Term
What is the formal, scientific name for the vascular plants? |
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Definition
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Term
Name the major apomorphies of the vascular plants. |
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Definition
Sporophyte independent, long-lived; sporphyte branched, with multiple sporangia; lignin, in lignified, secondary cell walls; sclerenchyma; vascular tissue, with xylem and phloem; endodermis; roots. |
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Term
What two features of the sporophyte are apomorphic for vascular plants, distinguishing them from liverworts, mosses, and
hornworts?
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Definition
Sporophyte independent, long-lived and branched, with multiple sporangia. |
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Term
What are two early evolving branching-patterns lineages in the vascular plants? |
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Definition
Dichotomous and pseudomonopodial. |
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Term
How was the evolution of lignin a major adaptive feature of the vascular plants? |
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Definition
Gave structural support to cells, enabling plants to grow taller, bigger, outcompete others. |
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Term
What is the difference between a primary and secondary cell wall in terms of time of deposition and chemistry? |
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Definition
Primary: form during primary growth, as cells are elongating, composed of a primary cell wall of cellulose and pectin.
Secondary: form after cell elongation has ceased, composed of primary and secondary cell walls, the latter containing lignin.
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Term
What is a pit? What is a primary pit field? |
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Definition
a) A pit is a hole in a secondary cell wall;
b) a primary pit field are holes in adjacent primary cell walls. |
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Term
Is the secondary cell wall formed inside or outside the plasma membrane? Is it formed inside or outside the primary cell wall? |
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Definition
It is formed outside the plasma membrane and inside the primary cell wall. |
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Term
What are the general characteristics of sclerenchyma cells? |
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Definition
Nonconductive cells that have a thick, lignified secondary cell wall, typically with pits, and that are dead at maturity. |
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Term
Name the two types of sclerenchyma and state how they differ. |
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Definition
a) fibers, which are long, very narrow cells with sharply tapering end walls, function in mechanical support of organs and tissues.
b) sclereids, which are isodiametric to irregular or branched in shape; may also function in structural support, or possibly help to deter herbivory in some plants.
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Term
What is the function and structure of tracheary elements? |
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Definition
Tracheary elements are specialized cells that function in water and mineral conduction, and are generally elongate cells, are dead at maturity, and have lignified secondary cell walls. |
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Term
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Definition
A tissue composed of tracheary elements, parenchyma, and fibers. |
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Term
Name the two types of tracheary elements and cite how they differ structurally. |
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Definition
a) Tracheids, which are imperforate, meaning that water and mineral nutrients flow between adjacent cells through the primary cell walls at pit-pairs, which are adjacent holes in the lignified secondary cell wall.
b) Vessel members, which are perforate, meaning that there are one or more continuous holes or perforations, with no intervening primary or secondary cell wall between adjacent cells through which water and minerals may pass.
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Term
In what taxa are vessels found? |
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Definition
A few species of Equisetum, a few leptosporangiate ferns, all Gnetales (Chapter 5), and almost all angiosperms. |
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Term
What is the function and structure of sieve elements? |
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Definition
Sieve elements are specialized cells that function in the conduction of sugars.
Sieve elements are elongate cells having only a primary cell wall with no lignified secondary cell wall. This primary wall has specialized pores, which are aggregated together into sieve areas.
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Term
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Definition
A tissue composed of sieve elements, parenchyma, and fibers. |
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Term
What is a sieve area and what compound is associated with them? |
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Definition
A region of the primary cell wall with an aggregation of pores, continuous holes in the primary cell wall that are lined with callose, a polysaccharide composed of β-1,3-glucose units. |
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Term
What is the difference, in morphology and taxonomic group where found, between a sieve cell and a sieve tube member? |
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Definition
Sieve cells have only sieve areas on both end and side walls. Sieve tube members have both sieve areas and sieve plates, which consist of one or more sieve areas at the end wall junction of two sieve tube members with significantly larger pores. |
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Term
What is the endodermis and Casparian strip, and what is the function of each? |
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Definition
The endodermis is a specialized cylinder of cells, each cell of which possesses a Casparian strip.
