Definitions [1]
Define - Thallus.
Thallus refers to a plant body that is not differentiated into roots, stems, and leaves. Example: Algae.
Key Points
1. Meaning - All single-celled eukaryotes act as a link between plants, animals and fungi; mostly aquatic; have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
2. Chrysophytes - Includes diatoms and golden algae; cell wall has silica; deposits form Diatomaceous Earth (used in polishing and filtration); chief producers in oceans.
3. Dinoflagellates - Mostly marine, photosynthetic; cell wall of cellulosic plates; have two flagella (one longitudinal, one transverse); rapid multiplication of red dinoflagellates (e.g. Gonyaulax) causes red tides.
4. Euglenoids - Have a pellicle instead of a cell wall; photosynthetic in sunlight but become heterotrophs in its absence. e.g. Euglena.
5. Slime Moulds - Saprophytic; feed on decaying matter; undergo syngamy to form a plasmodium that spreads over several feet.
6. Protozoans - 4 types:
- Amoeboid - move by pseudopodia. e.g. Amoeba, Entamoeba
- Flagellated - have flagella; cause sleeping sickness. e.g. Trypanosoma
- Ciliated - have cilia; have a gullet for feeding. e.g. Paramecium
- Sporozoans - no locomotory organelle; all parasitic. e.g. Plasmodium
1. Meaning - Heterotrophic organisms; body made of thread-like hyphae; network of hyphae = mycelium; cell wall made of chitin; grow in warm and humid places; except yeasts, all are multicellular.
2. Nutrition - Can be saprophytic (feed on dead matter), parasitic or symbiotic (as lichens and mycorrhiza).
3. Reproduction - Asexual by spores (conidia, zoospores, aplanospores); sexual reproduction involves 3 steps - plasmogamy → karyogamy → meiosis; Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes undergo a dikaryotic stage.
4. 4 Classes of Fungi:
- Phycomycetes - Mycelium aseptate, coenocytic; spores endogenous in sporangium. e.g. Rhizopus, Albugo
- Ascomycetes (Sac fungi) - Asexual spores = conidia; sexual spores = ascospores in ascus. e.g. Aspergillus, Neurospora
- Basidiomycetes - No asexual spores; sexual spores = basidiospores (exogenous). e.g. Agaricus, Ustilago, Puccinia
- Deuteromycetes (Imperfect Fungi) - Sexual form unknown; saprophytic/parasitic. e.g. Alternaria, Colletotrichum
5. Classification basis - Based on morphology, mode of spore formation and fruiting bodies.
6. Important examples - Puccinia (wheat rust), Penicillium (antibiotic), Agaricus (mushroom), Neurospora (genetic research).
1. Meaning- All eukaryotic, chlorophyll-containing organisms; cell wall made of cellulose; mostly autotrophic; some are insectivorous (e.g. Venus fly trap, Bladderwort) or parasitic (e.g. Cuscuta).
2. Members - Includes algae, bryophytes, pteridophytes, gymnosperms and angiosperms.
3. Alternation of generations - Life cycle has two phases - diploid sporophyte and haploid gametophyte - which alternate with each other.
4. Plant groups at a glance:
- Algae - Simple, aquatic, no true roots/stems/leaves. e.g. Seaweed, Green algae
- Bryophytes - Non-vascular, moist environments. e.g. Mosses, Liverworts
- Pteridophytes - Vascular, no seeds, reproduce by spores. e.g. Ferns
- Gymnosperms - Naked seeds in cones, no flowers/fruits. e.g. Pine, Fir
- Angiosperms - Seeds enclosed in fruits, the most diverse group. e.g. Rose, Lily
5. Key features - Have prominent chloroplasts for photosynthesis; membrane-bound organelles; the most diverse group among all kingdoms.
| Classes | Common Name | Major Pigments | Stored Food | Cell Wall | Flagellar Number and Position of Insertions | Habitat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorophyceae | Green algae | Chlorophyll a, b | Starch | Cellulose | 2–8, equal, apical | Fresh water, brackish water, salt water |
| Phaeophyceae | Brown algae | Chlorophyll a, c, carotenoids, xanthophylls | Mannitol, laminarin | Cellulose and algin | 2, unequal, lateral | Fresh water (rare), brackish water, salt water |
| Rhodophyceae | Red algae | Chlorophyll a, c, r-phycoerythrin | Floridean starch | Cellulose, pectin and polysulphate esters | Absent | Fresh water (some), brackish water, salt water (most) |
| Feature | Chlorophyceae (Green) | Phaeophyceae (Brown) | Rhodophyceae (Red) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Body form | Unicellular/colonial/filamentous | Simple to large complex forms | Mostly multicellular |
| Pigments | Chlorophyll a, b | Chlorophyll a, c, fucoxanthin | Chlorophyll a, d, phycoerythrin |
| Stored food | Starch | Mannitol, laminarin | Floridean starch |
| Cell wall | Cellulose | Cellulose + algin | Cellulose + pectin |
| Reproduction | Zoospores (2–8 equal flagella) | Zoospores (2 unequal flagella) | Non-motile spores/gametes |
| Habitat | Fresh, brackish, marine | Mostly marine | Mostly marine |
| Examples | Chlamydomonas, Spirogyra | Laminaria, Sargassum | Polysiphonia, Porphyra |
- Algae are simple, chlorophyll-containing, autotrophic organisms, mostly found in aquatic habitats.
