Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants

Page created by Lester Ball
 
CONTINUE READING
Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants
Spore‐Forming
Spore Forming Plants

    The Lower Plants
Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants
Classification of Life
•   If we go back to ancient Greek times,
    Aristotle (350 BC) was the first and
    most influential classifier of the world.
    He classified living things into plants
    and animals. Three sub‐groups for
    each: for plants: its size, and for
    animals, where it primarily lives.
•   This
      hi matchesh our naïve ï view
                                i off the
                                        h
    world: living things come in two basic
    varieties: those that move around
    (animals) and those that are rooted to
    the
     h ground   d (plants).
                  ( l    )
      – he wasn’t thinking about evolution
         or phylogeny!
•   Aristotle’ss views were considered
    Aristotle
    definitive, about this and everything
    else in the physical world, up until the
    development of science in the 1600’s.
Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants
Linnaeus
•   Carolus Linnaeus ((1707‐1778)) a.k.a. Carl Linne
     – Swedish naturalist: Latinized name
•   Like Aristotle, he classified the world into plants and
    animals, but divided these groups up by the presence of
    various traits.
•   Plants were grouped into genera and given multi‐word
    Latin names. Linnaeus shortened this to the binomial:
    genus followed by species.
                         species (like Homo sapiens)
•   He also grouped them into larger groups (classes) based
    on sexual characteristics: the Sexual System of
    Classification
     – For example: "Nine men in the same bride's chamber,
       with one woman“. This meant 9 stamens with 1 pistil in
       the same flower. (All in Latin, of course)
•   although
      lth    h this
               thi system
                      t   was invented
                                i     t d for
                                          f convenience,
                                                     i       it fit
    evolutionary reality fairly well, and we still basically use
    it (with modifications and corrections)
•   He also invented the kingdom
                          kingdom‐phylum‐class‐order‐
                                     phylum class order
    family‐genus‐species hierarchy.
Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants
Five Kingdom Model
•   New things kept being discovered, and
    several things became obvious:
     – fungi aren’t plants,
     – bacteria and other prokaryotes are
       fundamentally different from plants and
       other eukaryotes
     – single
       sin le celled
               elled eukaryotes
                      e kar otes (protists) are not
       easily classified as plants or animals or
       fungi
•   This led to the Five Kingdom model of R.
                                          R
    H. Whittaker, in 1969.
     – The Monera are the prokaryotes: the
       domains of Bacteria and Archaea. Monera
       is not a term used today.
     – Plants evolved from protists, but where is
       the boundary between them?
Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants
Three Domain System
•   The Three Domain system was invented
    Carl Woese, based on sequencing
    ribosomal RNA.
•   It shows
        h    a more realistic
                       li ti view
                              i off th
                                    the world
                                           ld
    of life:
     – two very different types of prokaryote
     – Most eukaryotes are protists
     – Protists aren’t a monophyletic group.
•   Classification today is based on DNA
    sequencing.
     – Relatively easy to do
     – DNA is what is actually inherited between
       organisms
     – We understand the mechanisms of change
       (mutation) in DNA
•   DNA‐based phylogeny matches traditional
    phylogeny reasonably well, but lots of
    changed details.
     – Especially in the less familiar groups and in
       very ancient branchings.
Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants
What is a Plant?
• Somewhere there is a boundaryy between p      photosynthetic
                                                       y
  algae (protists) and plants, a logical place to divide them.
• We want to distinguish between plants and algae on the basis
  off two
      t things:
          thi
   – Plants should be a monophyletic group (a single common ancestor and
     all descendants) as shown by solid DNA evidence.
   – Plants should match our naïve view of the world as primarily
     photosynthetic land‐dwelling organisms rooted to the ground.
       • Not that we can't have some exceptions, but they need good
         explanations.
Spore Forming Plants The Lower Plants
Some Possible Divisions
•   SStart with
             i h the
                  h protist
                        i group the
                                 h Archaeplastida.
                                       h    l id
    This group came from the primary endosymbiosis
     of a cyanobacterium that created the plastid
    (chloroplast).
