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Relative dominance in major plant lineages

Sporophyte 2N, produces spores. Non-vascular-to-vascular Spores-to-seeds Cones-to-flowers Motile-to-non-motile sperm. Relative dominance in major plant lineages. Gametophyte 1N, produces gametes. Fig. 37.3. Types of cell division. Mitosis: growth, development & repair

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Relative dominance in major plant lineages

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  1. Sporophyte 2N, produces spores Non-vascular-to-vascular Spores-to-seeds Cones-to-flowers Motile-to-non-motile sperm Relative dominance in major plant lineages Gametophyte 1N, produces gametes

  2. Fig. 37.3

  3. Types of cell division • Mitosis: • growth, development & repair • Asexual reproduction (yields identical cells) • Occurs in somatic (body) cells • Meiosis • Sexual reproduction (yields different cells) • Occurs in specific reproductive cells

  4. A comparison of mitosis and meiosis (Part 1)

  5. Meiosis • Type of cell division that halves number of chromosomes • Process of 2 successive divisions • Chromosome number reduced in prophase I and anaphase I • Product is gamete, essential for sexual reproduction

  6. Meiosis occurs in gametophytes Male gametophyte • male = pollen grain • located within pollen sacs inside anther • female = embryo sac • ovules contained within ovary • embryo sac within ovule Female gametophyte

  7. Fig. 12.13a

  8. Overview of meiosis: how meiosis reduces chromosome number

  9. Results of alternative arrangements of two homologous chromosome pairs on the metaphase plate in meiosis I

  10. Crossing Over • exchange of genetic material between homologous portions of 2 non-sister chromatids (prophase I) • Increases genetic diversity Results of crossing over during meiosis

  11. Evolutionary advantage • asexual reproduction (mitosis) • easy, rapid, effective way to reproduce • useful in stable environment • lack of genetic diversity among offspring • sexual reproduction (meiosis) • promotes genetic variability • useful in dynamic environment

  12. Alternation of Generations

  13. Monecious or diecious Overview of angiosperm life cycle Polar nuclei  endosperm

  14. 1N, haploid No embryo No nutritive tissue 2N, diploid Embryo Nutritive tissue (endosperm, 3N) Spores vs. Seeds

  15. Plant Classification • Binomial nomenclature • (genus & species epithets) • Devised by Carolus Linnaeus in ca. 1750 • Species grouped by reproductive traits • More recently based on DNA sequences

  16. Plant Evolution How did we get so many species? Just what is a species?

  17. Fig. 1.5

  18. Fig. 1.1

  19. Fig. 1.6

  20. Fig. 15.4

  21. Fig. 15.3 Convergent evolution

  22. Theory of Natural Selection • Over-reproduction • Struggle for existence • Survival & reproduction of the fittest • Inheritance & accumulation of favorable traits

  23. Descent with modification

  24.  Remember: • - Natural selection occurs because of interactions between organisms and their environments. Because the environment varies in time & place, NS is situation dependent. • - Natural selection works to increase or decrease the occurrence of heritable traits. It “filters” existing variation, but does not generate variation. • Individuals are selected, but populations evolve. • - Populations are members of a species that interbreed. • - A population is the smallest unit that can evolve.

  25. Evolution of insecticide resistance in insect populations.

  26. Evolution of drug resistance in HIV

  27. Artificial selection: diverse vegetables derived from wild mustard

  28. 5.  Evidence of evolution Fossil record Convergent form & function Biogeography Homologous structures Embryological development Molecular (DNA) sequences

  29. Embryological evidence: all vertebrates have pharyngeal pouches – gills.

  30. Molecular evidence: e.g., DNA/RNA is universal for the genetic code. Other evidence: homologies basically follow the tree of life.  More closely related organisms have more homologous molecules.

  31. Evolution terms • Phenotype (expression of genes) vs. genotype (genetic make-up) • Micro (within a species) & macro (among species) changes • Evolution refers to changes in a population, not changes in an individual • Evolution (change) usually leads to adaptation of a species to environment (acclimation refers to changes in an individual)

  32. Sources of variation • Mutation in DNA sequences • Ca. 1 in 100,000 genes; most harmful • Most are harmful; some neutral or helpful • Migration • Genetic drift (in small populations) • Reproductive isolation • E.g., geographical, mechanical, temporal • Non-random mating (e.g., sexual selection) • Hybridization • Polyploidy

  33. Fig. 15.6 Geographic Isolation of Western & Eastern Redbud Species

  34. Fig. 15.7 Reproductive Isolation of Dutchmen’s Breeches and Squirrel Corn

  35. Fig. 15.8 Mechanical Isolation in Orchids

  36. Fig. 15.9

  37. Fig. 15.10 Hybridization & polyploidy is very common in plants

  38. Fig. 43.2

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