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Course: Ncert - Class 11: Biology - Unit -1
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Detailed Notes Chapter3-Plant Kingdom

Introduction

  1. Introduction to Kingdom Plantae:

    • The chapter focuses on the detailed classification within the Kingdom Plantae, commonly known as the plant kingdom.
  2. Changes in Understanding:

    • Fungi, along with certain members of Monera and Protista possessing cell walls, have been excluded from Plantae. Earlier classifications erroneously grouped them within this kingdom.
    • Cyanobacteria, previously termed as blue-green algae, are no longer categorized as algae.
  3. Description of Plant Groups:

    • The chapter will elaborate on various plant groups, namely Algae, Bryophytes, Pteridophytes, Gymnosperms, and Angiosperms, within the Kingdom Plantae.
  4. Concerns with Early Classification Systems:

    • Early classification systems relied heavily on superficial morphological traits like habit, color, and leaf characteristics. These systems were primarily based on vegetative characters or the structure of the androecium (male reproductive organ).
    • Such systems were artificial, resulting in the separation of closely related species due to reliance on a limited set of characteristics.
    • Additionally, these systems assigned equal importance to vegetative and sexual characteristics, despite vegetative traits being more susceptible to environmental influences.
  5. Development of Natural Classification Systems:

    • Natural classification systems evolved to consider natural affinities among organisms. These systems took into account not only external features but also internal characteristics such as ultrastructure, anatomy, embryology, and phytochemistry.
    • George Bentham and Joseph Dalton Hooker proposed a natural classification system for flowering plants.
  6. Acceptance of Phylogenetic Classification:

    • Presently, phylogenetic classification systems based on evolutionary relationships are widely accepted. This approach assumes that organisms within the same taxa share a common ancestor.
  7. Utilization of Various Data Sources:

    • Taxonomists employ information from diverse sources to resolve classification challenges, especially in the absence of fossil evidence.
    • Numerical Taxonomy, facilitated by computers, assigns numbers and codes to all observable characteristics, ensuring equal consideration of each trait and allowing for the analysis of numerous characters simultaneously.
    • Cytotaxonomy relies on cytological information such as chromosome number, structure, and behavior, while chemotaxonomy uses chemical constituents of plants to aid classification efforts.

3.1 ALGAE

  1. Description:

    • Algae are chlorophyll-bearing, simple, thalloid, autotrophic (self-nourishing), and predominantly aquatic organisms. They are found in various habitats including freshwater, marine environments, moist stones, soils, wood, and even in association with other organisms like fungi and animals.
  2. Form and Size:

    • Algae exhibit a wide range of forms and sizes. They can exist as colonial forms like Volvox, filamentous forms like Ulothrix and Spirogyra, or even as massive plant bodies like certain marine kelps.
  3. Reproduction:

    • Algae reproduce through vegetative, asexual, and sexual methods.
    • Vegetative reproduction occurs through fragmentation, where each fragment develops into a new thallus.
    • Asexual reproduction involves the production of various types of spores, with zoospores being the most common. Zoospores are flagellated and give rise to new plants upon germination.
    • Sexual reproduction occurs through the fusion of two gametes. Gametes can be flagellated and similar in size (isogamous), non-flagellated but similar in size (anisogamous), or differentiated into large, non-motile female gametes and smaller, motile male gametes (oogamous).
  4. Importance to Humans:

    • Algae play a crucial role in the ecosystem by fixing a significant portion of carbon dioxide through photosynthesis, thereby increasing the level of dissolved oxygen in their environment.
    • They serve as primary producers of energy-rich compounds, forming the basis of aquatic food cycles.
    • Certain species of marine algae, such as Porphyra, Laminaria, and Sargassum, are used as food.
    • Some algae produce hydrocolloids like algin (from brown algae) and carrageenan (from red algae), which are commercially valuable as water-holding substances.
    • Agar, derived from algae like Gelidium and Gracilaria, is used in microbiology, food preparation, and pharmaceuticals.
    • Chlorella, a unicellular alga rich in proteins, is used as a food supplement, even by astronauts.
  5. Classification:

    • Algae are classified into three main classes: Chlorophyceae (green algae), Phaeophyceae (brown algae), and Rhodophyceae (red algae).

