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Plant


 
  • Land plants (embryophytes)
  • Non-vascular plants (bryophytes)
  • Hepaticophyta - liverworts
  • Anthocerotophyta - hornworts
  • Bryophyta - mosses
  • Vascular plants (tracheophytes)
  • Lycopodiophyta - clubmosses
  • Equisetophyta - horsetails
  • Pteridophyta - "true" ferns
  • Psilotophyta - whisk ferns
  • Ophioglossophyta - adderstongues
  • Seed plants (spermatophytes)
  • Pteridospermatophyta - seed ferns
  • Pinophyta - conifers
  • Cycadophyta - cycads
  • Ginkgophyta - ginkgo
  • Gnetophyta - gnetae
  • Magnoliophyta - flowering plants
  • Plants are a major group of living things (about 300,000 species), including familiar organisms such as trees, flowers, herbs, and ferns. Aristotle divided all living things between plants, which generally do not move or have sensory organs, and animals. In Linnaeus' system, these became the Kingdoms Vegetabilia (later Plantae) and Animalia. Since then, it has become clear that the Plantae as originally defined included several unrelated groups, and the fungi and several groups of algae were removed to new kingdoms. However, these are still often considered plants in many contexts. Indeed, any attempt to match "plant" with a single taxon is doomed to fail, because plant is a vaguely defined concept unrelated to the presumed phylogenic concepts on which modern taxonomy is based.

    Algae and Fungi

    The algae comprise several different groups of organisms, which are not in the kingdom plantae but in the kingdom protista, that produce energy through photosynthesis. The most conspicuous are the seaweeds, multicellular algae that often closely resemble terrestrial plants, but as stated above are not plants, found among the green, red, and brown algae. These and other algal groups also include various single-celled creatures and forms that are simple collections of cells, without differentiated tissues. Many can move about, and some have even lost their ability to photosynthesize; when first discovered, these were considered as both plants and animals. Now they are considered neither, but protists.

    Related Topics:
    Alga - Seaweed - Green - Red - Brown alga - Tissues

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    The embryophytes developed from green algae; the two are collectively referred to as the green plants or Viridiplantae. The kingdom Plantae is now usually taken to mean this monophyletic group, as shown above. With a few exceptions among the green algae, all such forms have cell walls containing cellulose and chloroplasts containing chlorophylls a and b, and store food in the form of starch. They undergo closed mitosis without centrioles, and typically have mitochondria with flat cristae.

    Related Topics:
    Monophyletic - Cellulose - Chloroplast - Chlorophyll - Starch - Mitosis - Centriole - Mitochondria

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    The chloroplasts of green plants are surrounded by two membranes, suggesting they originated directly from endosymbiotic cyanobacteria. The same is true of the red algae, and the two groups are generally believed to have a common origin. In contrast, most other algae have chloroplasts with three or four membranes. They are not in general close relatives of the green plants, acquiring chloroplasts separately from ingested or symbiotic green and red algae.

    Related Topics:
    Cyanobacteria - Red alga

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    Unlike embryophytes and algae, fungi are not photosynthetic, but are saprophytes: they obtain their food by breaking down and absorbing surrounding materials. Most fungi are formed by microscopic tubes called hyphae, which may or may not be divided into cells but contain eukaryotic nuclei. Fruiting bodies, of which mushrooms are the most familiar, are actually only the reproductive structures of fungi. They are not related to any of the photosynthetic groups, but are close relatives of animals. They are in their own kingdom.

    Related Topics:
    Fungi - Saprophyte - Nuclei - Mushroom - Animal

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~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
Embryophytes
Algae and Fungi
Importance
Growth
Fossils
Distribution

 

 

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