Term
What are the three phylums in Bryophytes? |
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Definition
- Phylum Hepaophyta (Liverworts)
- Phylum Anthocerophyta (hornworts)
- Phylum Bryophya (mosses)
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Term
Are bryophytes considered vasular or nonvascular plants? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the six characteristics that byrophytes and vascular plants share that differ from charophytes (green algae)? |
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Definition
1. presence of male and female gametangia, antheridia and archegonia
2. retention of both the zygote and the developing multicellular embyo or young sporophyte within the archegonium or female gametophyte
3. presence of a multicellular diploid sporophtye, which results in an increased number of meiosis and an amplification of the number of spores that can be produced by each fertilization event.
4. multicellular sporangia consisting of a sterlie jacket layer and internal spore-producing (sporogenous) tissue.
5) meiospores w/ walls containg sporpollenin, which resists decay and drying
6) tissues produced by an apical meristem. |
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Term
What type of life cycle do borophyte have? |
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Definition
Alternating heteromorphic gametophytic and sporophytic generation.
Gametophyte is larger and free living. Sporophyte is smaller and permanently attached to and nutrionally dependent on parentlal gametophyte. (This is opposite of vascular plants) |
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Term
Fossilized bryophyte spores are found, what is it known as? |
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Definition
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Term
True or False
DNA sequence data from present-day plants suggests that earliest plants diverged from charophytes were similar to present-day bryophyte. |
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Definition
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Term
Molecular data support that liverworts, hornworts or bryophytes are sister to all remaining land plants? |
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Definition
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Term
What bryophytes have thalloid? What is it? |
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Definition
a) namely the hornworts and certain liverworts
b) dorsiventrally flattened; dorsal side as pores and ventral side has rhizoids and scales. |
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Term
Marchantia represents which phyla in Bryophytes? |
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Definition
Phylum Heptophyta: Thallose liverworts |
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Term
What is the habitat for Heptatophyta (liverworts)? |
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Definition
moist, shaded banks and other suitable habitats such as flowerpots in a cool green house. |
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Term
Describe the thallus.
How many cells thick or thin and which portion contains the chlorophyll-rich side. |
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Definition
The midrib is about 30 cells thick and the thinner part is 10 cells thick which is differentiated into chlorophyll-rich upper (dorsal) portion and a thicker colorless lower (ventral) portion. |
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Term
Which species is the most simplest of Heptophyta (liverworts) |
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Definition
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Term
The gametophytes in Marchantia (phyla hepatophyta) are unisexual or bisexual? Name the parts. |
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Definition
Unisexual.
Antheridia are borne on disk-headed gametophores caleld antheridiophores
archegonia are borne on umbrella-headed gametophores called archegoniaphores. |
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Term
What are the elongate cells called in a mature sporangium of a Marchantia (Hepatophyta)? What does it do? |
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Definition
Elaters.
Helps disperse spores due to changes in humidity. |
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Term
What does the sporophyte generation consists of in Marchantia (Phyla Hepatophyta) |
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Definition
Foot, short Seta and a capsule. |
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Term
Fragmentation is the principle means of asexual reproduction, but another mechanism is is the production of GEMMAE. Where is it produced? How is it dispersed? |
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Definition
Produced in gemma cups located on the dorsal surface of the gametophyte
dispersed by splashes of rain. |
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Term
Life Cycle of Marchantia
[image]
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Definition
Young sporophyte (2N) contained inside of the archegonia undergoes meiosis creating spores (N) inside the Mature sporophyte (2n). Spores will give rise to either male or female gametophytes.
Fertilization occurs when the rain falls and transfers motile sperm onto the female archegonial head which swims down the venter and fertilizes the egg forming the zygote which grows into the young sporophyte which will eventually rupture the enlarge calyptra. The sporophyte is permanently attached to the gametophyte by the foot.
