BIO 2137 Lecture 9: October 7, 2016 - Seedless Vascular Plants

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Pores : (liverworts), then stomata (mosses, hornworts) for gas exchange. Hadrom and leptom : for transport of water and sap (bryidae) They lack true water (xylem) and food (phloem) transport/conducting tissue. This is why they stay close to the ground, are small, and prefer moist habitats for reproduction (swimming sperm) They synthesize lignin gives rigidity and permeability to cell walls, allows vertical growth, helps with water conduction against gravity. The sporophyte is branched, and can produce more spores, more gametophytes possess true water (xylem) and food (phloem) conducting tissue. Allows for the production of multiple sporangia. The sporophyte is the actual plant lives independent of gametophyte. Many bryophytes were thallose, others were somewhat differentiated. Early vascular plants were dichotomously branched axes that lacked roots and leaves. Shoot system : stem raised leaves (specialized photosynthetic organs) toward the. Root system : anchoring and absorption of water and minerals from the soil sun.

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