The Casparian strip is a band or ring of lignin and suberin (chemically similar to lignin) that infiltrates the cell wall, oriented tangentially (along the two transverse walls) and axially (vertically, along the two radial walls) and functions as a water-impermeable material that binds to the plasma membrane of the endodermal cells, differentially controlling the solutes that can enter the root vascular system. |
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Term
What is the function of roots? |
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Definition
Roots function in anchorage and absorption of water and minerals. |
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Term
What is the name of the region of actively dividing cells in the root? |
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Definition
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Term
Name five diagnostic features of roots and their function, if known. |
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Definition
a) The apical meristem is covered on the outside by a rootcap, which functions both to protect the root apical meristem from mechanical damage and to provide lubrication as the outer cells slough off.
b) With the exception of the Psilotopsida (Psilotales and Ophioglossales), the epidermal cells away from the root tip develop hairlike extensions called root hairs, which function to greatly increase the surface area available for water and mineral absorption.
c) Roots have a central vascular cylinder.
d) The vascular cylinder of roots is surrounded by an endodermis with Casparian strips, which function to selectively control which chemicals are and are not absorbed by the plant, functioning in selective absorption. (An undifferentiated layer internal to the endodermis, called the pericycle, is also typically present.)
e) Roots generally have endogenous lateral roots, in which new lateral roots originate by means of actively growing meristems, arising at the pericycle or endodermis. |
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Term
What are mycorrhizae and what is their function in vascular plants? |
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Definition
A symbiotic interaction with various species of fungi. The fungal component of mycorrhizae aids the plant in both increasing overall surface area for water and mineral absorption and increasing the efficiency of selective mineral absorption. The fungus benefits in obtaining photosynthates (sugars and other nutrients) from the plant. |
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Term
What are the characteristics of the rhyniophytes in terms of sporophyte morphology and stem anatomy? |
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Definition
Rhyniophyte sporophytes consisted of dichotomously branching axes bearing terminal sporangia that dehisced longitudinally. |
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Term
Name and give the features of a (paraphyletic) fossil group that diverged along the immediate lineage to the lycophytes. |
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Definition
Zosterophyllophytes, which had no leaves, but possessed lateral sporangia, similar to those of the lycophytes. |
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Term
Name a fossil lycophyte that was a large tree in the Carboniferous and now makes up a large percentage of coal deposits. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the major apomorphies of the lycophytes? |
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Definition
a) Roots of lycophytes are dichopodial, meaning that the root apical meristem may branch into two roots); no lateral roots develop, as they do in euphyllophytes (see later discussion).
b) Lycophyte roots usually have an endarch protoxylem.
c) Stems of lycophytes have an exarch protoxylem (just the reverse of the roots).
d) Lycophytes, at least ancestrally, have sporangia that are dosiventral (i.e., flattened and having a dorsal, upper, and ventral, lower, surface) and dehisce transversely relative to the axis of the stem or subtending leaf.
e) Lycophytes have sporophytic leaves, which constituted a major adaptive innovation by greatly increasing the area available for light capture in photosynthesis. |
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Term
What are the features of a lycophyll (microphyll)? An enation? |
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Definition
Lycophyll - have a single, unbranched (very rarely branched) vein, lacking a gap in the vasculature of the stem, and develop by an intercalary meristem, i.e., at the base of the leaf.
Enation - external, peg-like appendages that lack vascular tissue. |
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Term
How are lycophylls thought to have evolved? |
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Definition
Lycophylls may have evolved via the development of vasculature tissue leading from the stem into the enation, allowing for more efficient transfer of water and solutes; this was associated with flattening (“planation”) of the enation into a dorsiventral, planar posture. Alternatively, lycophylls may have evolved by the sterilization and planation of sporangia. |
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Term
What is homospory? Name the group and family of lycophytes that have this condition. |
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Definition
Homospory - the condition of having one type of spore, found in the Lycopodiopsida [Lycopodiales], Lycopodiaceae. |
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Term
What is a sporophyll? A strobilus? |
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Definition
Sporophyll - a specialized leaf that bears one or more sporangia.
