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Flowers • Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known plant species are flowering plants (260,000)

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Page 1: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Flowers

• Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form

• Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant!

• 88% of all known plant species are flowering plants (260,000)

Page 2: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Flowering plants first appeared around 140 million years ago (Upper Jurassic).

At that time the dominant forms of plant life were gymnosperms, cycads (at left), and ferns.

Oldest flower fossil is 125 million years old.

Flowers: A Marvelous Innovation

Slide text from: http://herbarium.usu.edu/Teaching/bio2410/FLOWERS.ppt

Page 3: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Flowers dominate (except…)

• Success of the flower as a repro. strategy makes it the dominant plant of the warmer lats

• In far north or high altitudes, we see gymnosperms (like fir, spruce) remain

http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/geog101/modules/natural_vegetation_of_north_america_map.html

Page 4: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Alternation of Generations

Page 5: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Why has the flower been such a success?

• Protection

• Pollination

• Dispersal

• Endosperm

• Evolutionary possibility – adaptive radiation

Page 6: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Protection

• Fruit helps prevent seed predation, resist dessication, may allow some seeds to last decades before germinating

Page 7: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Pollination

• Often deliberate, targeted, effective means of delivering gametes to target!

Page 8: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Dispersal

• Animal dispersed fruits, wind-dispersed seeds rely on evolved fruit forms – modifications of ovary not possible in non-flowering plants.

Page 9: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Endosperm

• Nutritive tissue derived from unique fertilization events – provides early energy reserves for embryo

                                                                 

Page 10: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Possibility

• Many specializations possible to modify original form

Page 11: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known
Page 12: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Four floral whorls

• a calyx of sepals

• a corolla of petals(alternative to above two, a perianth of tepals)

• an androecium of stamens

• a gynoecium of carpels

Page 13: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Calyx – The sepals

• Often green, but not always

• Frequently symmetric, in same number as petals

• Occasionally becomes a modified capsule that encloses fruit – tomatillo!

Page 14: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known
Page 15: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Corolla – The petals

• Note violet corolla of fused petals extending from a calyx of fused sepals in Datura!

Page 16: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Androecium – the stamens

• Anther held on extending filament

• May be attached to hypanthium or fused to petals

Page 17: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Androecium

Solandra maxima

K5 C5 A5 G2

Page 18: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Gynoecium – The carpels

• Fused style branches of multiple carpels may appear as a single central structure

http://www.csdl.tamu.edu/FLORA/imaxxgen.htm

Page 19: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Stamen and Stigma

Alstroemeria aurantiaca D. Don ex Sweet; photos Dan Zimmerman, FCSFlower courtesy of Dr. Melinda Yin

Page 20: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Floral Formula - KCAG

• K (or CA) Calyx• C (or CO) Corolla• A Androecium• G Gynoecium

http://www.howe.k12.ok.us/~jimaskew/botzo/botforms.htm

Page 21: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Actinomorphic and Zygomorphic•Actinomorphic

http://www.life.uiuc.edu/plantbio/260/Flowers/FloralTerms.html

zygomorphic

http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantnop/orchids/whatisorchid.htm

Page 22: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Jewelweed, Impatiens capensis Meerb.

Page 23: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Flower form - sympetaly

http://www.missouriplants.com/Redalt/Impatiens_capensis_page.html

Sympetaly = fused petals/tubular corolla

Page 24: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Zygomorphic Salvia patens Lamiaceae

Salvia flower, FCS Morris Arboretum Trip, October 13, 2007

Page 25: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Mints - Lamiaceae

http://www.eeob.iastate.edu/classes/botany306/terminology/flower/flowers.html

Hypogynous flower implies superior ovary

Page 26: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Perfect and Imperfect flowers

Begonia - imperfect

carpellate

staminate

http://www.botany.hawaii.edu/faculty/webb/BOT410/Angiosperm/FlowerCompletePerfect.htm

Perfect Hosta

Page 27: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Cucurbitaceae

• Imperfect flowers

                                                       

         

Page 28: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Monoecious plant, staminate and carpellate

(imperfect) flowers

• Note the inferior ovary here

Page 29: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Pollination

• Technically, pollination is simply the transfer of species-appropriate pollen to the receptive part of a flower.

• Could be self-pollination (selfing) or cross-pollination (outcrossing)

http://ecs.lewisham.gov.uk/youthspace/ca/webpagesf/pollination.jpg

Page 30: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Many possible vehicles for pollination

• Wind• Insects (many

different groups!)• Birds• Bats • A few other mammals

Photographic database

Page 31: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Butterflies – vision & color

http://webexhibits.org/causesofcolor/17C.html

Page 32: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Butterflies are great learners• Butterflies, whose color vision detects more

wavelengths than either humans' or bees', can also associate colors with rewards. In one of the more dramatic experiments, cabbage butterflies learned a color with beelike speed -- after just one experience with a reward. Given a choice of two colors, the butterflies picked the rewarding hue 82 percent of the time, reported Alcinda C. Lewis of Boulder, Colo., and a colleague in Insect-Plant Interactions (CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fla., 1990). Pipevine swallowtails learned a preference for yellow or magenta within 10 visits to treat-laden flowers, reported Weiss in the May 1997 Animal Behaviour.