     – W
       We could
              ld callll this
                         hi whole
                             h l group ““plants”:
                                           l    ” anything
                                                      hi
       containing a plastid that is not the result of
       secondary endosymbiosis. (recall that many protists
       developed a secondary endosymbiosis with
       eukaryotic
            y     red or ggreen algae).
                                   g )
•   Quite early, this groups split into the red and green
    algae.
     – Red algae contain phycoerythrin, a red pigment that
       helps
           p ggather light
                       g deep  p in the water.
     – Green algae contain chlorophyll b and in many ways
       is very similar to land plants. Green algae have long
       been thought to be ancestral to plants, and DNA
       evidence has confirmed this.
•   Some would like to include green algae and plants
    in a monophyletic group called Viridiplantae:
    “green plants”.
     – Probably not widely accepted due to the tradition of
       k i algae
       keeping  l   as a separate
                               t group.
Green Algae
•   Green algae come in many
    varieties: mostly unicellular, but
    some are colonial, and a few are
    genuinely
          i l multicellular.
                  lti ll l
•   All green algae have:
     – two membranes surrounding the
       chloroplast (i.e. primary
       endosymbiosis)
     – Chlorophyll a and b, along with
       carotene (yellow) and xanthophylls
       (orange‐brown)
     – Cellulose and pectin in the cell
       wall.
     – Starch for food storage (something
       to live on when it’s dark). Red
       algae use a different form of starch
       called “Floridean starch”.
More Green Algae
• Most are aquatic (marine or fresh
  water), but some live on land.
   – There’s
        e e s a type o
                     of algae
                        a gae tthat
                                 at lives
                                       es on
                                          o snow
                                             s o
     fields. Has a red pigment to block UV light.
• Some land algae are symbionts with
  fungi (lichens).
• Most have both sexual and asexual
  reproduction, with gametes having 2
  flagella.
• Most are primarily haploid, although a
  few have a diploid phase as well.
• Possible use of ggreen algae
                           g for biofuels.
  They are very efficient at converting
  sunlight into chemical energy, and easy
  to grow.
Charophytes
•   The green algae can be split into two
    main groups: the chlorophytes and the
    charophytes.
     – Most are chlorophytes, including
       single celled forms and colonial forms.
     – The charophytes, especially a group
       called the stoneworts (Charales), are
       the green algae group most closely
       related
         l d to plants.
                    l     B
                          Based
                              d on DNA
       evidence.
•   They have whorls of short branches
    surrounding a central stem. No leaves,
    just photosynthetic branches.
                         branches
•   They live in shallow water and lake
    margins: occasionally dry out.
•   Charophytes are the most structurally
    complex of the green algae
                           algae.
Charophytes as the Sister Group to Plants

•   Some characters shared by charophytes
    and plants, and no other groups: shared
    derived characters, used to define
          p y
    monophyletic     ggroups.
                           p
     – Charophytes protect their embryos
        with a layer of sporopollenin, a
        tough polymer whose composition
        isn’tt precisely known.
        isn               known Land plants
        use it to cover spores and pollen
        grains.
     – Phragmoplast: A structure used in
        cell division
              division, it is the scaffold on
        which the new dividing wall between
        the 2 daughter cells forms.
Embryophyte = Land Plant
•   The current most common definition
    of “plant” excludes all green algae.
    The group is called the Embryophyta.
•   The defining characteristic of an
    embryophyte is that they carry the
    m lticell lar embr
    multicellular embryo o within
                             ithin the
    mother’s body. That is, the female
    gamete is fertilized inside the mother
    plant’s body,
    p           y and it continues to
    develop there, using nutrients from
    the mother (a placenta).
•   Embryophyte and land plant are
    synonyms: they
                th refer
                       f tot the
                               th exactt
    same group of organisms.
Evolutionary Trends

• By moving onto the land, plants had to deal with 2 big issues:
  gravity ( or lack
               l k off buoyancy)
                       b       ) and
                                   d dryness.
                                     d
• Major trends:
   1. development of roots, shoots, vascular system. Roots needs to
      absorb
        b b nutrients,
                t i t nott just
                            j t hold
                                 h ld onto
                                        t the
                                           th surface.