Strobilus - a cone, consisting of an axis laterally bearing sporophylls.
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Term
Name three diagnostic features of the Lycopodiaceae. |
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Definition
The Lycopodiaceae are distinctive in being homosporous, dichotomously branched, erect, prostrate, or pendulous, perennial, lycophyllous herbs, the leaves eligulate, the sporangia reniform and transversely dehiscing, born on sporophylls that are photosynthetic and resemble vegetative leaves or that are nonphotosynthetic and scale-like in terminal strobili, the gametophytes mycorrhizal, photosynthetic or saprophytic. |
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Term
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Definition
Ligules are tiny appendages on the upper (adaxial) side of the leaf (both vegetative and reproductive), near the leaf base in the Isoetopsida [Isoetales]. |
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Term
Define: endospory, heterospory, megasporangium, megaspore, microsporangium, microspore. |
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Definition
Endospory - the development of gametophytes develop entirely within the original spore wall.
Heterospory - the production of two types of spores, microspores and megaspores.
Megasporangium - the specialized sporangium that produces megaspores.
Megaspore - relatively large spores produced in small numbers within a megasporangium.
Microsporangium - the specialized sporangium that produces microspores.
Microspore - relatively small spores produced in large numbers within a microsporangium. |
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Term
Draw the life cycle of a heterosporous land plant, listing all structures, ploidy levels, and processes. |
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Definition
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Term
What group and two included families of lycophytes have ligulate leaves and heterospory? |
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Definition
Isoetopsida [Isoetales] - Isoetaceae and Selaginellaceae. |
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Term
Describe the basic morphology of members of the Isoetaceae. |
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Definition
The Isoetaceae are distinctive in being cormose to rhizomatous plants with a basal rosette of microphyllous, ligulate leaves, the leaves basally sheathing, apically linear to acicular, heterosporous, bearing adaxial megasporangia or microsporangia within sheathing leaf base. |
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Term
Name and define the two types of leaf morphology in Selaginella species. |
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Definition
Either homomorphic or dimorphic and four-rowed (with two upper rows of leaves smaller than the two lower rows). |
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Term
Name the apomorphies of the euphyllophytes, and list the two major, vascular plant groups included. |
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Definition
Apomorphies:
a) Roots are monopodial.
b) Roots have an exarch protoxylem.
c) The ancestral sporangia were terminal in position with longitudinal deshiscence.
d) Extant euphyllophytes have a 30-kilobase inversion located in
the large single-copy region of chloroplast DNA.
e) Leaves of euphyllophytes, termed euphylls, are distinctive.
Two major groups:
Monilophytes and Lignophytes/Spermatophytes.
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Term
How do euphylls differ from lycophylls? |
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Definition
Euphylls are different in being associated with a leaf gap, a region of nonvascular, parenchyma tissue interrupting the vasculature of the stem, and in (usually) having more than one vein per leaf. Euphylls, in contrast to lycophylls, grow by means of either marginal or apical meristems. |
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Term
What (paraphyletic) fossil group diverged along the immediate lineage to euphyllophytes? |
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Definition
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Term
Describe a widely accepted hypothesis regarding the evolution of the euphyll. |
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Definition
By one hypothesis, euphylls evolved via the transformation of 3-dimensional (nonplanar) lateral branch system (as seen in trimerophytes) into a leaf, by the processes of planation, flattening of the axes into a 2-dimensional plane, and webbing, the development of thin tissue between the axes of the branches (Figure 4.20E). The original axes become transformed into veins, and the “web” functioned as a photosynthetic mesophyll. |
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Term
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Definition
A stem plus associated leaves. |
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Term
What is the name of the region of actively dividing cells in a shoot, and how does this differ among vascular plants? |
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Definition
a) Shoot apical meristem;
b) The apical meristem may contain one, dominant apical cell, found in most of the Selaginellaceae and the monilophytes, or a complex of several, actively dividing cells, found in the Lycopodiaceae, Isoetaceae, and the euphyllophytes.
