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Evolution of the Flower Chapter 20

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Angiosperms enclose their seeds in structures known as carpels, instead of lying ... papery. Simple fruit fleshy fruits. Berries- tomatoes, dates, and grapes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evolution of the Flower Chapter 20


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Evolution of the FlowerChapter 20
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  • Two classes - Monocotyledons and Dicotyledons
  • Distinctive reproductive feature - carpels
  • Angiosperms enclose their seeds in structures
    known as carpels, instead of lying naked on the
    scales of a strobilus as in gymnosperms. Hence
    the name "angiosperm" which means "seed in
    vessel".

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Review of Flower Structure
  • Flowers are reproductive structures that are
    formed from four sets of modified leaves on a
    shortened stem. In other words, the flower is a
    modified strobilus.
  • Sepals - protect floral parts in the bud
  • Petals - attract pollinators
  • Stamens - anthers and filaments
  • Carpels - stigma, style, and ovary (collection of
    carpels referred to as a pistil)
  • The carpel is a unique structure found only in
    angiosperms.

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  • Cut into the pistil and you will see one or more
    tiny chambers, each chamber holding one or more
    sporangia on tiny stalks.
  • These sporangia are the ovules - each carpel can
    hold one or several ovules
  • Ovules in the ovary develop into seeds
  • The ovary wall forms a fruit to help disperse the
    seeds
  • There is an amazing diversity of floral
    structures. Linnaeus used these differences to
    classify plants.

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Evolution of the Carpel
  • Goethe, German writer, philosopher, and (in his
    spare time) noted botanist, proposed in 1790 that
    carpels evolved from leaves.
  • Chambers in the pistil were probably formed from
    a sporophyll - a fertile leaf bearing ovules.
  • Sporophyll had ovules (modified sporangia) on its
    outer edges.
  • Edges of the leaf folded over and fused together
    to form a protective chamber - the carpel.

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  • Pistils probably formed by the fusion of several
    carpels along the midrib of the modified leaves.
  • Goethe's "foliar theory of the carpel" is still
    the best hypothesis for explaining the evolution
    of the carpel.

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Derived Features of Angiosperms
  • Leaves with finely divided venation
  • Complex xylem - incl. vessels and parenchyma
  • Complex phloem - sieve tube elements w/companion
    cells
  • Herbaceous habit - rapid life cycle (some angios)
  • Ovary to protect ovules ("seeds in vessels")
  • Double fertilization and formation of triploid
    endosperm

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  • Bisexual Flowers microsporangia and
    megasporangia in same strobilus
  • Advanced pollination syndromes - insects, birds,
    etc.
  • Fruits to protect and diserse seeds
  • Extreme diversity in secondary metabolism

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Origin of the Angiosperms
  • Darwin called the origin of the angiosperms an
    "abominable mystery".
  • The evolution of angiosperms remains a mystery to
    this day, although great progress has been made
    in recent years solving this mystery using a
    combination of fossil evidence, molecular data,
    and the discovery of the primitive angiosperm
    Amborella.
  • Flowering plants evolved sometime during the
    Cretaceous, approximately 140 million years ago,
    while the dinosaurs were at their peak.

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  • However, no fossils showing a transition from
    gymnosperm to angiosperm have been discovered.
    This makes the origin of the angiosperms
    mysterious.
  • Angiosperms quickly became the dominant plants,
    although gymnosperms continued to rule in cold,
    dry, or sandy habitats, as they still do today.
  • Regardless of the origin of the angiosperms, by
    the end of the Cretaceous (65-70 mya) most
    flowering plant families had evolved.

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Pollination and Seed Dispersal
  • Coevolution occurs when an evolutionary change in
    one organism leads to an evolutionary change in
    another organism that interacts with it.
  • Flowering plants show two great examples of
    coevolution evolution of animal pollination and
    evolution of fruit dispersal.
  • Flowers that rely on wind pollination are tiny
    and inconspicuous (like oak trees, maple trees,
    corn, grasses).
  • Flowers that are pollinated by animals have showy
    petals to attract the pollinators.

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  • Flowers advertise their reward of nectar, sugar
    water, to attract pollinators.
  • Fruits function to disperse seeds.
  • Animals eat fruit, but don't digest seeds.
  • Tiny hooks and spines to attach to animal.
  • Also dispersed by wind, water (coconuts).

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Monocots or Eudicots?
  • Some flowering plants are neither monocots or
    dicots.
  • Magnolia

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Evolution of the flower
  • What were the flowers of the earliest angiosperms
    like?
  • Deduce their nature form what we know of certain
    living plants and from the fossil record.
  • In general flowers were diverse in the number of
    floral parts and in their arrangements.