                                                  f     Shoots
                                                        Sh t need  d to
                                                                     t
      support photosynthetic system off the ground. Vascular system to
      transport materials between parts of the plant.
   2. Waxyy cuticle on the p
                           plant surface to prevent
                                            p       desiccation.
   3. Increasing the diploid phase of the life cycle, and decreasing the
      haploid phase. Diploid gives a backup copy of each gene, as a defense
      against random mutations. Allows a larger, more complex body.
   4 Spore,
   4.  Spore seed and pollen protection and dispersal.
                                               dispersal How can they be
      protected, how can the male gametes find the females, and how can
      new individuals disperse to new locations.
Major Plant Groups
•   FFour groups, some off which
                            hi h h
                                 have more
    than one phylum:
     – Bryophytes. Mosses, liverworts and
       hornworts No vascular system
       hornworts.                 system. The most
       primitive plants.
     – Seedless vascular plants. Ferns of various
       types.
        yp Have vascular systemy      but use spores
                                               p
       to reproduce.
     – Gymnosperms. Conifers, cycads, ginkos.
       Have seeds, a major innovation (so the next
       set off lecture
               l       notes starts here.
                                    h
     – Angiosperms. Flowering plants: most of
       the common plants. Seeds develop in an
       ovary.
       ovary
•   Note that some groups aren’t
    monophyletic. They are probably
    independent branches off the main
    evolutionary line. We will largely ignore
    this, however.
Plant Phylogeny
Alternation of Generations
•   The sexual cycle in eukaryotes has a diploid phase
    and a haploid phase.
     – Diploid: 2 copies of each chromosome
                                   chromosome, one from
       each parent
     – Haploid: only 1 copy of each chromosome.
     – Fertilization: two haploid
                             p      cells ((the ggametes))
       combine to form a new diploid cell, the zygote.
     – Meiosis: a diploid cell undergoes a special form of
       cell division that results in 4 haploid cells.
•   Alternation of generations means that both the
    diploid and haploid phases are multicellular.
     – Humans do not have alternation of generations:
       haploid phase is 1 cell only
     – Most fungi do not have alternation of generations:
       diploid phase in 1 cell only.
     – Plants
       Pl t dod hhave alternation
                        lt     ti off generations
                                            ti
Alternation of Generations in Plants
•   The diploid phase is called the sporophyte. Some cells in the sporophyte
    undergo meiosis, which produces haploid spores. This occurs in a
    multicellular structure called a sporangium.
                                     sporangium
     – Spores are unicellular and packaged to survive harsh conditions.
•   Spores germinate into a new haploid plant, the gametophyte. Some cells
    in the gametophyte develop into haploid reproductive cells, cells the gametes.
                                                                           gametes
    The gametes are the equivalent of human sperm and eggs. Production of
    gametes occurs in a multicellular gametangium.
•   Two gametes fuse together during fertilization,
                                            fertilization producing a zygote,
                                                                      zygote a
    single diploid cell that is the first cell of the new sporophyte.
•   The zygote develops into an embryo (multicellular diploid) attached to the
    mother The embryo is then released from the mother.
    mother.                                               mother It starts growing
    as an independent sporophyte.
Male and Female
•   IIn th
        the ffungii ((and
                        d many protists),
                                  ti t ) th
                                          the gametes
                                                  t are almost
                                                         l   t id
                                                               identical.
                                                                   ti l ThThere iis no ““male”
                                                                                           l ” or
    “female”, just different mating types.
•   Plants (and animals) have distinctly different male and female gametes.
     – The male gamete (sperm) is dispersed out into the world,
                                                         world and must find the female.
                                                                                    female
     – The female gamete (egg) stays inside the mother’s body, and is fertilized there. It is usually
       larger than the male gamete.
•   The gametes are made by the gametophyte, the haploid plant. In some plant groups,
    separate male and female gametophytes are produced, and in other species, a single
    gametophyte produces both male and female gametes.
•   The structures that produce gametes:
     – Male l gametes ((sperm)) are produced
                                       d d in antheridia.
