For further clarification of what is being asked.

What happens next?

A

The microphyle in which the sperm is released.

The fertilized egg becomes an embryo, and the ovule’s integument develops into a protective, often hard and tough seed coat.

Seed Coat = A hard, tough covering that develops from the ovule’s integuments and protects a plant embryo.

62
Q

What is the main difference between how gymnosperms and angiosperms store nutrients for their seeds?

A

Angiosperm seeds also contain this useful food supply, but most angiosperm ovules do not store food materials before fertilization. Instead, angiosperm seeds generally store food only after fertilization occurs, ensuring that the food is not wasted if an embryo does not form.

How is this accomplished?

The answer is a process known as double fertilization.

This process produces both a zygote and a food storage tissue known as endosperm, a feature unique to angiosperms.

One of the two sperm delivered by each pollen tube fuses with the egg, producing a diploid zygote, as you might expect.

The other sperm fuses with different gametophyte nuclei to form an unusual cell that has more than the diploid number of chromosomes; this cell continues to divide and generates the endosperm food tissue.

63
Q

What are some advantages that seeds confer which are important for reproduction?

A
  • Seeds can remain dormant for long periods until favorable conditions allow for germination.
  • Seed coats have adapatations that improve dispersal in some habitats. For example, many plants produce winged seeds that are effectively dispersed by wind. Other plants produce seeds with fleshy coverings that attract animals, which consume the seeds, digest the fleshy covering, and eliminate the bare seeds at some distance from the originating plants.
  • They can store considerable amounts of food which helps embryos mature enough to compete for light, water, and minerals. Especially important in shady forests.
  • Sperm of most seed plants do not need to swim since pollen tubes deliver sperm directly to ovules. Consequently, seed plant fertilization is not typically limited by lack of water, in contrast to fertilization of seedless plants. Consequently, seed plants are better able to reproduce in arid and seasonally dry habitats.

This is why seeds are considered to be a key adaptation to reproduction in a land habitat.

64
Q

Where have ovules and seeds evolved from?

A

Spore-producing structures by descent with modification!

Seed plants reproduce using both spores and seeds, and seed plants have not replaced spores with seeds.

Recall that this evolutionaryprinciple involves changes in pre-existing structures and processes.

Fossils provide some clues about ovule and seed evolution, and other information can be obtained by comparing reproduction in living lycophytes and pteridophytes.

65
Q

What do most modern lycophytes and pteridophytes release?

A

One type of spore that develops into one type of gametophyte.

Such plants are considered to be homosporous, and their gametophytes live independently and produce both male and female gametangia.

66
Q

When it comes to spores, what do some lycophytes and pteridophytes produce and release?

A

Produce and release two distinct kinds of spores: relatively small microspores and larger megaspores, which grow into male and female gametophytes, respectively.

EVEN THOUGH they are typically homosporous, some of early seedless vascular plants are actually herterosporous! Amazing evolution!

67
Q

Describe the steps that homosporous lycophytes and pteridophytes became hetersporous (creating two kinds of spores rather than one). (4)

A
  1. Sporangium containing spores that are similar in size
  2. In early evolution, the sporangium containing the spores began to evolve creating two different types.
    2a. Microsporangium containing many small microspores.
    2b. Megasporangium containing fewer, larger megaspores.
  3. Eventually the sporangium with the megaspores was reduced to 1 megaspore per megasporangium. THIS led to the enclosure of megasporangium within integuments to form ovule; when fertilized, ovule develops into a seed.
68
Q

What are the advantages of heterospory?

A
  1. It mandates cross-fertilization by allowing different gametophytes (with different DNA) to increase the potential for genetic variation.
  2. Genetic variation of cross-fertilization may enhance survival and reproduction of individuals with favorable phenotypes and result in evolution.
  3. Heterosporous plants have their gametophytes grow within the confines of micro and megaspore walls which protects them.
69
Q

What is a plant gametophyte that grows within the confines of microspore or megaspore walls?

A

Endosporic gametophyte