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Term
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Definition
The region between two adjacent nodes. |
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Term
What is the general morphology and function of leaves? |
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Definition
Leaves are usually dorsiventral organs (with some exceptions), both an upper and lower epidermis can be defined. As with all land plants, a cuticle covers the outer cell wall of the epidermal cells. One or more vascular bundles, or veins, contain xylem and phloem tissue and conduct water and sugars to and from the chloroplast-containing mesophyll cells. The mesophyll of some leaves is specialized into upper, columnar palisade mesophyll cells and lower, irregularly shaped spongy mesophyll cells, the latter with large intercellular spaces. Stomata, which function in gas exchange are found typically only in the lower epidermis of leaves.
Leaves are the primary photosynthetic organ of plants. |
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Term
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Definition
A vascular bundle that contains xylem and phloem tissue and conducts water and sugars to and from the chloroplast-containing mesophyll cells. |
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Term
What are the internal, chlorophyllous cells of a leaf called? Into which two layers may these cells be organized? |
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Definition
a) Mesophyll.
b) Upper, columnar palisade mesophyll cells and lower, irregularly shaped spongy mesophyll cells, the latter with large intercellular spaces.
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Term
What is the definition of a bud and where are they typically located? |
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Definition
Bud = an immature shoot system.
They are typically located in the axils of leaves. |
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Term
What is monopodial growth? |
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Definition
A growth in which the terminal apical meristem continues and in which lateral branches develop from axillary buds. |
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Term
Name the putative apomorphies of the monilophytes, and list the five major groups contained within it. |
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Definition
Apomorphies:
a) Siphonostele;
b) Stem protoxylem is mesarch in position.
Groups: Equisetopsida; Polypodiopsida; Marattiopsida; Psilotopsida (including Psilotales and Ophioglossales).
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Term
What is a siphonostele? Name the types of siphonosteles. |
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Definition
A siphonostele is a type of stem vasculature in which a ring of xylem is surrounded by an outer layer of phloem (ectophloic siphonostele) or by an outer and inner layer of phloem (amphiphloic siphonostelesolenostele; if dissected called a dictyostele). |
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Term
What fossil member of the equisetophytes makes up a component of coal deposits? |
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Definition
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Term
Name the major apomorphies of the equisetophytes. |
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Definition
1) Ridged stems;
2) reduced, whorled leaves that are usually marginally fused;
3) sporangiophores, each of which consists of a peltate axis bearing pendant longitudinally dehiscent sporangia; and
4) photosynthetic spores with elaters. |
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Term
What is the only extant genus and family of this group? |
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Definition
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Term
What do equisetophytes have as a component of the cell wall?
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Definition
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Term
What is the difference between a scouring rush and a horsetail? Into what two subgenera are these classified? |
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Definition
Scouring rushes (subgenus Hippochaete) lack (or have very few) whorls of lateral branches and have sunken stomates.
Horsetails (subgenus Equisetum) have numerous, whorled, lateral branches and stomates flush with the epidermis. |
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Term
Describe the morphology of the strobilus (cone), sporangiophore, and sporangia of Equisetum.
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Definition
Sporangia are homosporous, born in terminal strobili (subtended by a whorl of sheathing leaves), consisting of an axis bearing numerous, peltate sporangiophores, each (at maturity) bearing 5–10 sporangia beneath the distal, hexagonal outer portion; dehiscence is longitudinal (parallel to the axis of the elongate sporangium). |
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Term
What is unique about the spores of Equisetum? What is the function of this novelty?