                                                 h idi
     – Female gametes (eggs) are produced in archegonia.
Examples

•    In this fern, the sporophyte produces just one kind of
    ggametophyte,
              p y , which is bisexual. A single
                                            g ggametophyte
                                                       p y pplant
     produces both antheridia and archegonia.
Another Example
•   In this moss, a
    single kind of
    sporangium
    produces
    gametophytes that
    are unisexual:
    either
       h male l or
    female. The female
    gametophyte
    produces
    archegonia, which
    make the eggs.
    The male
    gametophyte
    produces
    antheridia,, which
    make sperm.
M+F continued
•   In the seed plants, the gametophytes are differentiated into male and female:
    the male gametophyte is the pollen grain and the female gametophyte is the
    ovule. These plants have two different kinds of sporangia, one for each sex.
    “ i
    “micro‐”” refers
                f to t the
                       th malel andd “mega‐”
                                     “       ” tto th
                                                   the ffemale.
                                                              l
     – The microsporangium produces microspores (microgametophytes),
         which then produce antheridia, which make sperm (male gametes).
     – The megasporangium produces megaspores (megagametophytes),
                                                          (megagametophytes) which
         then produce archegonia, which make eggs (female gametophytes).
•   In seed plants, the antheridium and archegonium have been reduced to very
    small structures that are not identified as separate
                                                    p       from the rest of the
    gametophyte. The gametophyte as a whole generates the sperm and eggs.
Example
•   In this pine tree (a gymnosperm),
    the sporophyte plant produces
    separate megaspores and
    microspores. The megaspores
    develop into female
    megagametophtyes and the
    microspores develop into male
    microgametophytes. The
    antheridium and archegonium
    have been reduced to very small
    structures that are not identified
    as separate from the rest of the
    gametophyte The gametophyte as
    gametophyte.
    a whole generates the sperm and
    eggs.
Move to Sporophyte Dominance
•   A major change over the evolutionary history of
    plants is a move from a dominant haploid
    gametophyte to a dominant diploid sporophyte.
                                       sporophyte
     – Bryophytes: mostly haploid, with small diploid
       sporophyte growing out of the gametophyte.
     – Ferns: the main plant body is a diploid sporophyte, but
       there is a small free‐living haploid plant
     – Flowering plants: the plant is diploid, and the
       gametophyte is reduced to 3 cells for the male and 8
       cells for the female.
•    Being diploid means there is a second copy of
    each gene. So, if one copy gets mutated
    ((mutation happens
                  pp       all the time),
                                        ), the other copy
                                                        py
     can continue to fill its role, so the cell lives on.
    Otherwise, organisms just can’t get too complex.
    Animals are also diploid for the same reason.
Photosynthesis
•    Photosynthesis uses energy from light to
    convert carbon dioxide (CO2) into sugar.
•   Occurs in the chloroplasts,
                          p      which were once
    free‐living bacteria that got swallowed up by
    endosymbiosis.
     – In other parts of the plant, chloroplasts get
                      g of food or other pigments
       used for storage                    pg
       (like in flowers). Called plastids.
•    Two parts to photosynthesis: light reactions
    (occur only in the light) and the Calvin cycle
    ((occurs in both light
                       g and dark).)
     – Light reactions: Light energy is captured by
       chlorophyll and used to extract high energy
       electrons from water, which converts it to
       oxygen.
     – Calvin cycle: The high energy electrons are
       used to convert carbon dioxide into sugar.
       This is called carbon fixation.
Cells, Tissues, and Organs
•   A big difference between plants and their protist ancestors is that plants are
    multicellular and have different organs.
     – Multicellular organisms have many different types of cell
                                                             cell.
     – Tissue: a group of cells with a common structure
     – Organ: a group of different tissues organized for a common purpose.
•   The main plant organs: leaves
                              leaves, stems
                                      stems, roots
                                             roots. Plus various reproductive
    organs.
•   All the cells in an individual have the same genes. Different cell types occur
    because different sets of genes are active.