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Parts of the flower provide clues to evolution
  • The perianth of early angiosperms did not have
    distinct sepals and petals
  • Sepals and petals were identical or there was a
    gradual transition in appearance between these
    whorls (magnolias and water lilies).
  • i.e. petals can be viewed as modified leaves that
    have become specialized for attracting
    pollinators.

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Wintergreen Chimphila umbellata
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In most angiosperms
  • Petals were probably derived originally from
    stamens that lost their sporangia- becoming
    sterile and modified to new role
  • Most petals like stamens are supplied by one
    vascular strand
  • In contrast sepals are normally supplied by the
    same number of vascular strands in a leaf

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  • Petal fusion resulting in a tubular corolla
    figure 20-8c

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The Stamens
  • Magnoliids- broad, colored, and scented role in
    attracting floral visitors
  • In others- small greenish, fleshy
  • Many living angiosperm in contrast have thin
    filaments and thick terminal anthers
  • In stamens of monocots and eudicots are less
    diverse than Magnoliids

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Stamens continue
  • In some specialized flowers the stamens are fused
    together.
  • Form columnar structure i.e pea, melon and mallow
    fig 20-8d and sunflower 20-9d
  • Some stamens fused with corolla i.e. snapdragon,
    phlox, and mint families.

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Stamens can become nectaries
  • In some families stamens become sterile losing
    their sporangia and becoming specialized
    nectaries.
  • Nectaries are glands that secrete nectar- sugary
    fluids tha tattract pollinators and provides food
    for them.
  • Most nectaries are not modified stamens but arose
    other ways.

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The Carpels
  • The carpels of many early angiosperms were
    unspecialized
  • Carpels with no specialized areas for the
    entrapment of pollen grains comparable to
    specialized stigmas of most living andiosperms.
  • Magnoliids- carpels are free from one another
    unlike most contemporary angiosperms.

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Four evolutionary trends among flowers are evident
  • Evolved toward having few parts that are definite
    in number
  • Floral whorls have been reduced four to one in
    more advance ones and the floral parts often have
    become fused.
  • Ovary has become inferior in position and the
    perianth has become differentiated into a
    distinct calyx and corolla
  • The radial symmetry (regularity) or actinomorphy
    of early flowers has given way to bilateral
    symmetry (irregularity)or zygomorphy in more
    advance ones.

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The Asteraceae and Orchidaceae are examples of
specialized families
  • Two largest families of angiosperms
  • Asteraceae- compositae which are eudicots
  • Orchidacea- monocots

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The flower of the Asteraceae are closely bunched
together into a head
  • The epigynous flowers are relatively small and
    bunched together into a head
  • Each flower have an inferior ovary composed of
    two fused carpels with a single ovule in one
    locule

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Composite flowers
  • Stamens are reduced to five in number
  • Usually fused to one another (connate)
  • And fused to the corolla (adnate)
  • The petals also five are fused to one another and
    to the ovary
  • The sepals are absent or reduced to a series of
    bristles or scales (pappus)

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Pappus
  • Often serves as an aid to dispersal by wind

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Orchidaceae is the largest Angiosperm family
  • 24, 000 species Orchids
  • Unlike composites are monocots
  • individual species rarely abundant
  • Most are tropical
  • 140 native to US and Canada

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Orchids
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Orchids
  • Like the composites
  • The carpels are fused (The three carpels)
  • Ovary is inferior
  • Unlike the composites
  • Ovaries contain many thousands of minute ovules
  • Each pollination event may result in huge number
    of seeds

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Animals serve as the primary agents of floral
evolution
  • Flowers and insects have coevolved

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Wind pollination flowers produce no nectar
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Fruit is a Mature ovary
  • Accessory fruit- fruit which some additional
    parts are retained (strawberry)
  • Simple fruits develop from one carpel or from
    several united carpels.
  • Aggregate fruits, such as those magnolias,
    raspberries and strawberries consist of a number
    of separate carpels of one gynoecium
  • Multiple fruits consist of the gynoecia of more
    than one flower- the pineapple

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Simple fruits
  • May be
  • soft and fleshy,
  • dry and woody, or
  • papery

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Simple fruit fleshy fruits
  • Berries- tomatoes, dates, and grapes
  • Drupes- one to several carpels but only 1 seed-
    peaches, cherries, olives, plums
  • Pomes- example of an accessory fruit- apples,
    pears

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Honeysuckle, Lonicera hispidula
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Dry simple fruit
  • Dehiscent- tissue of the mature ovary wall (the
    pericarp) break open freeing seeds
  • Indehiscent- the seeds remain in the fruit after
    the fruit has been shed from the parent plant.

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  • Dehiscent fruit, Legumes

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Cypselas, modified calyx (the Pappus)
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Poison Ivy
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Mescaline from the peyote cactus
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Cannabis sativa
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Quinine tx malaria
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Erythroxylum coca
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