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MSU LBS 148 - Overview of Lecture: Plants
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Overview of Lecture: Plants Read: Text ch 29 & 30 Bullet Points: • plant phylogeny & diversity • photosynthesis • light spectral sensitivity • alternation of generations multicellular gametophyte (n) & sporophyte (2n) • nonvascular mosses etc. • vascular ferns etc • seed plants • flowering plants - sex • fruit and seed dispersal • chemical defenses ... and offenses!vascular plants w/ ‘plumbing’ (ch 35) modern Chara - a pond weed is in sister group to modern plants land plants w/ fatty-waxy cuticle (Fig 36.14) & stomata (Fig 36.16) - conserve water Fig. 29.4 & 29.7. The ‘Kingdom Plantae’ has been revised into a sister clade of the chara pond weed clade (Fig 29.4) fruit: Fig 38.10 & sec 38.2 flowering plants seed plants (sec 30.1, ch 38)12H2O 6CO2 6O2 1C6H12O6 6H2O + ATP 2 stages: 1a capturing energy from light (ch 10.2) w/ photopigment molecules: chlorophylls & carotenoids 1b using the energy to make reducing (electron accepting) NADPH energy-storing ATP ATP 2 the Calvin cycle (ch 10.3): using ATP & NADPH to synthesize complex organic molecules: sugars: glucose ! starch, wood ATP C6H12O6Light is electromagnetic energy, ‘conveniently thought of as’ a wave. Shorter wavelengths carry greater energy Fig 10.6 carotenoids chlorophyll b chlorophyll a Fig 10.9 Englemann’s brilliant 1882 experiment w/ aerobic bacteria distributing themselves along spyrogyra algae behind a prism Light visible to human retinal pigments is a small portion of the solar spectrum. {birds & insects see down into UV}Plants have sensory systems and “behavioral” responses: to crowdinggametophyte dominant sporophyte dominant The multicellular diploid sporophyte produces haploid spores not gametes, by meiosis. The multicellular haploid gametophyte produces haploid gametes by mitosis. Gametophyte is non-vascular & either confined to moist spots or small. {if you were a plant, would you be a sporophyte, gametophyte or both?}Key Haploid (n) Diploid (2n) Protonemata (n) “Bud” “Bud” Male gametophyte (n) Female gametophyte (n) Gametophore Rhizoid Spores Spore dispersal Peristome Sporangium MEIOSIS Seta Capsule (sporangium) Foot Mature sporophytes Capsule with peristome (SEM) Female gametophytes 2 mm Raindrop Sperm Antheridia Egg Archegonia FERTILIZATION (within archegonium) Zygote (2n) Embryo Archegonium Young sporophyte (2n) moss liverwort sporophyte (2n) hornwort dominates gametophyte (n) sphagnum - future peat; Defrosting the Carbon Freezer of the North E. Stokstad Science 2004:1618-1620.http://www.nature.com/news/2004/040419/full/040419-5.html Michael Hopkin Height limit predicted for tallest trees. How tall can a tree grow? … researchers … have placed the theoretical height limit at 130 metres: the height of a 35-storey skyscraper. … Koch et al. 2004. Nature, 428, 851-854. There is no transmembrane water pump in nature, but cells do pump solutes & create osmotic gradients; water follows (up) osmotic gradient ! pressure (ch 36.1)Key Haploid (n) Diploid (2n) MEIOSIS Spore dispersal Sporangium Sporangium Mature sporophyte (2n) Sorus Fiddlehead Spore (n) Young gametophyte Mature gametophyte (n) Archegonium Egg Antheridium Sperm FERTILIZATION New sporophyte Gametophyte Zygote (2n)Raven et al. + Ginkophyta Ginko male trees OK, 1 tree female fleshy seeds (not fruit) a mess!Endosperm (3n) is the bulk of cereal grains (grasses: corn, wheat, rice, barley) which directly or indirectly (meat, beer) provide most human nutrition. Beans have converted 3n endosperm into 2n embryo. Pillow talk in plants McClure, B. 2004. Nature 429: 249-250 Fig 41.25 self-incompatibility pg 775Pomes - include: apples, pears & quinces. The core is the ovary (maternal) with seeds (partly maternal, partly recombinant), and the rest (the tastee part) is overgrowth of receptacle (maternal). If you find a tastee new mutant variety of apple, can you plant the seeds to propagate the variety?Digestion And Dispersal … scientists observed … animals living around a group of wild-growing chillies in Arizona. … desert mice and rats avoided spicy chillies, but birds fed almost exclusively on the plants. … when birds ate the chillies, many seeds germinated, but there was no germination after mice had eaten the chilli seeds. … seeds pass through a birds’ digestive systems very quickly and come out unharmed, whereas in mice, rats and other mammals, the seeds don’t make it out in one piece … The researchers suggest that chilli plants have evolved to produce capsaicin as a repellent for animals {mammals} … whilst still allowing birds to eat their seeds. Molecular basis for species-specific sensitivity to "hot" chili peppers. Jordt & Julius 2002. CELL 108:421-430. {the vanilloid receptor subtype 1 (VR1)} Seed dispersal – Directed deterrence by capsaicin in chillies. Tewksbury & Nabhan 2001 Nature 412:403-404Prairie Meadows Burning by George CatlinPerception and response to mechanical stimuli are likely essential at the cellular and organismal levels. Elaborate and impressive touch responses of plants capture the imagination as such behaviors are unexpected in otherwise often quiescent creatures. Touch responses can turn plants into aggressors against animals, trapping and devouring them, and enable flowers to be active in ensuring crosspollination and shoots to climb to sunlit heights. Signaling molecules and hormones ... have been implicated in touch responses. Altering gene expression by touch in Arabidopsis . The shorter plant on the left was touched twice a day. {hiding from grazers?} The unmolested plant (right) grew much taller.A deer browse-line on a row of cedars. Herbal & folk medicines exploit these, including for disease control: ex: quinine & taxol Ethnobotany/ethnopharmacology and mass bioprospecting: Issues on intellectual property and


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MSU LBS 148 - Overview of Lecture: Plants

Course: Lbs 148-
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