                                          active
•   An example: the stem of a plant has two main functions: to support the
    upper parts of the plant, and to conduct fluids between the roots and the
    leaves Stems have several tissues in them: epidermis (the outer covering),
    leaves.                                                               covering)
    xylem and phloem (vascular tissues), and fibers (for support) and general
    body cells. In turn, the vascular tissues are composed of several different
    cell types:
          yp tracheid and vessel elements for the xylem,y    , and sieve tubes and
    companion cells for the phloem.
Cell Walls
•   The cell wall is mostly made of cellulose.
     – Cellulose is a molecule made of many glucose
         sugar
            g molecules linked in longg chains
     – Starch is also made of many glucose units, but
         the linkages between the glucoses is different in
         cellulose and starch. This gives them different
         chemical
          h i l properties.i
     – Notably, almost all organisms can easily digest
         starch, but very few can digest cellulose.
           • Mostly just some types of bacteria and
              protists
     – Cellulose is probably the most common organic
              p
         compound     on Earth.
•   In cells needed for support or water conduction, the
    cell wall is thickened and strengthened by lignin, a
    complex organic compound that is even harder to
    digest than cellulose.
Meristems
•   Meristems
        i       are special
                         i l regions
                                i     i the
                                      in h plant
                                            l
    where cell division occurs. Cells in other
    parts of the plant don’t divide. Meristems
    produce all of the new cells; once a cell
    l
    leaves the
            h meristem,
                    i      i can enlarge
                           it       l     b
                                          but
    not divide.
     – Apical meristem: at the tip of the plant
       shoots and at the tip of the roots. This is
       where
         h    growthh occurs, producing
                                  d i new
       leaves, branches, flowers, etc.
     – Lateral meristem: in the stems of woody
       plants: they produce lateral growth. Also
       called cambium layers.
                       layers
– Once a cell has been produced in a
  meristem, it goes through a process of
  differentiation, which turns it into some
  particular
       i l type off cell.
                       ll
     – Xylem, phloem, epidermis, etc.
– Meristems are the equivalent of stem
  cells in animals.
Vascular Tissue
•   Two basic types: xylem and phloem
•   Xylem conducts water and mineral nutrients up from the roots.
     – Xylem cells are dead and hollowed out.
     – Wood is made of xylem, but even non‐woody
                                          non woody plants have xylem.
     – Water is pulled up by transpiration: water molecules evaporating from the leaves pull other
       water molecules up the tubes, because water molecules stick together.
•   Phloem cells carry organic matter (mostly sugar) from the leaves to other parts of the
    plant.
     – Unlike xylem, phloem cells are alive.
     – The cells are connected by many pores, so material flows easily between the cells.
     – Flow of material in both directions
Xylem and Phloem

•   Xylem and phloem occur together, in
    bundles that also include supporting cells.
•   Xylem in the inside, phloem on the
    outside, with the meristem (cambium)
    between them.
     – So, in a tree, the xylem becomes wood,
       and the phloem is the layer just under the
       b k Removing
       bark. R       i the
                         th bark
                             b k from
                                  f    a circle
                                          i l
       around the tree kills it because the
       phloem has been disrupted: the roots are
       not connected to the leaves.
•   A meristem layer (called vascular
    cambium) lies between the xylem and
    phloem,, and ggenerates new cells.
    p
Evolution of Leaves
•   The basic structure of having a flat surface to
    maximize exposure to light for photosynthesis
    is found in many algae as well as in the plants.
    However these are not considered “true
    However,                              true
    leaves”, because they have no vascular tissue.
•   Microphylls are leaf‐like structures found in
    some of the seedless vascular plants: lycopods
    and horsetails. Microphylls have a single
    strand of vascular tissue down the middle.
    Seem to have evolved as outgrowths from the
    stem.
    stem
•   Megaphylls are the type of leaf seen in ferns
    and seed plants. Megaphylls have a branched
    system of veins (vascular tissue). They seem to
    have evolved independently from microphylls,
    in response to a drop in atmospheric carbon
    dioxide in the late Paleozoic. Maybe by filling
    in the spaces between small branches
    (webbing).
