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E-grāmata: Evolution and Speciation in Plants [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(Madurai Kamaraj University, Tamilnadu, India)
  • Formāts: 348 pages, 79 Tables, black and white; 54 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Halftones, color; 26 Halftones, black and white; 2 Illustrations, color; 80 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2022
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781003258155
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 249,01 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 355,74 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 348 pages, 79 Tables, black and white; 54 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Halftones, color; 26 Halftones, black and white; 2 Illustrations, color; 80 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2022
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781003258155

Plants are autotrophs and sessile, while animals are heterotrophs and motile. Sessility has imposed on plants 94% hermaphroditism, 23% selfing, 3% polyploidization and 39% clonality, in comparison to < 5% herma-phroditism, < 1% selfing and 2% clonality in motile animals.



Plants are autotrophs and sessile, while animals are heterotrophs and motile. Sessility has imposed on plants 94% hermaphroditism, 23% selfing, 3% polyploidization and 39% clonality, in comparison to < 5% herma-phroditism, < 1% selfing and 2% clonality in motile animals. Whereas plants consist of 374,000 species but 1,664 variety/species, animals comprise 1,543,196 species and 210 variety/species. Hence, plants have undergone variety diversity, while animals have species diversity. In animals and plants, the species ratio is reduced from 4.1 animals : 1.0 plant to 1.4 for pollinating animals : 1.0 pollinated plants. In pollination, animals are benefited dietarily but plants are cross pollinated, generating new gene combinations – the raw material for evolution and speciation. For the reduced species diversity in plants, reasons are traced to 90% hermaphroditism, ~ 23% selfing and 39% clonality. Clonality decreases from 100% in 6-7 tissue typed sponges and 3 tissue typed algae drastically to 0.7% in 60 tissue typed worms but gradually to ~ 23% in 60 tissued typed angiosperms. About 12-15, 5-8 and 77-80% of all animal and plant species are distributed in marine, freshwater and terrestrial habitats, respectively. Animals have conserved the ‘right’ sequence of gametogenesis but plants have gone through a ‘wrong’ sequence prior to settling with right one albeit with double fertilization in angiosperms. Both animals and plants are 80% male heterogametics. Only 0.5% of them can afford semelparity. While 20 and 57% angiosperms are perennial trees and herbs, annual herbs make up 23% only. In all of them, 85, > 19 and < 1% are pollinated by fast flying animals, wind and water, respectively. Increasing pollen load enhances fruit- and seed-set. In contrast to animals, the life cycle of plants is direct but complicated. Unlike animals, plants have greatly contributed to weathering of rocks and the atmospheric gas composition during the geological past. From dormant spores and seeds of plants, life can be restored after thousands of years.

