ABSTRACT

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.

chapter 1|31 pages

General Introduction

part A|43 pages

Environmental Factors

chapter 2|18 pages

Photosynthesis and Chemosynthesis

chapter 3|7 pages

Phototrophic Heterotrophy

chapter 4|16 pages

Distribution

part B|66 pages

Life History Traits

chapter 5|12 pages

Monoecy: Reproductive Systems

chapter 6|8 pages

Dioecy and Sex Ratio

chapter 7|13 pages

Polyploids–Hybrids–Grafts

chapter 8|6 pages

Parthenogenesis–Apomixis

chapter 9|24 pages

Clonals and Stem Cells

part C|80 pages

Gametogenesis and Fertilization

chapter 10|9 pages

Oogenesis and Spermatogenesis

chapter 11|5 pages

Heterogamety–Sex Genes

chapter 12|18 pages

Annuals - Herbs - Semelpares

chapter 13|23 pages

Pollination and Coevolution

chapter 14|9 pages

Self- and Cross-Fertilization

chapter 15|14 pages

Spores—Seeds—Dispersal

part D|30 pages

Germination and Development

chapter 16|8 pages

Germination and Recruitment

chapter 17|4 pages

Brooders and Vivipares

chapter 18|9 pages

Sex Determination

chapter 19|7 pages

Hormones and Differentiation

part E|33 pages

Past, Present and Future

chapter 20|6 pages

Past: Weathering and Oxygenation

chapter 21|13 pages

Present: Conservation and Dormancy

chapter 22|12 pages

Future: Climate Change