Plant Kingdom
Plant Kingdom
Plant Kingdom
PLANT KINGDOM
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Plant Kingdom
I N T H I S C A P S UL E
PLANT KINGDOM ........................................................................................................................................ 2
CRYPTOGAMS .............................................................................................................................................. 4
ALGAE .............................................................................................................................................................................. 4
FUNGI .............................................................................................................................................................................. 5
BRYOPHYTES ................................................................................................................................................ 5
PTERIDOPHYTES .......................................................................................................................................... 6
PHANEROGAMS .......................................................................................................................................... 6
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Plant Kingdom
• Plants are mainly multicellular, predominantly photosynthetic eukaryotes
of the kingdom Plantae.
• They include the flowering plants, conifers and other gymnosperms, ferns,
club mosses, hornworts, liverworts, mosses and the green algae,
and excludes the red and brown algae.
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Cryptogams
• A cryptogam is a plant that reproduces by spores, without flowers or seeds.
• Algae, lichens, mosses and ferns are some of the exmaples of cryptogams.
Algae
• Algae is member of a group of aquatic photosynthetic organisms of the kingdom Protista.
• Algae are chlorophyll-bearing, simple, thalloid, autotrophic and largely aquatic
(Present in both fresh water and marine) organisms.
• They occur in a variety of other habitats: moist stones, soils and wood.
• Some of them also occur in association with fungi (lichen) and animals.
• Algae usually reproduce vegetatively by fragmentation, asexually by formation
of different types of spores and sexually by formation of gametes which may
show isogamy, anisogamy or oogamy.
2. P h a e o p h y c e a e
• The members of phaeophyceae or brown algae are found primarily in marine habitats.
• They show great variation in size and form.
• They range from simple branched, filamentous forms (Ectocarpus) to profusely
branched forms as represented by kelps, which may reach a height of 100 metres
3. R h o d o p h y c e a e
• The members of rhodophyceae are commonly called red algae because of the
predominance of the red pigment, r-phycoerythrin in their body.
• The red thalli of most of the red algae are multicellular.
• Some of them have complex body organisation.
• The food is stored as floridean starch which is very similar to amylopectin
and glycogen in structure.
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Fungi
• Fungus is any member of the group of eukaryotic organisms that includes microorganisms
such as yeasts and mould, as well as the more familiar mushrooms.
• They have no chlorophyll.
Lichens
The symbiotic relationship between algae and fungi is known as lichen.
Bryophytes
• Bryophytes include the various mosses and liverworts that are found
commonly growing in moist shaded areas in the hills.
• Bryophytes are also called amphibians of the plant kingdom because
they live in soil but are dependent on water for sexual reproduction.
• The plant body of bryophytes is more differentiated than that of algae.
It is thallus-like and prostrate or erect, and attached to the substratum
by unicellular or multicellular rhizoids.
• They lack true roots, stem or leaves. They may possess root-like, leaf-like
or stem-like structures.
• The main plant body of the bryophyte is haploid.
• It produces gametes, hence is called a gametophyte.
Reproduction in Bryophytes
• The sex organs in bryophytes are multicellular.
• The male sex organ is called antheridium. They produce biflagellate antherozoids.
• The female sex organ called archegonium is flask-shaped and produces a single egg.
• The antherozoids are released into water where they come in contact with archegonium.
• An antherozoid fuses with the egg to produce the zygote.
• Zygotes do not undergo reduction division immediately. They produce a multicellular
body called a sporophyte. The sporophyte is not free-living but attached to the
photosynthetic gametophyte and derives nourishment from it.
⇒ Liverworts
⇒ Mosses
o The first stage is the protonema stage, which develops directly from a spore.
It is a creeping, green, branched and frequently filamentous stage.
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o The second stage is the leafy stage, which develops from the secondary protonema
as a lateral bud. They consist of upright, slender axes bearing spirally arranged leaves.
Pteridophytes
• Pteridophytes are used for medicinal purposes and as soil-binders.
• They are also frequently grown as ornamentals.
• Pteridophytes have well-differentiated structures such as stem, root, leaves
as well as the vascular system. The main plant body is a Sporophyte.
• Evolutionarily, they are the first terrestrial plants to possess vascular tissues
– xylem and phloem.
• Ferns, horse-tails, Marsilea are some common examples of Pteridophytes.
Phanerogams
Gymnosperms
• Gymnosperms (gymnos : naked, sperma : seeds) are plants in which the ovules
are not enclosed by any ovary wall and remain exposed, both before and after
fertilisation.
• The seeds that are not contained within an ovary or fruit.
• They are heterosporous; they produce haploid microspores and megaspores.
• The seeds are open to the air and are directly fertilized by pollination.
Angiosperms