Plant Kingdom - Notes | Class 11 | Part 1: Classification systems, Algae

Plant Kingdom Notes - Classification Systems and Algae

Systems of Biological Classification

  • Earliest systems: Artificial Classification Systems.
  • Based on vegetative characters or superficial morphological characters like habit, colour, number, and shape of leaves.
  • Linnaeus’s artificial system based on androecium structure.
  • Drawbacks:

    • Separated closely related species due to reliance on few characteristics.
    • Equal weightage to vegetative and sexual characteristics, which is not ideal as vegetative characters are more environment-dependent.
  • Natural Classification Systems: Based on natural affinities among organisms.
  • Consider external and internal features (ultrastructure, anatomy, embryology, phytochemistry).
  • E.g., Classification for flowering plants by George Bentham & Joseph Dalton Hooker.
  • Phylogenetic Classification Systems: Based on evolutionary relationships, assuming organisms in the same taxa share a common ancestor.
  • Other sources to resolve classification problems:

    • Numerical Taxonomy: Uses all observable characteristics, computer-processed with assigned numbers and codes for equal consideration of hundreds of characters.
    • Cytotaxonomy: Based on cytological information like chromosome number, structure, behaviour.
    • Chemotaxonomy: Uses chemical constituents of plants.

Algae

  • Simple, thalloid, autotrophic, chlorophyll-bearing, and aquatic (fresh water & marine) organisms.
  • Also occur in moist stones, soils, and wood.
  • Some in association with fungi (lichens) and animals (e.g., on sloth bear).
  • Highly variable form and size:
    • Microscopic unicellular: E.g., Chlamydomonas.
    • Colonial: E.g., Volvox.
    • Filamentous: E.g., Ulothrix, Spirogyra.

Reproduction

  • Vegetative reproduction: By fragmentation, each fragment develops into a thallus.
  • Asexual reproduction: By spores, e.g., zoospores (most common, flagellated, motile, germinate into new plants).
  • Sexual reproduction: Fusion of two gametes, of types:
    • Isogamous: Fusion of similar-sized gametes, flagellated (e.g., Ulothrix) or non-flagellated (e.g., Spirogyra).
    • Anisogamous: Fusion of dissimilar-sized gametes, e.g., some Eudorina species.
    • Oogamous: Fusion of large, non-motile female gamete and smaller, motile male gamete, e.g., Volvox, Fucus.

Benefits of Algae

  • Fix half of Earth’s CO2 through photosynthesis, increasing dissolved oxygen levels.
  • Primary producers, forming the basis of aquatic food cycles.
  • 70 marine algae species used as food, e.g., Porphyra, Laminaria, Sargassum.
  • Agar (from Gelidium, Gracilaria) used for microbial growth, ice creams, and jellies.
  • Marine brown & red algae produce hydrocolloids (water-holding substances), e.g., algin (brown algae), carrageen (red algae), used commercially.
  • Protein-rich unicellular algae like Chlorella, Spirulina used as food supplements by space travellers.

Algae include three classes: Chlorophyceae, Phaeophyceae, and Rhodophyceae.

1. Chlorophyceae (Green Algae)

  • Unicellular, colonial, or filamentous.
  • Grass green due to chlorophyll a and b in chloroplasts.
  • Chloroplasts vary: discoid, plate-like, reticulate, cup-shaped, spiral, or ribbon-shaped.
  • Most have pyrenoids (storage bodies with protein and starch) in chloroplasts.
  • Some store food as oil droplets.
  • Rigid cell wall: inner cellulose, outer pectose.
  • E.g., Chlamydomonas, Volvox, Ulothrix, Spirogyra, Chara.
Chlorophyceae

Reproduction

  • Vegetative reproduction: By fragmentation or different spore types.
  • Asexual reproduction: By flagellated zoospores in zoosporangia.
  • Sexual reproduction: Isogamous, anisogamous, or oogamous.

2. Phaeophyceae (Brown Algae)

  • Mostly marine, varying from simple branched, filamentous forms (e.g., Ectocarpus) to profusely branched forms (e.g., kelps, up to 100 m).
  • Contain chlorophyll a, c, carotenoids, and xanthophylls.
  • Colour varies from olive green to brown due to fucoxanthin.
  • Food stored as complex carbohydrates: laminarin or mannitol.
  • Vegetative cells have a cellulosic wall with a gelatinous algin coating.
  • Protoplast contains plastids, central vacuole, and nucleus.
  • Plant body attached by a holdfast, with a stalk (stipe) and leaf-like frond.
  • E.g., Ectocarpus, Dictyota, Laminaria, Sargassum, Fucus.
Phaeophyceae

Reproduction

  • Vegetative reproduction: By fragmentation.
  • Asexual reproduction: By pear-shaped biflagellate zoospores with two unequal, laterally attached flagella.
  • Sexual reproduction: Isogamous, anisogamous, or oogamous. Gamete union in water or within the oogonium (oogamous species). Gametes are pear-shaped with two laterally attached flagella.

3. Rhodophyceae (Red Algae)

  • Contain r-phycoerythrin (red pigment).
  • Mostly marine, especially in warmer areas.
  • Occur in well-lighted surface waters and deep oceans with low light penetration.
  • Red thalli are mostly multicellular, some with complex body organisation.
  • Food stored as floridean starch, similar to amylopectin and glycogen.
  • E.g., Polysiphonia, Porphyra, Gracilaria, Gelidium.
Rhodophyceae

Reproduction

  • Vegetative reproduction: By fragmentation.
  • Asexual reproduction: By non-motile spores.
  • Sexual reproduction: Oogamous, by non-motile gametes with complex post-fertilisation developments.
Classes Chlorophyceae (Green Algae) Phaeophyceae (Brown Algae) Rhodophyceae (Red Algae)
Major pigments Chlorophyll a, b Chlorophyll a, c, Fucoxanthin Chlorophyll a, d, Phycoerythrin
Stored food Starch Mannitol, Laminarin Floridean Starch
Cell wall Cellulose Cellulose and Algin Cellulose
Flagellar number & position of insertion 2-8, equal, apical 2, unequal, lateral Absent
Habitat Fresh water, salt water & brackish water Fresh water (rare), salt water & brackish water Fresh water (some), salt water (most) & brackish water

2 Comments

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