• The butterflies could also keep two learned colors in mind for different purposes, Weiss says. She and Daniel R. Papaj of the University of Arizona have trained female pipevines to associate one color with sources of nectar and another with suitable spots for laying eggs.

http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/sn_arc98/4_11_98/bob1.htm

Page 33: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Nectar guides – visible or UV

                                                                                                                                    

Page 34: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Moth pollinators

Page 35: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known
Page 36: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known
Page 37: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Isabel Friedman, Apis mellifera on Asteraceae, Morris Arboretum October 13, 2007

Page 38: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Bees are important pollinators

• Bees’ bodies well adapted to receive, transfer pollen

• Bees’ vision includes UV spectral regions, but bees do not distinguish red as a visible color

• Red-colored flowers are often bird-pollinated and not adapted for bees

(poinsettia, hibiscus, red-flowered sages)

Page 39: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known
Page 40: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Colony Collapse Disorder?

• Researchers are concerned that trucking colonies around the country to pollinate crops, where they intermingle with other bees from all over, helps spread viruses and mites among colonies. Additionally, such continuous movement and re-settlement is considered by some a strain and disruption for the entire hive, possibly rendering it less resistant to all sorts of systemic disorder.[69] One major US beekeeper reports moving his hives from Idaho to California in January, then to apple orchards in Washington in March, to North Dakota two months later, and then back to Idaho by November - a journey of several thousands of miles. Others move from Florida to New Hampshire or to Texas; nearly all visit California for the almond bloom in January. Keepers in Europe and Asia are generally far less mobile, with bee populations moving and mingling within a smaller geographic extent (although some keepers do move longer distances, it is much less common). This wider spread and intermingling in the US has resulted in far greater losses from Varroa mite infections in recent years.[70]

Page 41: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Bougainvillea (Nyctaginaceae)

Bracts !

Page 42: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Poinsettia (Euphorbiaceae)

Bracts !

Page 43: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Hummingbird, sunbird, and honeycreeper – nectar feeding bird pollinators

Page 44: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Pollination Syndromes

• http://www.cas.vanderbilt.edu/bioimages/pages/pollination.htm

Page 45: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Unusually remarkable pollination stories

• Thermogenic flowers and heat reward

• Orchid with wasp pheromones and deception

• Yucca moth and seed parasitism

• Fig wasp and two female flower styles in syconium

Page 46: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Yucca – more tension/balance

• http://waynesword.palomar.edu/ww0902a.htm

Page 47: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Figs! Reproductive captivity

• Figs are one of many fruits that aren’t really fruits (also true of the strawberry, the apple and pear (!) the durian and several others…)

• Fig wasps live and reproduce inside the “syconium” – a fig’s inflorescence

• Ray’s Figs of Israel

Page 48: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Fig pollination

• The puzzle of the fig

• Wayne’s word on figs

Page 49: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Fertilization follows pollination

• Pollination involves only the transfer of species-appropriate pollen to the receptive stigma of a flower

• Fertilization requires the union of pollemn sperm nucleus with an ovule’s egg cell and creation of a new diploid (2n) embryo

Page 50: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Female sex cell is accompanied by accessory cells

• Meiosis in the megasporangium of ovary (megasporocyte) creates eight (8) haploid cells – one of these eight is the egg cell, two nearby are called synergids.

• Two other important nuclei

are the polar bodies

http://zygote.swarthmore.edu/plantfig8.gif

Page 51: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Male pollen must germinate and divide

• Pollen grains on stigma actually germinate and grow a pollen tube to provide passage through style to ovary.

http://www.msstate.edu/dept/biosciences/fishbein/pollentube.jpg

http://www.cepceb.ucr.edu/images/members/lord/figure_1.jpg

Page 52: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Pollen tubes

http://www.jmu.edu/biology/k12/fruitdev/fertil.htm

Page 53: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known
Page 54: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Pollen nucleus journey may be long!

http://agbiosafety.unl.edu/education/lessons/breeding_lesson.htm

Long corolla flowers like Chalice vine (Solandra) or trip from top silks of ear of corn to bottom kernels….

Page 55: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known
Page 56: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Pollen tube ultimately comprises 3 male nuclei

• Tube nucleus is responsible for growth of pollen tube

• Generative cell divides into two (2) (!) sperm nuclei by arrival at ovule entry (micropyle)

http://zygote.swarthmore.edu/plantfig10.gif

Page 57: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Double fertilization

• Following the division of the pollen’s sperm nucleus into two identical haploid nuclei, there are two separate fertilization events

http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/BioBookflowersII.html

http://www.hos.ufl.edu/amsweb/research.html

Page 58: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Double fertilization

http://www.emunix.emich.edu/~ghannan/systbot/doublefertanimation.html

Page 59: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

WHY have double fertilization?

• Competing hypotheses• Review consequences of

double fertilization

• Shown at right, male and female gamete nuclei fusing to form embryo (top) and the 3 cells of 2nd fertilization fusing to form triploid cell to form endosperm(bottom)

Page 60: Flowers Extraordinary diversity of color, size, form Universal in objective – sexual reproduction for a rooted, stationary land plant! 88% of all known

Pollen Viewer

• http://www.geo.brown.edu/georesearch/esh/QE/Research/VegDynam/VegAnima/PV31Inst.htm