3.1.1 Chlorophyceae

  1. Description:

    • Chlorophyceae, commonly known as green algae, exhibit a variety of plant body types including unicellular, colonial, or filamentous forms.
    • They typically appear green due to the prevalence of chlorophyll a and b pigments.
    • Chloroplasts, where pigments are localized, can vary in shape and structure among species, ranging from discoid, plate-like, reticulate, cup-shaped, spiral, to ribbon-shaped.
    • Many members of Chlorophyceae have pyrenoids within their chloroplasts, which serve as storage bodies containing protein and starch. Some species may store food in the form of oil droplets.
    • Green algae typically possess a rigid cell wall consisting of an inner layer of cellulose and an outer layer of pectose.
  2. Reproduction:

    • Vegetative reproduction commonly occurs through fragmentation or the formation of various types of spores.
    • Asexual reproduction involves the production of flagellated zoospores within specialized structures called zoosporangia.
    • Sexual reproduction in green algae exhibits considerable variation in the type and formation of sex cells. It may be isogamous (gametes similar in size and motility), anisogamous (gametes similar in size but differ in motility), or oogamous (fusion between a non-motile egg and a motile sperm).
  3. Commonly Found Species:

    • Some commonly encountered green algae include Chlamydomonas, Volvox, Ulothrix, Spirogyra, and Chara.

3.1.2 Phaeophyceae

  1. Description:

    • Phaeophyceae, also known as brown algae, are predominantly found in marine habitats.
    • They exhibit a wide variation in size and form, ranging from simple branched, filamentous forms like Ectocarpus, to highly branched forms like kelps, which can reach heights of up to 100 meters.
    • Brown algae contain chlorophyll a, chlorophyll c, carotenoids, and xanthophylls. The amount of the pigment fucoxanthin present determines their color, ranging from olive green to various shades of brown.
    • Food is stored as complex carbohydrates, such as laminarin or mannitol.
  2. Structure:

    • Vegetative cells have a cellulosic wall covered by a gelatinous coating of algin.
    • The protoplast contains plastids, a centrally located vacuole, and a nucleus.
    • The plant body is typically attached to the substrate by a holdfast and consists of a stalk (stipe) and leaf-like photosynthetic organs called fronds.
  3. Reproduction:

    • Vegetative reproduction occurs through fragmentation.
    • Asexual reproduction involves the production of biflagellate zoospores, which are pear-shaped and have two unequal laterally attached flagella.
    • Sexual reproduction may be isogamous, anisogamous, or oogamous. Gametes are pyriform (pear-shaped) and bear two laterally attached flagella. Union of gametes may occur in water or within specialized structures like the oogonium in oogamous species.
  4. Commonly Found Species:

    • Common examples of brown algae include Ectocarpus, Dictyota, Laminaria, Sargassum, and Fucus.

3.1.3 Rhodophyceae

  1. Description:

    • Rhodophyceae, commonly known as red algae, derive their name from the predominance of the red pigment r-phycoerythrin in their bodies.
    • The majority of red algae are found in marine environments, with higher concentrations in warmer areas.
    • They inhabit both well-lighted regions close to the water surface and deep ocean depths with minimal light penetration.
    • Most red algae have multicellular thalli, with some exhibiting complex body organization.
  2. Food Storage:

    • Food in red algae is stored as floridean starch, which structurally resembles amylopectin and glycogen.
  3. Reproduction:

    • Vegetative reproduction in red algae primarily occurs through fragmentation.
    • Asexual reproduction involves the production of non-motile spores.
    • Sexual reproduction is oogamous, involving non-motile gametes. It is accompanied by complex post-fertilization developments.
  4. Commonly Found Species:

    • Common members of Rhodophyceae include Polysiphonia, Porphyra, Gracilaria, and Gelidium.

 

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