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Definition
Spores, which lack an attachment scar, are spherical, green (with chloroplasts), each bearing four,
spatulate, hygroscopic elaters (derived from the spore wall), which coil and uncoil with changes in humidity, functioning in spore dispersal. |
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Term
What features about the roots and gametophytes are presumed apomorphies for the Psilotopsida? |
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Definition
The roots of Ophioglossales are unusual in lacking both root branches and root hairs, and those of the Psilotales are lacking. The gametophytes of both orders are nonphotosynthetic (heterotrophic), contain mycorrhizal fungi, and are often subterranean. |
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Term
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Definition
A sporangium that is relatively large, is derived from several epidermal cells, has a sporangial wall comprised of more than one cell layer, and produces very many (usually thousands of) spores |
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Term
What is distinctive about the leaves of the Ophioglossales/Ophioglossaceae, the ophioglossoid ferns? |
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Definition
The ophioglossoid ferns are unique in that each leaf (or “frond”) consists of a sterile segment, which contains the photosynthetic blade or lamina, and a fertile segment, bearing the sporangia. |
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Term
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Definition
A fusion product of sporangia. |
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Term
What is distinctive (and apomorphic) about the roots, leaves, and sporangia of the Psilotaceae, the whisk ferns? |
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Definition
Roots are absent. Leaves are reduced to microphylls or enations. Sporangia are fused (synangia). |
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Term
What are the two genera of the Psilotaceae? What species is a commonly cultivated ornamental? |
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Definition
Psilotum and Tmesipteris. Psilotum nudum is a common cultivar |
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Term
Name and describe the diagnostic features and a putative apomorphy of the marattioid ferns. |
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Definition
The Marattiaceae are distinctive in being large, terrestrial ferns with mucilage canals, the stems with a polycyclic dictyostele, the leaves generally large, simple to several-pinnate, with abaxial, intramarginal eusporangia, sometimes fused into synangia. |
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Term
How do the gametophytes, leaf type, and leaf development of the marattioid ferns resemble the leptosporangiate ferns? |
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Definition
Gametophytes are photosynthetic. Leaves are simple to many-compound with abaxial sporangia. Leaf development is by means of circinate vernation. |
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Term
What type of sporangium is found in the marattioid ferns? |
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Definition
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Term
Name three stem types/habits that occur in the leptosporangiate ferns.
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Definition
Rhizome, arborescent, and vine stem. |
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Term
What is circinate vernation? What terms are used for immature fern leaves that exhibit this? |
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Definition
a) Development in which immature parts are coiled.
b) Crozier or “fiddlehead.” |
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Term
Define frond, stipe, pinna, pinnule. |
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Definition
Frond - term for a fern leaf. Stipe - term for a fern petiole. Pinna - term for first discrete leaflets or leaf divisions of a fern leaf. Pinnule - term for the ultimate leaftlet or leaf division of a fern leaf. |
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Term
What aspects of venation and scale morphology are useful in leptosporangiate fern classification? |
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Definition
Venation - whether pinnate, palmate, open/free (simple, forked, or bifurcate), or reticulate/anastamosing.
Scale morphology - whether clathrate or non-clathrate.
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Term
What is the major apomorphy of the Polypodiopsida? Describe its development and morphology. |
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Definition
The leptosporangium, a sporangium that develops from a single epidermal cell, has a single cell layer of the wall at maturity, and produces a relatively small number of spores. |
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Term
Define annulus, sorus, indusium, false indusium, acrostichoid. |
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Definition
Annulus - a single row of cells of the leptosporangium in which the cell walls are differentially thickened on the inner cell face and on the faces between adjacent annular cells.
Sorus - a cluster of leptosporangia.
Indusium - a flap-like structure that may cover the sorus.
False indusium - a flap-like structure that covers a sorus or group of leptosproangia that arises from the margin of a leaf or leaflet.
