BIO 200 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Brown Algae, Charales, Tracheid

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Origin of land plants: how do plants evolve, tactics for land invasion, a general plant life cycle, just what is a plant, red algae: the outgroup to the plants, chlorophytes and stonewort. Non-seeded land plants: moving to land: embryophytes, bryophytes: liverworts, hornworts, and mosses, the moss life cycle, the next big advance: tracheid cells, lycophytes and monilophytes (horsetails and ferns, the fern life cycle. Land plants mark a big shift in the organism"s we"ve been discussing. The invasion of land is one of the more complex feats in evolutionary history. Cuticle: traps water inside the plant (then hard to get air in) The haploid phase (blue) gets shorter as plants evolve. Rhodophyta have multiple pigments and vary in size. Chloroplasts result from primary endosymbiosis: a single event that gave rise to red and green algae (two membranes) Brown algae is an example of secondary symbiosis (engulfed red or green algae to get their chloroplasts; three membranes).

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