KINGDOM PLANTAE
PLANT KINGDOM
At present
phylogenetic classification systems
based on evolutionary relationships between the various organisms are
acceptable. This assumes that organisms belonging to the same taxa have a
common ancestor. We now use information from many other sources too to
help resolve difficulties in classification. These become more important
when there is no supporting fossil evidence.
Numerical Taxonomy is based on all
observable characteristics. Number and codes are assigned to all the
characters and the data are then processed. In this way each character
is given equal importance and at the same time hundreds of characters
can be considered.
Cytotaxonomy that is based on
cytological information like chromosome number, structure, behaviour and
chemotaxonomy that uses the chemical constituents of the plant to
resolve confusions, are also used by taxonomists these days.
ALGAE:-
Habit & Habitat:-
Algae are chlorophyll-bearing, simple, thalloid, autotrophic and
largely aquatic (both fresh water and marine) organisms. They occur in a
variety of other habitats: moist stones, soils and wood. Some of them
also occur in association with fungi (lichen) and animals (e.g., on
sloth bear).
Size:- The size
ranges from the microscopic unicellular forms like Chlamydomonas, to
colonial forms like Volvox and to the filamentous forms like Ulothrix
and Spirogyra. A few of the marine forms, such as kelps, form massive
plant bodies.
Reproduction:- The algae reproduce by vegetative, asexual and sexual methods.
Vegetative Reproduction:- Vegetative reproduction is by fragmentation. Each fragment develops into a thallus.
Asexual Reproduction:-
Asexual reproduction is by the production of different types of spores,
the most common being the zoospores. They are flagellated (motile) and
on germination gives rise to new plants.
Sexual reproduction: Sexual reproduction takes place through fusion of two gametes. The fusion of gametes can be of following types in algae:
Isogamous Fusion:
These gametes can be flagellated and similar in size (as in
Chlamydomonas) or non-flagellated (non-motile) but similar in size (as
in Spirogyra). Such reproduction is called isogamous.
Anisogamous Fusion: Fusion of two gametes dissimilar in size, as in some species of Chlamydomonas is termed as anisogamous.
Oogamous Fusion : Fusion between one large, non-motile (static) female gamete and a
smaller, motile male gamete is termed oogamous, e.g., Volvox, Fucus.
Economic Importance of Algae:
Algae are useful to man in a variety of ways. At least a half of the
total carbon dioxide fixation on earth is carried out by algae through
photosynthesis. Being photosynthetic they increase the level of
dissolved oxygen in their immediate environment. They are of paramount
importance as primary producers of energy-rich compounds which form the
basis of the food cycles of all aquatic animals. Many species of
Porphyra, Laminaria and Sargassum are among the 70 species of marine
algae used as food. Certain marine brown and red algae produce large
amounts of hydrocolloids (water holding substances), e.g., algin (brown
algae) and carrageen (red algae) are used commercially. Agar, one of the
commercial products obtained from Gelidium and Gracilaria are used to
grow microbes and in preparations of ice-creams and jellies. Chlorella
and Spirullina are unicellular algae, rich in proteins and are used as
food supplements even by space travellers.
The algae are divided into three main classes:
Chlorophyceae,
Phaeophyceae and
Rhodophyceae.
Chlorophyceae
Characteristics:
The members of chlorophyceae are commonly called green algae. The plant
body may be unicellular, colonial or filamentous. They are usually
grass green due to the dominance of pigments chlorophyll a and b. The
pigments are localised in definite chloroplasts. The chloroplasts may be
discoid, plate-like, reticulate, cup-shaped, spiral or ribbon-shaped in
different species. Most of the members have one or more storage bodies
called pyrenoids located in the chloroplasts. Pyrenoids contain protein
besides starch. Some algae may store food in the form of oil droplets.
Green algae usually have a rigid cell wall made of an inner layer of
cellulose and an outer layer of pectose.
Reproduction:
Vegetative reproduction usually takes place by fragmentation or by
formation of different types of spores. Asexual reproduction is by
flagellated zoospores produced in zoosporangia. The sexual reproduction
shows considerable variation in the type and formation of sex cells and
it may be isogamous, anisogamous or oogamous.
Common Examples: Chlamydomonas, Volvox, Ulothrix, Spirogyra and Chara
Phaeophyceae
Characteristics:
The members of phaeophyceae or brown algae are found primarily in
marine habitats. They show great variation in size and form. They range
from simple branched, filamentous forms (Ectocarpus) to profusely
branched forms as represented by kelps, which may reach a height of 100
metres. They possess chlorophyll a, c, carotenoids and xanthophylls.
