Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism...

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Plant Taxonomy

Transcript of Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism...

Page 1: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Plant Taxonomy

Page 2: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Basics of Characters

• A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous states or conditions - for example the number of petals on a flower - can be in 3's, 4's or 5's - thus distinct states and they are discontinuous

• The taxonomic value of a characteristic is increased if the biological significance of the characteristic has been determined

Page 3: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Anatomy (Internal)

• Anatomical characteristics are of most importance in studies for classification – especially when trying to determine relationships among large groups of plants, often at higher taxonomic levels - they are less often used for identification and aren't often mentioned in floras

Page 4: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Trichomes on stinging nettles - Urticaceae

Page 5: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Trichome Structure and Growth

Page 6: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.
Page 7: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Snapdragons - Scrophulariaceae

Page 8: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Acanthus - Acanthaceae

Page 9: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Pollen Grains – Many Species

Page 10: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Physiology

• Physiology is less important in classification, but can be of use for classifying parasitic and saprophytic plants which lack chlorophyll and thus don't do photosynthesis - this separates the dodders (genus Cuscuta) from morning glories (Convolvulaceae)

Page 11: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Dodder – Cuscutaceae (once in Convolvulaceae)

Page 12: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Broomrape – Orobanche fasciculata – parasitizes Asteraceae

Page 13: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Indian pipe - Monotropa uniflora- parasitizes mycorrhizal fungi

Page 14: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Chemistry

• Chemistry can be important because some plants produce distinctly different chemical compounds - aromatic mints (Lamiaceae) and the parsleys (Apiaceae) were separated into unique groups by Dioscorides in the 1st century A.D. due to aroma "chemistry"

Page 15: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Lamiaceae

Page 16: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Apiaceae

Page 17: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Starch grains from Sorghum (left) and Fescue (right) - Poaceae

Page 18: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Calcium oxalate crystals

Page 19: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Calcium oxalate in plant cells

Page 20: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Ecology

• Ecology and geography of plants provide data of much relevance to plant taxonomy because each taxon exhibits a certain pattern of distribution which is one aspect of its definition

• Coincidence or not of areas occupied by related taxa has bearing on classification of a group - especially when considering its evolutionary history

Page 21: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Patterns of Geographic Distribution

• Geographic differentiation exists between taxa at all levels and in all degrees of spatial separation - effective spatial separation varies greatly in absolute terms because different taxa may possess quite different abilities to migrate, either as pollen or as seeds

• Phytogeography is the study of patterns of distribution by plants

Page 22: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Patterns of Geographic Distribution

• Allopatric taxa occupy mutually exclusive geographic areas - i.e. they do not overlap in their distributions

• Sympatric taxa occupy overlapping geographic areas

• Sympatric taxa usually show different types of genetic, ecological and structural differentiation from those shown by closely related allopatric taxa - this is because geographic separation is a reproductive isolating mechanism and is effective in maintaining species differences

Page 23: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Silphium hybrids – compass plant and prairie dock

Page 24: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Bracken fern – Pteridium aquilinum - Dennstaedtiaceae

Page 25: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Annual bluegrass – Poa annuaPoaceae

Page 26: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Haleakala Silversword- Asteraceae

Page 27: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Giant Saguaro and Organ Pipe Cacti - Cactaceae

Page 28: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Blue Gum Eucalyptus - Myrtaceae

Page 29: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Floristic Elements• If the distribution of a large number of taxa is analyzed,

certain geographic patterns are found to recur consistently - such recurring patterns and the taxa which exhibit them are called "floristic elements"

• In Illinois the tall grass prairie could probably be divided into 3 floristic elements - wet prairies dominated by sedges, bluejoint reedgrass, New England aster, marsh muhly grass, cowbane, prairie cordgrass

• mesic prairies dominated by big bluestem, prairie dropseed, sky-blue aster, showy sunflower, false sunflower, Indian grass

• dry prairies dominated by little bluestem, big bluestem, needlegrass, heath aster, prairie coreopsis, prairie goldenrod

Page 30: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Mesic Prairie

Page 31: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Geographic vs. Ecological Distribution Patterns

• Geographic distribution – based on region/area of occurrence

• Ecological distribution – based on habitat of occurrence

• Sometimes may be hard to distinguish

Page 32: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.
Page 33: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Disjunct Distributions

• Most taxa are fairly continuous throughout their region of distribution, but some have distribution patterns which are interrupted by considerable areas from which the taxa is absent - such patterns are said to be disjunct distributions

• Disjunct distributions can arise in several ways – • 1) long range dispersal of a taxon from one area to

another • 2) current distributions represent relics of former,

wide continuous distribution patterns where the intervening areas have lost the members of the taxa

Page 34: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Coconut Palm - Palmaceae

Page 35: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Glacier Lily – Liliaceaefrom Basin and Range

Page 36: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Basin and Range Topography

Page 37: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Disjunct Distributions

• 3) it is possible that the taxon arose independently in the disjunct areas by convergent or parallel evolution - usually this is not thought to be likely, especially if potential ancestor species are not present

Page 38: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Spartina maritima - Poaceae

Page 39: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Spartina maritima

• Spartina maritima (Small Cordgrass) is native to the coasts of western and southern Europe and western Africa, from the Netherlands west across southern England to southern Ireland, and south along the Atlantic coast to Morocco and also on the Mediterranean Sea coasts. There is also a disjunct population on the Atlantic coasts of Namibia and South Africa - Wikipedia

Page 40: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Vicariance

• Another geographic distribution pattern is vicariance - when two similar taxa occupy separate geographic (or ecological) areas –

• the distinction between disjunct and vicariant taxa is subtle

Page 41: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Cedar of Lebanon - Pinaceae

Page 42: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Vicariant Distribution of Cedrus

Distribution: Cedrus atlantica in red, C. brevifolia in blue and C. libani in purple

Page 43: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Endemism

• Taxa which occur in single restricted geographical areas are known as endemics

• Endemism is a relative concept, but is normally applied only where there is considerable restriction in area of distribution

• Often the term is used in the same way as indigenous which means native to an area, but to a taxonomist, it should just mean geographically restricted

Page 44: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Senecio cambrensis – groundsel - Asteraceae

S. vulgaris

Page 45: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Gingko biloba - Gingkoaceae

Page 46: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Giant Sequoia- Taxodiaceae

Page 47: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Centers of Diversity

• If the distribution for every species in a genus is drawn on a map, it is usually found that there are one or more areas with a concentration of species - these areas are called centers of genetic diversity for that genus

• You can usually draw similar maps for higher levels of taxa as well

• Usually there is just a single center of diversity for a particular taxa and you find progressively fewer species as you move away from the center of diversity

Page 48: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.
Page 49: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.
Page 50: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Vavilov’s centers for agricultural diversity

Page 51: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Ecotypes

• Many species of plants form ecotypes - genetically distinct races when grown in different habitats - especially common are dwarf races in alpine or low rainfall areas

• It is important to note that similar ecotypes may arise due to different factors in different areas - thus a species may form dwarf ecotypes due to very different constraints - possibly water availability, or soil type, or temperature

Page 52: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Cupressus pygmea – pygmy cypress

Page 53: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Pygmy Forest

Page 54: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Plantago maritima - Plantaginaceae

Page 55: Plant Taxonomy. Basics of Characters A taxonomic character is any expressed attribute of an organism that can be evaluated and that has two or more discontinuous.

Willow herb – Epilobium - Ongraceae