BIOL 1030 Lecture Notes - Lecture 22: Vascular Plant, Sporophyte, Starch

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BIOL 1030 Full Course Notes
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Therefore, they could at some stages of their lives, deal with dryer environments that the bryophytes cannot: in the vascular plants, at least one phase of their life has vascular tissue (xylem and phloem). Tracheo refers to tracheids water conducting cell type and phyte which refers to plants: examples of these include the ferns and seed plants, the origin of land plants was about 450-470 million years ago. Both share the photosynthetic pigments chlorophyll a, b and carotenoids: molecular systematics also demonstrates their relationship, as both algae and land plants are genetically related. This also restricts their ability to grow substantially: the liverwort marchantia typically grows from spores in over-watered environments (such as in a house plant pot), the seedless vascular plants include the lycophytes and pterophytes. The club mosses (lycophyte) generally look like little pine/seeder trees and occur near groupings of other actual mosses: the quillworts are aquatic lycophytes.

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