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Diversity - Non-vascular Plants
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Which bacteria share some features with plants?
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The cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) are photosynthetic.
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What kinds of bacteria are important economically and for plant life?
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soil bacteria, particularly N fixing and nitrifying bacteria and bacterial plant diseases
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What makes fungi different from plants?
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Fungi are non-photosynthetic, have chitin cell walls and coenocytic cell structure.
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What kinds of fungi are important economically and for plant life?
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mushrooms, mycorrhizae and fungal plant diseases
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What are plant-like and non-plant-like features of euglenoids, diatoms, green algae and brown algae?
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euglenoids (Euglenophyta)
- photosynthetic pigments - chlorophyll a & b, carotene
- food reserve - paramylon
- cell wall - none (mostly a protein pellicle)
green algae (Chlorophyta)
- photosynthetic pigments - chlorophyll a & b, carotene
- food reserve - starch
- cell wall - sometimes cellulose
diatoms (Chrysophyta)
- photosynthetic pigments - chlorophyll c, fucoxanthin
- food reserve - chrysolaminarin
- cell wall - silica
brown algae (Phaeophyta)
- photosynthetic pigments - chorophyll c, fucoxanthin
- food reserve - laminarin
- cell wall - cellulose & alginic acid
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Where are we likely to encounter algae and what is their economic importance?
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as "weeds" growing on damp walls, tree trunks, soil surface and in irrigation ponds and pipes
also sea-weed derived fertilizers, food gels and agar (and Chinese restaurants)
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What are the differences between the pores in a liverwort and stomata in a higher plant?
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Pores are multicellular and cannot open and close like stomata.
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Which functions of roots do rhizoids fulfill for the liverwort?
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anchorage only
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How do liverworts propagate themselves?
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vegetatively by spread of thallus and sometimes by tiny propagules (gemmae)
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What kind of habitat do liverworts occupy and how does this relate to their structure?
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They are confined to a permanently wet habitat (no cuticle, open pores and no roots).
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What is the ploidy level of the leafy plant?
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haploid
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What gives rise to a sporophyte and what does it look like?
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Sperm fertilizes an egg to produce a zygote. The Stalk grows out of the tip of the gametophyte with the sporangium on top.
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Where does meiosis occur and to what does it give rise?
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inside sporangium to produce spores
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Where does some kind of conducting tissue occur and what is it like?
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In the stem of gametophyte and sporophyte elongated cells (leptoids and hydroids)
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Where are we likely to find this kind of plant?
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in damp or shady places
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How does its structure and life cycle determine its habitat?
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no roots or proper conducting tissue
needs water for sperm to swim
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When we find these plants growing on damp soil and rocks are we looking at the:
- gametophyte
- sporophyte
- archegonium
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- Yes, unlike most other plants, the dominant phase of the life-cycle is the gametophyte.
- Apart from the Hepaticophyta and Bryophyta, the gametophyte is pretty inconspicuous throughout the remainder of the plant kingdom.
- You can sometimes see archegoniophores (structures bearing archegonia) but this is not the main part of the plant.
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So what is its level of ploidy:
- 2n
- 1n
- 4n
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- No, gametes are haploid so the plant that produces them should be similar.
- Yes, as you would expect from its name it is haploid.
- There is no tetraploid stage in the life-cycle.
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How does the liverwort take up water:
- through rhizoids
- through the thallus
- through pores
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- Perhaps a little, but these single celled hairs mostly just hold the plant down
- Yes, liverworts take up (and lose) water over pretty much their entire surface.
- The pores have more to do with gas exchange, and they may even let water escape under dry conditions
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Where would you expect to find liverworts growing:
- only in the tropics
- on exposed mountain-tops
- in damp-shady places
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- They are quite cold-hardy, and can certainly survive Ohio winters
- Although they are cold-hardy they cannot withstand drying winds that would be likely to occur on mountain tops.
- Yes, they can be found growing in all sorts of places as long as they are damp and shady: rocks, patios, plant containers etc.
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What does the moss have that is missing from thalloid liverworts:
- roots
- stem
- xylem
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- The moss only has rhizoids, just like the liverwort
- Yes, unlike many liverworts, mosses are usually differentiated into leaves and stems.
- Mosses have poorly differentiated conducting tissue (hydroids and leptoids) but no true xylem.
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What stage of the lifecycle is the leafy moss plant:
- gametophyte
- sporophyte
- antheridia
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- Yes, as with the liverwort, the gametophyte is the dominant phase of the life-cycle.
- This would be true for most other plants, but not in the case of the moss.
- Antheridia may be present but they are invisible to the naked eye and ceratinly not the whole of the plant.
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If it is the male gametophyte what structures should be present at maturity:
- antheridia
- sporangia
- archegonia
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- Yes, antheridia are formed on the male gametophyte
- Sporangia are formed on the sporophyte (on the moss and throughout the plant kingdom)
- Archegonia are formed on the female gametophyte.
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What is formed by the antheridia:
- pollen
- spores
- sperm
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- Pollen is a kind of spore produced by the sporophyte of higher plants
- Spores are released by the sporophyte
- Yes, whenever antheridia are formed they produce sperm cells.
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How do the sperm cells get to the egg?
- swim through water
- carried by the wind
- carried by animals
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- Moss sperm have flagellae that enable them to swim to the egg. Rain drops can also help to move them around.
- Not in this plant or any other (sperm are very delicate)
- In flowering plants we will see insects and other animals carrying pollen, but the process is much more hapazard for moss sperm
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So where is the egg cell:
- also swimming around
- next to the antheridium
- on another gametophyte
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- No the egg cell is always stationary (throughout the plant kingdom). In the moss each egg is inside an archegonium.
- No, the moss gametophyte is unisexual
- Yes each egg is in an archegonium at the tip of the female gametophyte.
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So the sperm finds an egg, fertilization occurs and a zygote is formed. What next?
- meiosis
- mitosis
- spore formation
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- Not just yet - the life cycle is more complex
- Yes while it is still in the archegonium and at the tip of the female gametophyte a new plant, the sporophyte, starts to grow.
- Not just yet - but we are on our way to spores
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What is the ploidy level of the sporophyte?
- 1n
- 2n
- 4n
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- The sporophyte grew out of a zygote formed by the fusion of two (haploid) gametes.
- Yes a mature female moss plant consists of a diploid sporophyte growing out of a haploid gametophyte.
- There is no tetraploid phase in the life cycle
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How many cells are formed from the spore-mother cells in the sporophyte?
- 2
- 4
- 8
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- These cells undergo meiosis, so how many cells are normally formed in this process?
- Yes since this is where meiosis occurs, four cells are produced. The cluster of four is often called a tetrad.
- These cells undergo meiosis, so how many cells are normally formed in this process?
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After dispersal what does a spore produce:
- a sporophyte
- a protonema
- a gametophyte
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- Spores come from a sporophyte, but they grow into something else.
- Yes a spore germinates to form a filamentous protonema that does not survive. It produces buds from which new gametophytes (all male or all female) grow out to start the alternation of generations over.
- In a sense, although the plants that we recognize as gametophytes grow out of something else.
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