Week 2 Questions: Plant Life Cycles
- What are the approximate dates for the following events: (a) algae evolved in the oceans (b) some green algae moved into bogs of fresh water lakes (c) 1st land plants
- What are 4 problems plants faced when making the transition to land?
- Why were the 1st land plants small?
- What structures to land plants have to keep their gametes from drying out?
- Describe the gametophyte and sporophyte generations in bryophytes. Which one is dominant? Which is dependent on the other?
- Approximately when do we 1st see vascular plants in the fossil record?
- What 5 themes should you focus on when studying the evolution of vascular plants?
- For ferns, comment on the presence or absence of the following structures: (a) vascular tissue (b) a transport system (c) seeds (d) sporophylls
- Diagram the fern life cycle. What change do we see in sporophyte vs. gametophyte dominance as compared to the bryophytes?
- Approximately when do we 1st see seed plants in the fossil record?
- Why are gymnosperms said to bear naked seeds? What does this mean?
- Do gymnosperms only have one kind of sporangium? Explain. Why is this important to their life cycle?
- Why is it important for microsporangia to produce so much pollen?
- For gymnosperms, diagram a micro- & megasporangium and their involvement in the process of pollination and fertilization. Explain the role of the sporophyte and gametophyte in this process.
- Distinguish between an ovule and a seed.
- What are 2 characteristics of angiosperms?
- Define a flower.
- What are the 3 parts to the carpel (the female part of the flower)?
- Where is the female gametophyte in angiosperms? Diagram it and label the archegonia if present.
- In angiosperms, where does the male gametophyte generation come from?
- Describe the sequence of events leading up to and including double fertilization. Where does endosperm come from? Why is it important?
- Besides wind, what other pollination mechanisms do angiosperms employ? Give an example.
- What are the 2 types of embryos in angiosperms? How do they differ? How are they similar?
- How do different flowering plant seeds vary in the relative amounts of endosperm? How does this relate to cotyledon size in the embryo?
- Diagram the eudicot embryo at the time of germination. Label the axis, epicotyl, hypocotyl, and cotyledons.
- What is a meristem?
- When is a cell or tissue said to be primary?
- What is the function of endosperm and cotyledons?
- What is the liquid that comes out of a corn kernel?
- What is the liquid in a coconut? What about the white part – what is that?
- Distinguish between a fruit and a nut.
- For a peanut, list the plant parts that correspond to the following features: (a) shell (b) brown wrapper around the nut (c) each half of the nut (d) the hard ‘nipple’ at the base of the nut
- Where did the material stored in the cotyledons originate?
- Give examples of wind, insect, and water-based seed dispersal in angiosperms.
- How do bean seeds and peas germinate differently?
- Draw and define the following features of a plant: (a) stem/axis (b) shoot meristem (c) root meristem (d) node (e) petiole (f) axil (g) blade