- They have a thallus body without true roots, stems, and leaves.
- Algae show different forms, such as unicellular (Chlamydomonas), colonial (Volvox), and filamentous (Spirogyra).
- Reproduction occurs by vegetative, asexual, and sexual methods, including fragmentation and spore formation.
- Algae play an important role in CO₂ fixation and oxygen production, supporting aquatic ecosystems.
- They have economic importance, providing food, agar, algin, carrageenan, and protein-rich supplements like Spirulina.
- Bryophytes are called amphibians of the plant kingdom as they live on land but need water for reproduction.
- They are found in damp, humid, and shaded places and lack true roots, stems, and leaves.
- The plant body is thallus-like and attached to the substratum by rhizoids.
- The gametophyte is the dominant phase, which produces male (antheridia) and female (archegonia) gametes.
- Fertilisation requires water, forming a zygote that develops into a sporophyte (foot, seta, capsule).
- Reproduction occurs by vegetative (fragmentation), asexual (gemmae), and sexual methods.
- Economic importance: prevents soil erosion, acts as a pioneer species, provides peat (fuel), and has medicinal uses.
- Pteridophytes are vascular plants with true roots, stems, and leaves; the sporophyte is the dominant phase.
- They are the first terrestrial plants with vascular tissues (xylem and phloem).
- Leaves may be microphylls (small), as in Selaginella, or macrophylls (large), as in ferns.
- Sporangia produce spores and are present on sporophylls, often forming cones (strobili).
- Spores germinate into a haploid gametophyte (prothallus), which is small, independent, and photosynthetic.
- Fertilisation requires water, and the zygote develops into a new sporophyte.
- Some pteridophytes show heterospory (microspores and megaspores), which is an important step towards a seed habit.
- Naked seeds - Gymnosperms have ovules not enclosed by the ovary wall; seeds remain exposed before and after fertilisation.
- Vegetative features - Stem branched (Pinus) or unbranched (Cycas); leaves are needle-like with thick cuticle and sunken stomata to reduce water loss; roots are tap roots.
- Special roots - Pinus has mycorrhiza (fungal association); Cycas has coralloid roots with N₂-fixing cyanobacteria.
- Reproduction - Reproductive structures are strobili (cones); plants are heterosporous - male strobilus has microsporophylls (produce pollen); female strobilus has megasporophylls (bear ovules); pollination is by air (wind).
- Fertilisation - Pollen tube carries male gametes to archegonium → fuses with egg → zygote → embryo; ovule develops into seed; life cycle is diplontic (sporophyte dominant).
- 4 groups - Cycads (Cycas), Conifers (Pinus, Cedrus), Ginkgoales (Ginkgo biloba), Gnetales (Ephedra, Gnetum).
- Economic importance - Ephedrine (from Ephedra) for respiration; Taxol (from Taxus) for cancer; sago from Cycas; timber, resins, turpentine and paper pulp from conifers.
- Angiosperms are flowering plants with seeds enclosed in fruits.
- They show great variation in size, from small (Wolffia) to large trees (Eucalyptus).
- Classified into monocots and dicots.
- Double fertilisation occurs, forming a zygote and a triploid endosperm.
- After fertilisation, the ovary becomes a fruit, and the ovule becomes a seed.
- Life cycle is diplontic with a dominant sporophyte and a reduced gametophyte.
- Seed coat: Consists of two layers—testa (outer) and tegmen (inner).
- Hilum: A scar on the seed coat showing the point of attachment to the fruit.
- Micropyle: A small pore present above the hilum helps in water absorption.
- Cotyledons: Two fleshy cotyledons present, storing reserve food material.
- Embryo: Contains an embryonal axis with radicle and plumule at opposite ends.
- Endosperm: May be present (e.g., castor) or absent (e.g., bean, gram, pea) in mature seeds.
- Monocot seed: Usually endospermic, with endosperm storing food (except orchids).
- Endosperm: Large and bulky, separated from the embryo by a protein-rich aleurone layer.
- Embryo: Consists of a single cotyledon called the scutellum and a short embryonal axis.
- Cotyledon: Only one large, shield-shaped cotyledon present.
- Radicle and plumule: Radicle is enclosed in the coleorhiza, and plumule in the coleoptile.
- Seed structure: The seed coat is often fused with the fruit wall, and the embryo lies at one side of the endosperm.
Concepts [16]
- Introduction of Biological Classification
- Classification of Living Organisms
- Five Kingdom Classification
- Kingdom Monera
- Kingdom Protista
- Kingdom Fungi
- Kingdom Plantae
- Sub-division Algae
- Kingdom Plantae: Thallophyta (Fungi)
- Cryptogams > Division II- Bryophytes
- Cryptogams > Division III- Pteridophytes
- Phanerogams
- Phanerogams > Division I-Gymnosperms
- Phanerogams > Division II- Angiosperms
- Structure of a Dicotyledonous Seed
- Structure of Monocotyledonous Seed