Acrostichoid - a morphology in which numerous leptosporangia cover an extensive area of the blade, and are not arranged into discrete sori. |
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Term
Name aspects of sorus morphology, indusium morphology, sporangium development, sporangium morphology, and spore type used in fern classification. |
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Definition
Sorus morphology - shape (in outline), variation in the shape and size of the receptacle, and presence and morphology of paraphyses.
Indusium morphology - present (indusiate) or absent (exindusiate), shape (e.g., reniform, orbicular, linear), and attachment point (e.g., peltate or lateral).
Sporangium development - sequence of development, whether gradate (acropetalous, basipetalous), simultaneous, mixed, or intermingled.
Sporangium morphology - length and number of stalk cells, body size and shape, and morphology and position of the annulus (e.g., whether lateral, transverse, apical, oblique), stomium, and dehiscence line
Spore type - whether trilete, monolete, or alete.
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Term
In a fern gametophyte, what is the name of the male gametangium? The female gametangium? What do they look like? |
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Definition
a) Antheridium - usually spheric;
b) archegonium - with a protruding neck. |
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Term
What is unique about the leaf morphology and sporangium annulus of the Osmundaceae? |
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Definition
Leaves are dimorphic with either fertile and sterile leaves or with fertile and sterile leaf segments.
Sporangium annulus is lateral in position. |
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Term
What is the common name of the Hymenophyllaceae? What is unique about its indusium, receptacle, and leaf anatomy? |
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Definition
a) Filmy fern family.
b) Indusium is conical, tubular, or 2-lobed; receptacle is elongate; leaves usually consist of a single layer of cells. |
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Term
Describe the leaf morphology of the Gleicheniaceae. |
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Definition
Leaves are usually long, indeterminate, pseudodichotomously branched. |
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Term
What is unique about the leaf morphology, sorus, indusium, and sporangium annulus of the Lygodiaceae? |
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Definition
Leaf morphology - Leaves are indeterminate, with twining/climbing rachises, alternately bearing pseudodichotomously-branching pinnae, leaf segments dimorphic.
Sorus - at the tips of ultimate segments, each with only one sporangium.
Indusium - flap or flange-like.
Annulus - transverse, subapical, continuous.
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Term
What is distinctive and apomorphic about the life cycle of the Salviniales?
What is a sporocarp and what is its function? |
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Definition
a) They are heterosporous.
b) The sporocarp is a seed-like protective and dormant reproductive propagule. The sporocarp “germinates,” releasing endosporic megaspores and microspores.
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Term
Name the two families of the Salviniales and describe how they differ. Name two genera in each family. |
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Definition
Marsileaceae (Marsilea, Pilularia, Regnellidium) - have emergent leaves with 4, 0, or 2 leaflets, respectively.
Salviniaceae (Azolla, Salvinia) - have floating leaves. |
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Term
How is Azolla of great economic importance? |
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Definition
It houses a symbiotic blue-green bacterium, Anabaena azollae, which fixes nitrogen. When “seeded” in rice paddies, Azolla’s symbiotic relationship results in an enhancement of nitrogen content in the surrounding water, enabling rice plants to grow more vigorously. |
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Term
What is distinctive about the sorus and indusium of the Aspleniaceae? |
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Definition
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Term
Name a diagnostic feature of the sorus and indusium of the Dryopteridaceae, Polypodiaceae, and Pteridaceae. |
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Definition
Dryopteridaceae - Sori are usually round, indusiate or exindusiate, acrostichoid in some taxa. Indusia, when present, are round-reniform or peltate.
Polypodiaceae - Sori are abaxial (rarely marginal), round, oblong, or elliptic, rarely elongate or acrostichoid, the receptacle often with paraphyses, exindusiate.
Pteridaceae - Sori are exindusiate, either marginal with a false indusium formed by a reflexed marginal flap or intramarginal in lines along veins, the receptacle generally not raised. |
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