Plant Kingdom
'Plants are the lungs of the Earth, the producers of the biosphere.' — Plant Biology
1. Chapter Overview
The PLANT KINGDOM encompasses an ENORMOUS diversity — from microscopic algae to giant sequoias. This chapter surveys the MAJOR GROUPS of plants: ALGAE, BRYOPHYTES, PTERIDOPHYTES, GYMNOSPERMS, and ANGIOSPERMS. The FOCUS is on their STRUCTURAL organisation, REPRODUCTIVE strategies, and the ALTERNATION OF GENERATIONS (the haploid-diploid life cycle) that CHARACTERISES all land plants.
2. Algae
Characteristics
- SIMPLEST and MOST PRIMITIVE plants
- Thalloid body (NO differentiation into root, stem, leaf)
- Chlorophyll a PRESENT; photosynthetic
- Cell wall: CELLULOSE
- Habitat: Aquatic (freshwater and marine)
Classification
| Group | Pigment | Stored Food | Cell Wall | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorophyceae (Green algae) | Chlorophyll a, b | Starch | Cellulose | Chlamydomonas, Spirogyra, Volvox |
| Phaeophyceae (Brown algae) | Chlorophyll a, c, Fucoxanthin | Laminarin, Mannitol | Cellulose + Algin | Sargassum, Laminaria, Fucus |
| Rhodophyceae (Red algae) | Chlorophyll a, d, Phycoerythrin | Floridean starch | Cellulose + Pectin | Polysiphonia, Gracilaria, Gelidium |
Economic Importance
- Food: Porphyra (nori), Spirulina (protein supplement)
- Agar: From Gelidium and Gracilaria (culture media)
- Carrageenan: From red algae (emulsifier)
- Alginates: From brown algae (thickener)
Reproduction
- Vegetative, Asexual (zoospores, conidia), Sexual (isogamous, anisogamous, oogamous)
3. Bryophytes
Characteristics
- AMPHIBIANS of the plant kingdom (need water for reproduction)
- NO TRUE roots, stems, leaves (thalloid or leaf-like structures)
- Rhizoids present (root-like, NOT true roots)
- VASCULAR TISSUE ABSENT
- Gametophyte is DOMINANT (independent, photosynthetic)
- Sporophyte is DEPENDENT on gametophyte
Classification
| Class | Examples | Features |
|---|---|---|
| Hepaticopsida (Liverworts) | Marchantia, Riccia | Dorsiventral thallus. Gemmae for asexual reproduction |
| Anthocerotopsida (Hornworts) | Anthoceros | Horn-like sporophyte; cells have SINGLE large chloroplast |
| Bryopsida (Mosses) | Funaria, Sphagnum | Erect stem, spirally arranged leaves, rhizoids |
Economic Importance
- Sphagnum (peat moss): PEAT (fuel), soil conditioner
- Prevent soil EROSION
- Ecological indicators (air quality)
4. Pteridophytes
Characteristics
- FIRST terrestrial plants with VASCULAR TISSUE (xylem + phloem)
- TRUE roots, stems, and leaves present
- Sporophyte is DOMINANT and INDEPENDENT
- Gametophyte is SMALL (prothallus)
- Spores are produced in SPORANGIA (on leaves = sporophylls)
- Spores germinate to form PROTHALLUS (heart-shaped gametophyte)
Classification
| Class | Examples | Features |
|---|---|---|
| Lycopsida (Club mosses) | Lycopodium, Selaginella | Microphyllous leaves |
| Sphenopsida (Horsetails) | Equisetum | Jointed stem, scale leaves |
| Pteropsida (Ferns) | Pteris, Adiantum, Dryopteris | Large compound leaves (fronds) |
5. Gymnosperms
Characteristics
- NAKED SEEDS (ovules NOT enclosed in ovary wall)
- Perennial, WOODY (trees and shrubs)
- Vascular tissue present (xylem with tracheids, NO vessels except in Gnetales; phloem with sieve cells, NO companion cells)
- Sporophyte is DOMINANT; gametophyte is REDUCED (dependent)
- POLLEN TUBE present (water NOT needed for fertilisation)
Examples
- Pinus (Pine), Cycas (Cycad), Ginkgo biloba (Maidenhair tree), Ephedra, Gnetum
6. Angiosperms
Characteristics
- FLOWERING plants — seeds enclosed in FRUITS (ovary)
- VESSELS present in xylem; COMPANION CELLS in phloem
