Algal Ancestry and Shared Traits
Adaptions to Land Life
Life cycles and Reproduction
Nonvascular Plants
Seedless Vascular Plants
100

Plants share a common ancestor with this group of green algae in the Archaeplastida supergroup.

Charophytes

100

This waxy covering on plant surfaces resists desiccation but requires pores for gas exchange.

Cuticle (waxy cuticle)

100

This type of life cycle, unique to land plants, alternates between a haploid multicellular form and a diploid multicellular form.

 Alternation of generations

100

Name the three phyla collectively called 'Bryophytes.'

Marchantiophyta (liverworts), Anthocerotophyta (hornworts), Bryophyta (mosses)

100

Seedless vascular plants possess two types of vascular tissue. Name both and state what each transports.

Xylem (transports water and minerals) and Phloem (transports sugars, amino acids, and organic products)

200

These four characteristics are shared by chlorophytes, charophytes, and plants.

Multicellularity, cellulose cell walls, chloroplasts with chlorophyll a & b, and starch as storage molecule

200

These adjustable pores in most vascular plants allow controllable CO₂/O₂ exchange.

Stomata

200

In bryophytes, this generation is dominant (longest lasting/largest); in seedless vascular plants, the sporophyte takes over as dominant.

Gametophyte (in bryophytes)

200

This peat-forming moss genus is harvested for fuel and has preserved corpses for thousands of years.

Sphagnum

200

Only lycophytes have these small, spine-shaped leaves supported by a single strand of vascular tissue.

Microphylls

300

This supergroup of eukaryotes contains red algae, green algae, and plants.

Archaeplastida

300

This mutualistic association with fungi aids water and mineral absorption and predates true roots.

Mycorrhizae

300

Spores are protected during air dispersal by this tough polymer in their walls.

 Sporopollenin

300

Bryophytes use these structures for attachment instead of true roots

Rhizoids

300

Ferns, horsetails, and whisk ferns all belong to this phylum.

Monilophyta

400

By 470 mya, multicellular green algae expanded from shallow seas into these two types of freshwater habitats.

Rivers and lakes

400

These chemicals produced by plants deter, repel, or poison competitors, herbivores, and parasites. Give two examples.

Secondary metabolites (secondary compounds); examples include caffeine and latex rubber

400

Sperm are protected within this male gametangium; eggs are protected within the archegonium.

Antheridium

400

In the moss life cycle, the germinating spore first becomes this filamentous structure before differentiating into a bud.

Protonema

400

These clusters of sporangia are found on the underside of fern sporophylls.

 Sori

500

These five advantages made land colonization favorable for early algae.

Higher CO₂, higher light intensity, more minerals, no herbivores, and no competition

500

This zone of continuously dividing cells at root and shoot tips allows plants to grow toward resources.

Apical meristem

500

In homosporous plants, one spore type gives rise to this kind of gametophyte.

 A bisexual (hermaphroditic) gametophyte that produces both eggs and sperm

500

Hornworts have a symbiotic relationship with these nitrogen-fixing prokaryotes.

Cyanobacteria

500

In heterosporous plants, megaspores produce female gametophytes and microspores produce male gametophytes. Name one group of seedless vascular plants that is heterosporous.

Spike mosses (Selaginella) or quillworts (Isoetes)

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