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Origins of Angiosperms

Origins of Angiosperms. Spring 2013. Outline. Origin of the angiosperms Characters of angiosperms Brief history of angiosperm classification Major groups of angiosperms ANITA grade. Origin of the Angiosperms. Cycads. Conifers. Gnetophytes. Ginkgo. Angiosperms. Progymnosperms

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Origins of Angiosperms

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  1. Origins of Angiosperms Spring 2013

  2. Outline • Origin of the angiosperms • Characters of angiosperms • Brief history of angiosperm classification • Major groups of angiosperms • ANITA grade

  3. Origin of the Angiosperms

  4. Cycads Conifers Gnetophytes Ginkgo Angiosperms Progymnosperms (“seed ferns”) Divergence estimated at ca. 325 mybp

  5. Geologic Time

  6. Timing of Angiosperm Divergences • The timing of the origin of the angiosperms still is uncertain, but most would agree on a Triassic or Jurassic initial divergence, although there is no unequivocal fossil evidence • A demonstrable “burst” of phylogenetic radiation is found in the fossil record beginning in the mid-to late Cretaceous, 140 - 100 mybp

  7. Figure 7.1

  8. Origin of the Angiosperms • pollen grains from ca. 140 mya (early Cretaceous) but already major radiation! • earliest flowers 130 mya • likely no extant group of seed plants is very closely related to the angiosperms!

  9. Origin of Angiosperms • Cycad-like plants: Bennettitales? • large, flowerlike strobili: • pollen-producing organs surrounding an axis bearing naked ovules/seeds

  10. Origin of Angiosperms Modification of a “seed fern” such as Caytonia? Caytonia fossil: ovule

  11. Origin of Angiosperms • Archaefructus • ca. 130 mya • ancestral flowering plant or • extinct off-shoot of an extinct lineage? • aquatic plant (dissected leaves) • elongate reproductive axes: • -paired stamens below • -several-seeded carpels above

  12. Characters of Angiosperms

  13. Fig. 6.1

  14. What makes a plant an angiosperm? • Flower (usually with perianth) • Carpels with a stigmatic surface for pollen tube germination; ovules enclosed within carpels; fruit • Ovules with two integuments • Reduced female gametophyte, usually 8 nuclei in 7 cells – no archegonium • Double fertilization with the production of 3N endosperm • Stamens with two pairs of lateral pollen sacs (microsporangia); pollen (male gametophyte) 3-nucleate • Xylem – most with vessels (evolved within angiosperms) • Phloem – sieve tube members with 1 or more companion cells derived from the same mother cell

  15. Flower Figure 6.2

  16. Magnolia Spiral undifferentiated perianth parts = tepals (plesiomorphic) Magnolia

  17. Differentiated sepals and petals (each in whorls) (apomorphic) Abutilon

  18. Laminar stamens in basal angiosperms (plesiomorphic) paired pollen sacs connective microsporangium filament

  19. Early carpel with stigmatic crest (plesiomorphic)… Figure 6.9 from the text …to the derived carpel with a style and an apical stigma (apomorphic).

  20. Female gametophyte in angiosperms -no waiting time as in gymnosperms! -note 2 integuments (bitegmic; some angiosperm lineages have lost one integument) -gymnosperms have only 1 integument (unitegmic) mature ovule ovule

  21. And it’s off to the races! Indirect pollination (due to presence of carpels)

  22. Seed development in angiosperms -no waiting time as in gymnosperms! double fertilization seed

  23. Avocado (Persea, Lauraceae) exocarp Flower pericarp mesocarp endocarp seed fruit

  24. Vessels in Angiosperms • are the water (solute) conducting cells of the • xylem in most angiosperms • ends of cells have openings (perforation • plate), cells shorter and wider • more efficient, faster rate of flow but more • susceptible to air bubbles (embolisms) than • tracheids are • may have arisen independently in two or more • angiosperm lineages but may have had a • single origin