- DOUBLE FERTILISATION (unique to angiosperms → endosperm)
- Sporophyte is DOMINANT; gametophyte is EXTREMELY REDUCED
Classification
| Class | Seeds | Leaves | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monocotyledonae | One cotyledon | Parallel venation | Maize, Wheat, Rice, Lily |
| Dicotyledonae | Two cotyledons | Reticulate venation | Mango, Rose, Sunflower, Pea |
7. Alternation of Generations
- Haplontic: Dominant HAPLOID phase (gametophyte); sporophyte is only the zygote. Example: Many algae
- Diplontic: Dominant DIPLOID phase (sporophyte); gametophyte is reduced. Examples: Gymnosperms, Angiosperms
- Haplo-diplontic: BOTH phases multicellular and free-living. Examples: Bryophytes, Pteridophytes
Comparison of Plant Groups
| Feature | Algae | Bryophytes | Pteridophytes | Gymnosperms | Angiosperms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Body | Thallus | Thallus/Leafy | Root, stem, leaf | Root, stem, leaf | Root, stem, leaf |
| Vascular tissue | Absent | Absent | Present | Present | Present |
| Dominant generation | Gametophyte | Gametophyte | Sporophyte | Sporophyte | Sporophyte |
| Seeds | Absent | Absent | Absent | Naked seeds | Encased seeds |
| Water for fertilisation | Needed | Needed | Needed | NOT needed | NOT needed |
8. Common Mistakes
- Bryophytes are NOT 'non-vascular plants': They simply LACK vascular tissue — they are the only group that does (among land plants)
- Gymnosperms have NO FRUITS, but some have fleshy seed coverings: The yew 'berry' is an aril, NOT a fruit
- Double fertilisation is UNIQUE to angiosperms: Not found even in gymnosperms
- Prothallus is the GAMETOPHYTE of pteridophytes: Heart-shaped, free-living, but SHORT-LIVED
- Algae are NOT always aquatic: Some grow on tree trunks, wet soil, or in symbiotic associations
9. CBSE Exam Focus
- Classification of algae — pigments, stored food (3-mark)
- Bryophytes — characteristics and economic importance (3-mark)
- Alternation of generations — haplontic, diplontic, haplo-diplontic (5-mark)
- Pteridophytes vs Gymnosperms vs Angiosperms (5-mark)
- Double fertilisation in angiosperms (3-mark)
10. Self-Test (5+ Q&A)
Q1: Differentiate between red algae and brown algae. A: Red algae: Phycoerythrin pigment, floridean starch, found in deeper waters. Brown algae: Fucoxanthin pigment, laminarin storage, found in cooler marine waters.
Q2: Why are bryophytes called 'amphibians of the plant kingdom'? A: They live on land but REQUIRE WATER for reproduction (flagellated sperm swim to reach egg).
Q3: What is double fertilisation? Explain briefly. A: One sperm fuses with the egg (→ zygote, 2n), the OTHER fuses with polar nuclei (→ triploid endosperm, 3n). UNIQUE to angiosperms.
Q4: Name the dominant generation in bryophytes and pteridophytes. A: Bryophytes: GAMETOPHYTE (haploid, dominant). Pteridophytes: SPOROPHYTE (diploid, dominant).
Q5: What is the prothallus in ferns? A: The PROTHALLUS is the free-living, heart-shaped GAMETOPHYTE (haploid) of ferns. It bears antheridia (male) and archegonia (female) and is independent of the sporophyte.
11. Conclusion
The plant kingdom shows a PROGRESSION from simple to complex: algae (thallus) → bryophytes (land colonisers) → pteridophytes (first vascular plants) → gymnosperms (first seed plants) → angiosperms (flowering plants, MOST successful). Each group has ADAPTATIONS that allowed plants to conquer land more effectively. The alternation of generations reveals the CORE life cycle pattern — the SPOROPHYTE becomes increasingly dominant as we move from algae to angiosperms. This evolutionary perspective is FUNDAMENTAL to understanding plant diversity.