They vary in colour from olive green to various shades of brown
depending upon the amount of the xanthophyll pigment, fucoxanthin
present in them. Food is stored as complex carbohydrates, which may be
in the form of laminarin or mannitol. The vegetative cells have a
cellulosic wall usually covered on the outside by a gelatinous coating
of algin. The protoplast contains, in addition to plastids, a centrally
located vacuole and nucleus. The plant body is usually attached to the
substratum by a holdfast, and has a stalk, the stipe and leaf like
photosynthetic organ – the frond. Vegetative reproduction takes place by
fragmentation.
Reproduction:
Asexual reproduction in most brown algae is by biflagellate zoospores
that are pear-shaped and have two unequal laterally attached flagella.
Sexual reproduction may be isogamous, anisogamous or oogamous. Union of
gametes may take place in water or within the oogonium (oogamous
species). The gametes are pyriform (pear-shaped) and bear two laterally
attached flagella.
Common Examples: Ectocarpus, Dictyota, Laminaria, Sargassum and Fucus
Rhodophyceae
Characteristics:
Rhodophyta are commonly called red algae because of the predominance of
the red pigment, r-phycoerythrin in their body. Majority of the red
algae are marine with greater concentrations found in the warmer areas.
They occur in both well-lighted regions close to the surface of water
and also at great depths in oceans where relatively little light
penetrates. The red thalli of most of the red algae are multicellular.
Some of them have complex body organisation. The food is stored as
floridean starch which is very similar to amylopectin and glycogen in
structure.
Reprodcution:
The red algae usually reproduce vegetatively by fragmentation. They
reproduce asexually by non-motile spores and sexually by non-motile
gametes. Sexual reproduction is oogamous and accompanied by complex post
fertilisation developments.
Common Examples: Polysiphonia, Porphyra, Gracilaria and Gelidium.
BRYOPHYTES
Habits & Habitats:
Bryophytes include the various mosses and liverworts that are found
commonly growing in moist shaded areas in the hills. Bryophytes are also
called amphibians of the plant kingdom because these plants can live in
soil but are dependent on water for sexual reproduction. They usually
occur in damp, humid and shaded localities.
Characteristics:
They play an important role in plant succession on bare rocks/soil. The
plant body of bryophytes is more differentiated than that of algae. It
is thallus-like and prostrate or erect, and attached to the substratum
by unicellular or multicellular rhizoids. They lack true roots, stem or
leaves. They may possess root-like, leaf-like or stem-like structures.
Reproduction:
The main plant body of the bryophyte is haploid. It produces gametes,
hence is called a gametophyte. The sex organs in bryophytes are
multicellular. The male sex organ is called antheridium. They produce
biflagellate antherozoids. The female sex organ called archegonium is
flask-shaped and produces a single egg. The antherozoids are released
into water where they come in contact with archegonium. An antherozoid
fuses with the egg to produce the zygote. Zygotes do not undergo
reduction division immediately. They produce a multicellular body called
a sporophyte. The sporophyte is not free-living but attached to the
photosynthetic gametophyte and derives nourishment from it. Some cells
of the sporophyte undergo reduction division (meiosis) to produce
haploid spores. These spores germinate to produce gametophyte.
Economic Importance of Bryophytes:
Bryophytes in general are of little economic importance but some mosses
provide food for herbaceous mammals, birds and other animals. Species
of Sphagnum, a moss, provide peat that have long been used as fuel, and
because of their capacity to hold water as packing material for
trans-shipment of living material. Mosses along with lichens are the
first organisms to colonise rocks and hence, are of great ecological
importance. They decompose rocks making the substrate suitable for the
growth of higher plants. Since mosses form dense mats on the soil, they
reduce the impact of falling rain and prevent soil erosion.
The bryophytes are divided into following classes:
1. liverworts and
2. mosses.
Liverworts
Characteristics:-
The liverworts grow usually in moist, shady habitats such as banks of
streams, marshy ground, damp soil, bark of trees and deep in the woods.
The plant body of a liverwort is thalloid, e.g., Marchantia. The thallus
is dorsiventral and closely appressed to the substrate. The leafy
members have tiny leaf-like appendages in two rows on the stem-like
structures.
Reproduction:-
Asexual reproduction in liverworts takes place by fragmentation of
thalli, or by the formation of specialised structures called gemmae
(sing. gemma). Gemmae are green, multicellular, asexual buds, which
develop in small receptacles called gemma cups located on the thalli.
The gemmae become detached from the parent body and germinate to form
new individuals. During sexual reproduction, male and female sex organs
are produced either on the same or on different thalli. The sporophyte
is differentiated into a foot, seta and capsule. After meiosis, spores
are produced within the capsule. These spores germinate to form
free-living gametophytes.
Mosses
Characteristics:
The predominant stage of the life cycle of a moss is the gametophyte
which consists of two stages. The first stage is the protonema stage,
which develops directly from a spore. It is a creeping, green, branched
and frequently filamentous stage. The second stage is the leafy stage,
which develops from the secondary protonema as a lateral bud. They
consist of upright, slender axes bearing spirally arranged leaves. They
are attached to the soil through multicellular and branched rhizoids.