Leaves
• Leaves are the main site of photosynthesis.
• Photosynthesis mostly occurs in the layer of cells just below the
  epidermis. (palisade layer)
• The sugars are then transported to other parts of the plant
  through the vascular system.
   – The spongy tissue below the palisade layer carries the sugar (dissolved in
     water) to the veins of the leaf, which are part of the vascular system.
• LLeaves are coated
                  t d with
                        ith a waxy layer
                                   l     called
                                           ll d the
                                                th cuticle.
                                                     ti l The
                                                            Th leaf
                                                               l f
   epidermis cells secrete the cuticle, which helps prevent the leaf
   from drying out.
Stomata in the Leaves
• A big
    b development
        d l           in bryophytes
                         b    h     is
  stomata: openings in the leaves that
  open and close in response to
  conditions. (singular
              (singular=stoma)
                        stoma)
• The leaves are covered with the waxy
  cuticle, which is impermeable to gases
   • Photosynthesis needs CO2 from the
     atmosphere, and it releases oxygen
   • Transpiration needs water vapor to
     evaporate out of the leaves, but in
     hot, dry climates, too much
     evaporation would kill the plant.
• Stomata can open and close in
  response to the need for carbon
  dioxide and the need to avoid drying
  out.
• All plants except liverworts have
  stomata.
Bryophytes
•   Bryophytes
    B      h t are also
                      l called
                            ll d th
                                 the non‐vascular
                                               l plants.
                                                    l t They
                                                          Th
    do not have xylem and phloem to conduct fluids and
    nutrients between different parts of the plant body.
•   The bryophytes are not a monophyletic group (clade).
    Instead, we use the name for 3 phyla: the liverworts, the
    hornworts, and the mosses.
•   All three groups spend most of their life cycle as haploid
    gametophytes.
•   The sperm are produced in antheridia. They have flagella
    (several), and they have to swim through drops of water
    to find the eggs inside the archegonia of another plant
                                                        plant.
•   No vascular system means that the plants must be small
    and low to the ground, and that they are mostly found in
    moist environments.
•   Roots are called rhizoids: they just hold the plant down
    and don’t extract water and nutrients for the rest of the
    plant. Each one is a single elongated cell.
                                                                 Liverwort pore: always open,
                                                                 in contrast to stomata, which
                                                                 open and close.
More on Bryophytes

•   The fertilized egg is contained within the
    archegonium of the gametophyte. This
    zygote grows into a sporophyte without
    leaving. The sporophyte grows out of the
    gametophyte.
              h
     – The sporophyte is composed of a foot that
       anchors it to the gametophyte, a stalk, and
       the sporangium,
            sporangium where meiosis and spore
       production occurs.
     – The sporophyte is not photosynthetic, and it
       is completely
              p      y dependent
                         p       on the ggametophyte
                                                p y
       fro survival.
Liverworts
•   Liverworts are probably the earliest branching
    plant lineage.
     – The name come from an old and very incorrect idea
       called the Doctrine of Signatures: a plant resembles
       the organ it can heal. Liverworts somewhat
       resemble the liver, and so they were thought to cure
       liver
          e ailments.
             a e ts.
•   Liverworts are small and low to the ground.
    They produce a flattened stem that looks like
    a leaf,, but it lacks the different cell and tissue
    types found in real leaves.
•   Unlike all other plant groups, liverworts don’t
    have stomata that open  p and close in response
                                                  p
    to different environmental conditions.
    Instead, liverworts have pores that are always
    open. (Hornworts and mosses have stomata.)
Hornworts
•   Another bryophyte group. The
    sporophyte grows out of the
    gametophyte, but the sporophyte is
    photosynthetic.
•   Another small, low‐growing plant.
    Distinguished by the horn‐shaped
    sporophyte.
Mosses
•   The mosses are the largest group of
    bryophytes.