  25. Origin of vessels from tracheids Figure 6.16B from the text

  26. Angiosperm phloem • sieve tube members + companion cells • stm = specialized sugar-conducting • cells of the phloem of angiosperms; • lack a nucleus at functional maturity • cc = parenchyma cells associated • with stm • -function to load/unload sugars into stm cavity • -derived from the same mother • cell as its stm stm

  27. Brief history of angiosperm classification

  28. Alternative ways of thinking about early angiosperm characters… • “Old” School (German) - Engler - “Simple is primitive” (Few floral parts) - Ancestors are conifers - Pollination by wind - Modern relicts = “Amentiferae” (catkins) • “New” School (American) – Bessey - “Flowers with many parts are primitive” - Ancestors are Cycad-like plants - Pollination by primitive insects - Modern relicts = Magnolias and allies

  29. Heinrich Gustav Adolph Engler(1844-1930) • German Botanist at Berlin Botanical Garden-Was the primary European in interpreting the grouping of major angiosperm assemblages-“Few simple flower parts primitive”-Small, unisexual flowers primitive

  30. Englerian ‘Primitive Taxa’ Juglans sp. Quercus sp. “Amentiferae” Betula sp.

  31. Charles Edwin Bessey(1845-1915) -Botanist at Iowa State University from 1869-1884 (left in 1884 to teach in Nebraska)-Was a “major player” in interpreting and understanding angiosperm evolution-“Many flower parts primitive” Bessey Hall Iowa State University

  32. Bessey’s “Cactus” (1915) Placed plant groups with many floral parts in a basal position as the ‘ancestral’ forms. Outlined ‘dicta’ for the construction of phylogenies using the evolutionary trends in character changes. Polypetalous flowers, insect pollination, cycad-like ancestors

  33. Besseyan ‘Primitive Taxa’ Nymphaeaceae Magnoliaceae

  34. Figure 6.1 from the text

  35. Major Groups of Angiosperms • Basal Angiosperms (ANITA grade) - Amborellaceae - Nympheaceae - Illiciaceae • Magnoliid Complex - Magnoliales - Piperales - Winterales • MONOCOTS • EUDICOTS (tricolpates)

  36. Major Groups of Eudicots • Basal Eudicots - Ranunculales and allied families • Caryophyllales & Saxifragales • Rosid Clade - Fabids - Malvids • Asterid Clade - Basal Asterids - Lamiids - Campanulids

  37. ANITA grade • Amborella (Amborellales) • Nymphaea (Nymphaeales) • Illicium (Austrobaileyales) • Trimenia (Austrobaileyales) • Austrobaileya (Austrobaileyales)

  38. Fig. 6.1 ANITA Grade or “basal” angiosperms ca. 125 mybp Grade = a paraphyletic (or Polyphyletic) group whose members share a similar level of morphological or physiological complexity.

  39. Major Angiosperm Clades Amborellaceae Nymphaeales Austrobaileyales MAGNOLIID COMPLEX MONOCOTS EUDICOTS [TRICOLPATES] ANITA grade (basal groups) Soltis et al. 2000, APG II 2002, Judd et al. 2002

  40. Basal Angiosperms: Amborellaceae • New Caledonia • Understory shrub; plants dioecious • 1 species (monotypic): Amborella trichopoda • Leaves simple, evergreen • Flowers small, unisexual: ♀ apocarpous, with stigmatic crests; ♂ with laminar stamens • Significant features: Most basal of all flowering plants; no vessels in wood • Special uses: (none)

  41. Basal Angiosperms:Amborellaceae (Amborella Family) Amborella trichopoda

  42. As we venture through the various major groups of angiosperms… • Identify the plesiomorphic characteristics associated with particular groups and note their apomorphies (if any) as well. • Try to associate “syndromes” of characteristics with each group (make note of special characters occurring together). • One good way to study is to write keys to the groups we cover in any given unit. • Names of groups are important! Learn to spell and say them! • Ask questions!!

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