This stage bears the sex organs.
Reproduction:
Vegetative reproduction in mosses is by fragmentation and budding in the
secondary protonema. In sexual reproduction, the sex organs antheridia
and archegonia are produced at the apex of the leafy shoots. After
fertilisation, the zygote develops into a sporophyte, consisting of a
foot, seta and capsule. The sporophyte in mosses is more elaborate than
that in liverworts. The capsule contains spores. Spores are formed after
meiosis. The mosses have an elaborate mechanism of spore dispersal.
Common Examples: Funaria, Polytrichum and Sphagnum
PTERIDOPHYTES
Characteristics:
The pteridophytes are found in cool, damp, shady places though some may
flourish well in sandy-soil conditions. In pteridophytes, the main
plant body is a sporophyte which is differentiated into true root, stem
and leaves. These organs possess well-differentiated vascular tissues.
The leaves in pteridophyta are small (microphylls) as in Selaginella or
large (macrophylls) as in ferns. The sporophytes bear sporangia that are
subtended by leaf-like appendages called sporophylls. In some cases
sporophylls may form distinct compact structures called strobili or
cones (Selaginella, Equisetum).
Reproduction:
The sporangia produce spores by meiosis in spore mother cells. The
spores germinate to give rise to inconspicuous, small but multicellular,
free-living, mostly photosynthetic thalloid gametophytes called
prothallus. These gametophytes require cool, damp, shady places to grow.
Because of this specific restricted requirement and the need for water
for fertilisation, the spread of living pteridophytes is limited and
restricted to narrow geographical regions. The gametophytes bear male
and female sex organs called antheridia and archegonia, respectively.
Water is required for transfer of antherozoids – the male gametes
released from the antheridia, to the mouth of archegonium. Fusion of
male gamete with the egg present in the archegonium result in the
formation of zygote. Zygote thereafter produces a multicellular
well-differentiated sporophyte which is the dominant phase of the
pteridophytes. In majority of the pteridophytes all the spores are of
similar kinds; such plants are called homosporous. Genera like
Selaginella and Salvinia which produce two kinds of spores, macro
(large) and micro (small) spores, are known as heterosporous. The
megaspores and microspores germinate and give rise to female and male
gametophytes, respectively. The female gametophytes in these plants are
retained on the parent sporophytes for variable periods. The development
of the zygotes into young embryos take place within the female
gametophytes. This event is a precursor to the seed habit considered an
important step in evolution.
The pteridophytes are divided into four classes:
1. Psilopsida(Psilotum);
2. Lycopsida (Selaginella, Lycopodium),
3. Sphenopsida (Equisetum) and
4. Pteropsida (Dryopteris, Pteris, Adiantum).
GYMNOSPERMS
Characteristics:-
The gymnosperms (gymnos : naked, sperma : seeds) are plants in which
the ovules are not enclosed by any ovary wall and remain exposed, both
before and after fertilisation. The seeds that develop
post-fertilisation, are not covered, i.e., are naked. Gymnosperms
include medium-sized trees or tall trees and shrubs. One of the
gymnosperms, the giant redwood tree Sequoia is one of the tallest tree
species. The roots are generally tap roots. Roots in some genera have
fungal association in the form of mycorrhiza (Pinus), while in some
others (Cycas) small specialized roots called coralloid roots are
associated with N2- fixing cyanobacteria. The stems are unbranched
(Cycas) or branched (Pinus, Cedrus). The leaves may be simple or
compound. In Cycas the pinnate leaves persist for a few years. The
leaves in gymnosperms are well-adapted to withstand extremes of
temperature, humidity and wind. In conifers, the needle-like leaves
reduce the surface area. Their thick cuticle and sunken stomata also
help to reduce water loss.
Reproduction:-
The gymnosperms are heterosporous; they produce haploid microspores and
megaspores. The two kinds of spores are produced within sporangia that
are borne on sporophylls which are arranged spirally along an axis to
form lax or compact strobili or cones. The strobili bearing
microsporophylls and microsporangia are called microsporangiate or male
strobili. The microspores develop into a male gametophytic generation
which is highly reduced and is confined to only a limited number of
cells. This reduced gametophyte is called a pollen grain. The
development of pollen grains takes place within the microsporangia. The
cones bearing megasporophylls with ovules or megasporangia are called
macrosporangiate or female strobili. The male or female cones or
strobili may be borne on the same tree (Pinus) or on different trees
(Cycas). The megaspore mother cell is differentiated from one of the
cells of the nucellus. The nucellus is protected by envelopes and the
composite structure is called an ovule. The ovules are borne on
megasporophylls which may be clustered to form the female cones. The
megaspore mother cell divides meiotically to form four megaspores. One
of the megaspores enclosed within the megasporangium (nucellus) develops
into a multicellular female gametophyte that bears two or more
archegonia or female sex organs. The multicellular female gametophyte is
also retained within megasporangium.
