Plant taxonomy Flashcards

1
Q

what are in the spermophytes

A

gymnosperms and angiosperms
developed pollen
seeds have seed coats to confer ability to store starch and proteins and defenses as well as confers dormancy.

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2
Q

What sex are plants

A

All land plants are haplodiplontic= This means generations span two multi-cellular individuals – one haploid and one diploid.
The diploid generation is called the sporophyte
The haploid generation is called the gametophyte - this stage
produces gametes by mitosis.

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3
Q

When did land plants evolve?
What are the first land fossils?

A

In early Ordovician from multi-cellular freshwater algae
First land fossils (472 Ma) are liverwort cryptospores
Liverworts and other bryophytes dominated early terrestrial life

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4
Q

What are Bryophytes

A

Non-tracheophytes – i.e. poorly developed vascular system limits stature.
First plants to evolve mycorrhizal affiliations
Distributed widely but…gametophyte-dominated life cycle requires water for reproduction

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5
Q

Explain bryophyte Sex

A

The haploid gametophyte occupies more of the
bryophyte life cycle than for vascular plants
The free-living photosynthetic plant you see is the
gametophyte

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6
Q

What are the 3 different clades of Bryophytes

A

*Liverworts - Marchantiophyta
-deeply lobed or segmented ‘thalloid or foliose’ leaves arranged in three ranks; lack differentiated stem & leaves – 9,000 species
*Mosses - Bryophyta
-variable stem form with simple leaves; threadlike rhizoids for
anchorage only – 12,000 species
*Hornworts - Anthocerotophyta
-thalloid leaves; tall, narrow sporophytes growing continuously from a near-basal meristem – 100 species

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7
Q

What happened in the devonian period and what are the key features

A

Key Features
Lignification & Vascular tissues allow plants to grow larger
Roots allowed deeper soil penetration, nutrient access & structural support

First vascular plant fossils (spores) appear late Ordovician, but land plants underwent rapid radiation during Devonian (415-360 Ma)

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8
Q

Lycopodiophyta (Club Mosses)

A

Tracheid-based vascular tissues, but lack vascularised leaves
Currently about 1200 species
Sporophyte stage dominant
30m tall plants dominated Carboniferous
forests 310Ma

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9
Q

Pterophytes (Ferns)

A

ferns are tracheophytes & first plants to evolve true vascular leaves –plants grow from a rhizome

Two groups
Sporangia of Eusporangiate ferns arise from several epidermal cells, unlike Leptosporangiate ferns
(sporangia arise from a single cell)

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10
Q

Fern Sex

A

The conspicuous diploid sporophyte occupies most of the
Pterophyte life cycle The small, free-living gametophyte is
photosynthetic.

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11
Q

What are the three extant classes of Eusporangiate ferns

A

Whisk ferns - Psilotopsida,Tropical - lack differentiated leaves & roots (lost after divergence from other ferns) – 90 species. Long green and stringy.
‘Tropical Ferns’ - Marattiopsida
Fleshy roots and very large fronds – 150 species

Important
Horsetails - Equisetopsida are Wiry or Scale-like leaves radiate in a whorl from a jointed photosynthetic stem – 15 species

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12
Q

Leptosporangiate ferns

A

True-Ferns - Polypodiopsida (often) compound leaves (fronds) created as ‘fiddleheads’ (croziers) uncurl; sporangia on lower leaf surface in clusters (sori) – 11,000 species
Variety of growth-forms.
Tree-ferns - up to 24m tall
Epiphytic
Aquatic

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13
Q

What are the two of the seven Orders of Ferns most common in britain?

A

Polypodiaceae
Sori arranged in round/oblong clusters; usually lack
indusium. Scaly, creeping rhizomes.
Aspleniaceae
Sori arranged in lines and covered by a flap-like
membrane (Indusium)

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14
Q

Spermatophyte timeline

A

Progymnosperms evolved 390 Ma but true
gymnosperms radiated in Permian and dominated
early Mesozoic – some evidence of pollination by
scorpionflies in Jurassic

Angiosperms appear in Jurassic & have dominated
since Cretaceous – over 300,000 extant species
Now extinct (Pteridospermatophyta) ‘Seed ferns’
were first major group and dominated the late
Palaeozoic

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15
Q

Seedy Sex

A

Spores are retained by the (large) sporophyte to
produce (small) haploid gametophytes.
Pollen is the male gametophyte
and produces sperm – this is transferred from the plant
The female gametophyte (egg) develops inside the ovule and is
retained on the parent plant.

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16
Q

Gymnosperms

A

Characterised by seeds that develop on surface of scales or leaves (often modified to form cones)
Includes largest and oldest living plants
Coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) grows to 112m; bristlecone pine (Pinus aristata) lives to 5,000 years.