•   Th
    There  are a number
                      b off plants
                               l t called
                                      ll d “moss”
                                           “     ”
    that are really not bryophytes: reindeer
    moss is an example
•   S
    Some   mosses h have a strand
                             t d off vascular
                                           l
    tissue, but not a full xylem‐phloem
    combination as is found in all non‐bryophyte
    plants.
    plants
•   Mosses have a use for humans: they absorb
    water very well, so peat moss is a common
    soil additive in gardening.
                     gardening It is also used for
    fuel in some parts of the world. It is also
    burned to produce the smoky taste of Scotch
    whiskey.
•   Peat moss bogs are quite acidic, and this
    preserves dead organisms.
Sphagnum mosses cover 1% of the earth’s
                                earth s surface
Seedless Vascular Plants
•   Two phyla: the lycophytes (club mosses) and the pterophytes (ferns and
    horse tails)
•   Sporophyte is dominant, with small gametophyte. The eggs are in
    archegonia, and the sporophyte grows right out of the gametophyte, just
    like in the bryophytes. Sperm have flagella and move through drops of
    water to the eggs.
•   Roots and shoots both form branches (not true in bryophytes).
Protrachaeophytes and early vascular plants

                             • All are extinct. Known only from
                               fossils, which date to 420 mya.
                             •    Sporophytes
                                  S      h      ((as shown
                                                      h    iin the
                                                                h
                                 figure) are branched and grow
                                 independently of gametophytes.
                             • Some had vascular tissues. Up to 50
                               cm tall, which is HUGE compared
                               to bryophytes!
                             • Consisted of stem tissues only
                               (photosynthetic vertical stems and
                               h i
                               horizontal
                                        l rhizomes).
                                           hi      )
 Aglaophyton [29.12/29.11]   • NO leaves
                             • NO roots
                                      t ffor absorbing
                                              b bi watert (b
                                                          (butt
                               rhizoids for anchoring).
Lycophytes
•   Lycophytes are club mosses (plus spike mosses
    and quillworts).
     – Not closely related to the “true” mosses,
        which are bryophytes with no vascular
        system.
•   Leaves are microphylls.
•   Some called ground pines: they resemble small
    pine trees, with the sporangia at the tips looking
    somewhat like pine cones.
•   Many are epiphytes: they grow off the ground,
    supported by trees but just using them for
    support, not as parasites.
•   Flash powder, used by photographers before
    electricity‐powered flash bulbs, was Lycopodium
    club moss spores: they are very small and burn
    very rapidly.
Paleozoic Club Mosses
•    Club mosses were a dominant form in
    the Carboniferous period of the
    Paleozoic. Sometimes called “scale
    trees” because the bark had scales on
    it.
•   They were the first plants to grow into
    trees, up to 40 meters tall.
•   They grew in swamps, and most of
    our coal in Illinois comes from
    Carboniferous club mosses (plus ferns
    and dhhorsetails).
                 il )
•   These big lycophytes are long extinct,
    but smaller ones survived and exist
    today.
        d
Pterophytes
•   Pterophytes are ferns, horsetails, and whisk ferns.
•    Have megaphyll leaves.
•   Gametophyte is a small multicellular structure called a
    prothallus that is often bisexual. The large sporophyte
    grows right out of it.
•   Ferns have roots that can branch at any point. In
    contrast, lycophyte roots can only branch at the
    growing tip, by forming a Y with two equal branches.
•   Azolla (duckweed), a very small fern, grows in rice
    paddies. It has a cyanobacterium symbiote, which fixes
    nitrogen, useful to fertilize the rice.
•   Whisk ferns are just 2 small genera, mostly tropical
    epiphytes No true roots,
    epiphytes.           roots just rhizoids to hold them
    down. (but roots may have been lost secondarily).
    Dichotomous branching: Y shaped, 2 equal branches:
    considered a primitive trait, with unequal branches
    evolving later.
Horsetails
•   Horsetails have silica in their stems that
    makes them good for scouring pots:
    "scouring rushes".
•   Horsetails were very common, up to 15
    meters tall in the Carboniferous period.
    Today only a few species exist.
•   Sporangium at the top of the plant.
•   Photosynthesis in the stems.
•   When the stems branch, a whorl of smaller
    branches appear
               pp     ((i.e. the whorls are
    branches, not leaves).
You can also read