2. Objectives
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
Describe the major characteristics of the plant
kingdom
Discuss the challenges to plant life on land
Describe the adaptations that allowed plants to
colonize land Plants
3. Plants are a large and varied group of organisms
(close to 300,000 species of catalogued plants)
260,000 are plants that produce seeds.
The plant kingdom contains mostly of
photosynthetic organisms
Chlorophyll pigment in chloroplast
Plants possess cell walls containing cellulose.
Plant Kingdom
4. As organisms adapt to life on land, they have to contend
with several challenges in the terrestrial environment.
Water stuff of life
Alternation of Generations
Sporangia in the seedless plants
Gametangia in the seedless plants
Apical Meristems
PLANT ADAPTATIONS TO LIFE AND LAND
5. Alternation of Generations
Alternation of generations describes a life cycle in which an
organism has both haploid and diploid multicellular stages
Haplontic Dominant haploid
Diplontic Dominant diploid
Alternation of generations between the haploid (1n)
gametophyte and diploid (2n) sporophyte is shown.
Haplodiplontic plants exhibit
alternation of generations
Diploid organism = Gametophyte
Haploid organism = Sporophyte
6. Sporangia in the Seedless Plants
The sporophyte of seedless plants is diploid and results from syngamy
or the fusion of two gametes
The sporophyte bears the sporangia (singular, sporangium) = Spore in
a vessel
2 types:
Homosporous - produce only one kind of spore (Seedless
nonvascular)
Heterosporous - produce two morphologically different types of
spores (Male and Female)
7. This life cycle of a fern shows
alternation of generations with a
dominant sporophyte stage.
This life cycle of a moss shows alternation
of generations with a dominant
gametophyte stage.
Sporophyte VS Gametophyte
8. Gametangia in the Seedless Plants
Gametangia (singular, gametangium) are structures on the
gametophytes of seedless plants in which gametes are produced by
mitosis.
The male gametangium, the antheridium, releases sperm. Many
seedless plants produce sperm equipped with flagella that enable
them to swim in a moist environment to the archegonia, the female
gametangium.
The embryo develops inside the archegonium as the sporophyte.
9. Apical Meristems
-the shoots and roots of plants increase in length
through rapid cell division within a tissue
Meristematic cells give rise to all the
specialized tissues of the plant
Lateral meristem produces cells that increase
the diameter of stems and tree trunks.
This apple seedling is an
example of a plant in which the
apical meristem gives rise to
new shoots and
root growth.
10. Additional Land Plant Adaptations
Xylem and Phloem food and water transport.
Cuticle Coats waxy coating to prevent desiccation
Synthesize a large range of poisonous secondary metabolites -
Alkaloids
Morphine alkaloid in Opium
poppy
11. Hydrophytes Plant adapted to live nearly or quite
submerged in water
Mesophytes thrives best on a moderate supply of
water
Halophytes salt-tolerant plant that grows in soil or
waters of high salinity, coming into contact with saline
water through its roots
Xerophytes drought-loving plants
Environmental adaptations
Mesophytes
Halophytes
Xerophytes
Hydrophytes
12. Major Divisions of Land Plants
Vascular Plants developed a network of cells that conduct water and
solutes through the plant body
Nonvascular Plants lack vascular tissue formed of specialized cells
for the transport of water and nutrients