17
Q

What are the four subclasses Gymnosperms

A

*Gnetidae
Vascular tissues possess ‘vessel elements’ – 70 species (Ephedra only European genus)
*Ginko - Ginkoidae
Fan-shaped leaves with dichotomous veins radiating out into leaf blade – 1 species (China)
*Cycads - Cycadidae
Stout, woody trunk with crown of large, stiff (palm-like) leaves;
dioecious – 300 species (none in Europe)
*Conifers - Pinidae
Resinous trees or shrubs; ‘evergreen’ scale- or needle-like leaves; monoecious – 600 species (3 Families in Europe)

18
Q

Europaean Pinidae

A

*Cupressaceae – Cypress family
Leaves linear or scale-like; pollen cones small, terminal; scales on seed
cones heavily reduced, consist of bracts with 1 to many seeds

*Taxaceae – Yew family
Seeds surrounded by fleshy aril

Pinaceae – Pine family
Leaves in clusters (fascicles) surrounded by sheath, or spiral on long or short shoots; pollen cones axillary; woody scaled seed cones each with 2 seeds

19
Q

Angiosperms

A

Obvious distinguishing feature is the flower
Carpel encloses the ovules – permits specialised
pollination syndromes & reduces self-pollination
Seeds also protected by carpel (thickens to fruit) &
endosperm provides early embryo nutrition
Vessel elements allow more efficient water transport
through xylem (see Gnetidae)

20
Q

Cretaceous Explosion
(angiosperms)

A

A Whole Genome Duplication event happened to
plants 2 or 3 times in the Jurassic/Cretaceous
WGD - a doubling of a single species genome, or a
combination of genomes from two different species
‘Genetically diverse’ ancestor gives rise to new
lineage. birds and mammals increased aswell

21
Q

Angiosperm Morphology

A

First approximation – separate into two structural
forms; Monocots and Eudicots
Monocots are named for the single cotyledon apparent shortly
after germination.
parellel veins
flower parts in multiples of 3
Roots Fibrous or rhizomes/bulbs
Vascular bundles are Complex

Dicots have two cotyledons.
network of veins
flower parts of multiples of 4 or 5
roots taproots
Vascular bundles arranged in a ring

22
Q

Root form and function

A

Anchor the plant into the soil,
absorb minerals, water, and store food

23
Q

Shoot Morphology

A

Shoots consist of a stem, leaves, flowers
and fruits

24
Q

describe Stems

A

The terminal bud develops at the tip of the shoot
Alternation of nodes (points at which leaves are attached), and
internodes - stem segments between nodes

In the angle between each leaf and the stem, is an axillary
(lateral) bud, an embryonic side shoot

25
Q

Leaves

A

Petiole is variable in shape; but generally consist of a flat blade and a stalk – the petiole - joining the leaf to the stem node

Leafless plants photosynthesise via stems or modified petioles - phyllodes
Most monocots lack petioles – instead the leaf base forms a sheath that envelops the stem (e.g grasses)

26
Q

What are the two types of leaf shapes?

A

compound=made of small leaflets
entire

there are;
linear
rhomboid
spoon-shaped

27
Q

Flowers

A

Evolved from compressed shoots with four whorls of modified leaves separated by very short internodes
Consist of four organs - in sequence from the outside to inside of the flower these are:
Sepals, Petals, Stamens, Carpels (female)

28
Q

Receptacle & Calyx

A

At the apex of the flower stalk is a swelling - the receptacle - to which the flower parts are attached

The outermost whorl - the calyx - comprises a number
of leaf-like structures - sepals - these protect the
inner parts of the flower during the bud stage

29
Q

The Corolla

A

Within the calyx, the next whorl - the corolla - is
comprised of (coloured) leaf-like petals

wind pollinated species have inconspicuous flowers

30
Q

The Perianth

A

the calyx (sepals) and the corolla (petals)
together form the perianth
Sometimes sepals & petals are identical in
form and colour - so we count perianth segments (tepals)

31
Q

What are the different tube like structures in sepals and petals?

A

Petals are sometimes joined to form a corolla tube
Sepals are sometimes joined to form a calyx tube

32
Q

Flower Symmetry (dicots)

A

In zygomorphs the flowers are only symmetric about
one axis
In actinomorphs, sepals and petals are so arranged that they display radial symmetry

33
Q

The Male Sex parts

A

The anthers contain the pollen sacs
The stamens consist of a stalk (filament) and a head (anther)

34
Q

The Female Sex parts and Ovary Positions

A

At the base of the carpel is the ovary (contains ovules)
Above the ovary is the stalk-like style (this can be single
or multiple)
At the tip of the style is the stigma – the receptive surface for pollen

A superior ovary is attached to the receptacle above the
corolla whorl and stamens (inside flower)

An inferior ovary has the calyx and corolla arising from the
top

35
Q

Flowers can be either…?

A

solitary or multiple (inflorescence instead of flower)

36
Q

Inflorescence Types I
(Elongated)

A

*Cyme – terminal flower opens first, followed in succession by lateral flowers from bract axils
*Panicle – a branched raceme
*Raceme – stalked lower flowers open first followed
sequentially upwards
*Spike – an unbranched Raceme; flowers stalk-less

37
Q

Inflorescence Types II
(Flat-tops)

A

*Umbel – flower stalks of even length, all emerge from same point
*Corymb – stalks of outer flowers longer than inner to give appearance of flat top
*Head – crowded clusters of flowrs from commonnstalk

38
Q

Asteraceae (inflorescence)

A

‘miniaturized’ flowers are grouped in a tight head or
Capitulum
The centre of the capitulum has disc florets
Ray florets line the outside, giving the appearance of petals