Asexual reproduction takes place in the Gemma cup of the gametophyte. |
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Term
Where is the archegonia located on the archegonial head on the Merchantia? |
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Definition
Underneath the archegonial head. |
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Term
Where is the antheridia located on the antheridial head of Merchantia? |
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Definition
On the top of the antheridial head |
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Term
In Merchantia, what are the parts of the mature sporophyte starting at the foot of the gametophyte down? |
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Definition
Foot, Seta, the sporangium (2N) with spores (n) inside |
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Term
How can one distinguish a liverwort leaf from a moss leaf? |
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Definition
moss leaves are equal in size and spirally arranged around the stem. Liverworst have 2 rots of equal-sized leaves and a 3rd row of smaller leaves along the lower surface of the gametophyte. |
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Term
Gametophytes of Phyla Anthocerophyta; hornworts are superficially similar to what? |
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Definition
Thallose liverworts, phyla hepatophyta. |
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Term
The cells of a Anthocerophyta contain a large central chlorophase with what structure? |
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Definition
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Term
Anthrocerophyta have extensive internal cavities inhabited by what bacteria that helps fix nitrogen? |
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Definition
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Term
What is a unique aspect of anthocerophyta that has to do with their meristem between the foot and the sporangium? |
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Definition
It is actively dividing, so that the sporophyte continues to elongate for a prolonged period of time. |
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Term
What links mosses and liverhorns to evolutionarily to vascular plants? |
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Definition
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Term
What class within Phylum Bryophyta are the "true mosses"? |
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Definition
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Term
The branching filaments of Phyla Bryophyta consists of how many rows? |
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Definition
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Term
In Phylum Bryophyta, leafy gametophyte will develop from what structure? |
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Definition
bud-like structure on the Protonema |
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Term
Are the rhizoids of Phylum Bryophyta multicellular or unicellular? |
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Definition
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Term
How many cells thick is the leaf of phylum Bryophyta |
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Definition
One cell thick except at the midrib |
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Term
What is a hadrom and hadroid? Where is it found and in which phylum? |
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Definition
Hadrom is a water conducting tissue and Hadroid is the water conducting cells found in the stems of gametophyte and sporophytes of Phylum Bryophytes. |
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Term
what do hadroids resemble? What do hadroid lack? |
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Definition
trachery elements of vascular plants b/c they both lack a living protoplast at maturity.
Lack specialized, lignin-containing wall thickenings. |
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Term
What is leptom and leptoids? Where is it found and in what phyla? |
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Definition
Leptom is the food-conducting tissue and leptoids are the cells. It surrounds the strands of hydroids in the stem of gametophytes and sporophytes in phyla Bryophyta |
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Term
What type of asexual reproduction does phylum bryophyta undergo? |
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Definition
Fragmentation and sometimes produce Gemmae |
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Term
How can one tell the difference from a hydroid and leptoid? |
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Definition
Hydroid is in the center and is much larger than the leptoid cells. |
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Term
What are capsules in Phyla Bryophyta? How long does it take to reach maturity in temperate zones? |
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Definition
The sporangia, 6-18 months |
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Term
Does phyla Bryophyta have stomata? |
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Definition
Yes, are present on epidermis of moss and some are bordered by a single, doughnut shaped guard cell. |
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Term
In Phyla Bryophyta, what stage of it's life does it have chloroplasts and when does it lose it? |
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Definition
Young and maturing sporophytes contain chloroplasts to carry out photosynthesis but as it matures it will lose its ability to photosynthesize and go from green to yellow, orange than brown. |
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Term
What is the calpytra derived from? In the Bryophyta when the capsule elongates, what happens to the calpytra? |
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Definition
The female archegonia. It will be lifted upward with the capsule. |
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Term
What is the peristome in phyla bryophyta? |
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Definition
when the operculum burst off the capsule revealing a ring of teeth that curl up when moist and uncurl when dry which release spores. |
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Term
Life cycle of a moss Bryophyta class Byridae
[image]
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Definition
The Sporogenous tissue (2N) of the capsule undergoes Meiosis which the Operculum is lost showing the peristome which the releases the spores (N)
The spores germinate and become young female and male gametophytes (N) Rain falls into the splash cups which release sperm from the antheridium into the the archegonium. Egg undergoes fertilization to become a Zygote (2N). As the embryo develops into a young sporophyte the calpytra forms around it until it becomes a mature sporophyte. |
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Term
Within bryophytes, which phyla have stomates? |
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Definition
Anthocerophyta and Bryophyta |
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Term
Within the bryophytes, which phyl have elaters? |
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Definition
Hepatophyta and anthocerophyta |
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Term
Within bryophytes, which phylas have cond. tissue? |
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Definition
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Term
In bryophytes, which phyla have protonema? |
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Definition
Hepatophyta rarely
anthocerophyta no
bryophyta yes. |
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