Fertilization:-
Unlike bryophytes and pteridophytes, in gymnosperms the male and the
female gametophytes do not have an independent free-living existence.
They remain within the sporangia retained on the sporophytes. The pollen
grain is released from the microsporangium. They are carried in air
currents and come in contact with the opening of the ovules borne on
megasporophylls. The pollen tube carrying the male gametes grows towards
archegonia in the ovules and discharge their contents near the mouth of
the archegonia. Following fertilisation, zygote develops into an embryo
and the ovules into seeds. These seeds are not covered.
ANGIOSPERMS
Characters: In the angiosperms or flowering plants,
the pollen grains and ovules are developed in specialized structures
called flowers. In angiosperms, the seeds are enclosed by fruits. The
angiosperms are an exceptionally large group of plants occurring in wide
range of habitats. They range in size from tiny, almost microscopic
Wolfia to tall trees of Eucalyptus (over 100 metres). They provide us
with food, fodder, fuel, medicines and several other commercially
important products.
Angiosperms are divided into two classes:
1. Dicotyledons and
2. Monocotyledons
The dicotyledons are characterised by having two cotyledons in their seeds while the monocolyledons have only one.
Reproduction:-
Male Sex Organ:-
The male sex organ in a flower is the stamen. Each stamen consists of a
slender filament with an anther at the tip. The anthers, following
meiosis, produce pollen grains.
Female Sex Organs:-
The female sex organs in a flower is the pistil or the carpel. Pistil
consists of an ovary enclosing one to many ovules. Within ovules are
present highly reduced female gametophytes termed embryosacs. The
embryo-sac formation is preceded by meiosis. Hence, each of the cells of
an embryo-sac is haploid. Each embryo-sac has a three-celled egg
apparatus – one egg cell and two synergids, three antipodal cells and
two polar nuclei. The polar nuclei eventually fuse to produce a diploid
secondary nucleus.
Pollination:
Pollen grains, after dispersal from the anthers, are carried by wind or
various other agencies to the stigma of a pistil. This is termed as
pollination.
Fertilization:
The pollen grains germinate on the stigma and the resulting pollen tubes
grow through the tissues of stigma and style and reach the ovule. The
pollen tubes enter the embryo-sac where two male gametes are discharged.
One of the male gametes fuses with the egg cell to form a zygote
(syngamy). The other male gamete fuses with the diploid secondary
nucleus to produce the triploid primary endosperm nucleus (PEN). Because
of the involvement of two fusions, this event is termed as double
fertilisation, an event unique to angiosperms.
Embryo: The
zygote develops into an embryo (with one or two cotyledons) and the PEN
develops into endosperm which provides nourishment to the developing
embryo. The synergids and antipodals degenerate after fertilisation.
During these events the ovules develop into seeds and the ovaries
develop into fruit.
PLANT LIFE CYCLES AND ALTERNATION OF GENERATIONS
In
plants, both haploid and diploid cells can divide by mitosis. This
ability leads to the formation of different plant bodies - haploid and
diploid. The haploid plant body produces gametes by mitosis. This plant
body represents a gametophyte. Following fertilisation the zygote also
divides by mitosis to produce a diploid sporophytic plant body. Haploid
spores are produced by this plant body by meiosis. These in turn, divide
by mitosis to form a haploid plant body once again. Thus, during the
life cycle of any sexually reproducing plant, there is an alternation of
generations between gamete producing haploid gametophyte and spore
producing diploid sporophyte.
However, different plant groups, as well as individuals representing them, differ in the following patterns:
1. Sporophytic generation
is represented only by the one-celled zygote. There are no free-living
sporophytes. Meiosis in the zygote results in the formation of haploid
spores. The haploid spores divide mitotically and form the gametophyte.
The dominant, photosynthetic phase in such plants is the free-living
gametophyte. This kind of life cycle is termed as haplontic. Many algae
such as Volvox, Spirogyra and some species of Chlamydomomas represent
this pattern.
2.
On the other extreme, is the type wherein the diploid sporophyte is the
dominant, photosynthetic, independent phase of the plant. The
gametophytic phase is represented by the single to few-celled haploid
gametophyte. This kind of lifecycle is termed as diplontic. All
seed-bearing plants i.e. gymnosperms and angiosperms, follow this
pattern.
3.
Bryophytes and pteridophytes, interestingly, exhibit an intermediate
condition (Haplo-diplontic); both phases are multicellular and often
free-living. However, they differ in their dominant phases.
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