Preface iii
Acknowledgements v
1 General Introduction
1(34)
Introduction
1(2)
1.1 Classification and Evolution
3(4)
1.2 Life Cycles
7(9)
1.3 Species and Diversity
16(2)
1.4 Racial/Variety Diversity
18(12)
1.5 Numerical Diversity
30(5)
Part A Environmental Factors
2 Photosynthesis and Chemosynthesis
35(18)
Introduction
35(1)
2.1 Photosynthesis
35(3)
2.2 Nitrogen Acquisition
38(12)
2.2.1 Direct Acquisition
39(6)
2.2.2 Indirect N2-fixation
45(5)
2.3 Secondary Plant Metabolites
50(3)
2.3.1 Beneficial SPMs
50(2)
2.3.2 Allelopathy
52(1)
3 Phototrophic Heterotrophy
53(7)
Introduction
53(1)
3.1 Carnivorous Plants
53(3)
3.2 Epiphytes
56(1)
3.3 Parasitic Plants
57(3)
4 Spatial Distribution
60(20)
Introduction
60(1)
4.1 Horizontal Distribution
61(4)
4.2 Aquatic Habitat
65(2)
4.3 Montane Habitat
67(3)
4.4 Harsh Habitat: The Deserts
70(10)
Part B Life History Traits B1: Sexuality
5 Monoecy: Reproductive Systems
80(12)
Introduction
80(1)
5.1 Algae and Sexuality
80(2)
5.2 Systems and Technical Terms
82(7)
5.3 Escapade from Selfing
89(3)
6 Dioecy and Sex Ratio
92(8)
Introduction
92(1)
6.1 Land Plants
92(2)
6.2 Sex Ratio
94(6)
7 Polyploids - Hybrids - Grafts
100(13)
Introduction
100(1)
7.1 Polyploidy: Incidence and Types
100(4)
7.2 Beneficial Polyploids
104(2)
7.3 Hybridization
106(2)
7.4 Graft Hybridization
108(2)
7.5 Pollinator Shift
110(2)
7.6 Diversity and Speciation
112(1)
8 Parthenogenesis - Apomixis
113(6)
Introduction
113(1)
8.1 Types and Incidence
113(4)
8.2 Genes and Transgenics
117(2)
9 Clonals and Stem Cells
119(26)
Introduction
119(1)
9.1 Clonal Forms
120(3)
9.2 Taxonomic Distribution
123(7)
9.3 Special Cases
130(2)
9.4 Sternness and Meristem
132(2)
9.5 Meristems and Stem Cells
134(2)
9.6 Tissue Types and Clonality
136(6)
9.7 Tissue Culture--The New Era
142(3)
Part C Gametogenesis and Fertilization
10 Oogenesis and Spermatogenesis
145(9)
Introduction
145(1)
10.1 Haplontic Gametogenesis
145(4)
10.2 Land Colonization: The Pioneers
149(2)
10.3 Gametes and Quantification
151(3)
11 Heterogamety - Sex Genes
154(5)
Introduction
154(1)
11.1 The Non-Angiosperms
155(1)
11.2 Dioecy and Heterogamety
155(4)
12 Annuals - Herbs - Semelpares
159(18)
Introduction
159(1)
12.1 Annuals and Perennials
159(2)
12.2 Herbs and Trees
161(1)
12.3 Resource Allocation
162(4)
12.4 Semelparity and Iteroparity
166(1)
12.5 Taxonomic Distribution
167(10)
13 Pollination and Coevolution
177(23)
Introduction
177(1)
13.1 Biotic and Abiotic Pollination
177(2)
13.2 Zoophilous Pollination
179(13)
13.2.1 Pollens and Stigmas
179(2)
13.2.2 Pollen Viability and Vigor
181(1)
13.2.3 Pollinators and Pollinated Plants
182(3)
13.2.4 Attraction and Rewards
185(5)
13.2.5 Pollination and Pollen Limitation
190(2)
13.3 Wind Pollination - Anemophily
192(2)
13.4 Aquatic Angiosperms - Hydrophily
194(2)
13.5 Coevolution and Diversity
196(4)
14 Self- and Cross-Fertilization
200(9)
Introduction
200(1)
14.1 Algae
200(1)
14.2 Pioneering Land Plants
201(1)
14.3 Aquatic Gamete Transfer
202(2)
14.4 Transfer of Pollens
204(1)
14.5 Cleistogamy
205(2)
14.6 Genes and Incompatibility
207(1)
14.7 Quantitative Estimation
207(2)
15 Spores - Seeds - Dispersal
209(16)
Introduction
209(1)
15.1 Algae
209(2)
15.2 Bryophytes
211(2)
15.3 Tracheophytes
213(3)
15.4 Gymnosperms
216(1)
15.5 Angiosperms
216(9)
Part D Germination and Development
16 Germination and Recruitment
225(8)
Introduction
225(1)
16.1 Algae
225(2)
16.2 Bryophytes and Tracheophytes
227(1)
16.3 Flowering Plants
228(3)
16.4 Germination Stages
231(2)
17 Brooders and Vivipares
233(4)
Introduction
233(1)
17.1 Taxonomic Distribution
233(1)
17.2 Characteristics of Viviparity
234(2)
17.3 Types of Viviparity
236(1)
18 Sex Determination
237(9)
Introduction
237(1)
18.1 Lower Plants
237(2)
18.2 Flowering Plants
239(7)
19 Hormones and Differentiation
246(9)
Introduction
246(1)
19.1 Phytohormones
246(3)
19.2 Vertebrate Hormones
249(2)
19.3 Characteristics of Plant Hormones
251(4)
Part E Past, Present and Future
20 Past: Weathering and Oxygenation
255(6)
Introduction
255(1)
20.1 Geological Time Table
255(3)
20.2 Weathering and Landscape
258(1)
20.3 Oxygenation of Atmosphere
259(2)
21 Present: Conservation and Dormancy
261(13)
Introduction
261(1)
21.1 Dormancy
261(9)
21.1.1 Algal Spores
262(4)
21.1.2 Spores of Bryophytes
266(1)
21.1.3 Fern Spores
266(2)
21.1.4 Seeds of Angiosperms
268(2)
21.2 The Longest Dormancy
270(3)
21.3 In-situ and Ex-situ Conservation
273(1)
22 Future: Climate Change
274(47)
Introduction
274(1)
22.1 Air-Water Interaction
274(2)
22.2 Algae
276(4)
22.3 Bryophytes and Ferns
280(1)
22.4 Flowering Plants
280(3)
22.5 Pollinators and Pollinizers
283(2)
22.6 Green Shoots and New Hopes
285(36)
23 References
Author Index 321(11)
Species Index 332(12)
Subject Index 344(3)
Author's Biography 347
T.J. Pandian, recipient of the S.S. Bhatnagar Prize, the highest Indian award for scientists, one of the ten National Professorships, has served as editor/member of editorial boards of many international journals. His books on Animal Energetics identify him as a prolific but precise writer. His five volumes on Sexuality, Sex Determination and Differentiation in Fishes, published by CRC Press, are ranked with five stars. He has authored a multi-volume series on Reproduction and Development of Aquatic Invertebrates, of which the volumes on Crustacea, Mollusca, Echinodermata and Prochordata, Annelida, Platyhelminthes and Minor Phyla have been published. The CRC Press has recently published his new book series on Evolution and Speciation in Animals. The second volume on Evolution and Speciation in Plants is presented here.