Plants and Animals (RRB)
Photosynthesis, plant kingdom, animal classification.
Plants and Animals (RRB) — Core
Photosynthesis, plant kingdom, animal classification.
Plants and animals — classification and key groups
Notes
Five-kingdom classification (Whittaker, 1969):
- Monera — unicellular prokaryotes (no nucleus): bacteria, blue-green algae.
- Protista — unicellular eukaryotes: amoeba, paramecium, algae.
- Fungi — multicellular, non-photosynthetic, cell wall of chitin: mushrooms, yeasts, moulds.
- Plantae — multicellular, photosynthetic, cell wall of cellulose.
- Animalia — multicellular, heterotrophic, no cell wall.
Plantae (further classified):
- Thallophyta: simple, no roots/stems/leaves. Algae, lichens.
- Bryophyta: mosses, liverworts. Need water for reproduction.
- Pteridophyta: ferns. Have vascular tissue but reproduce by spores.
- Gymnosperms: naked seeds. Pines, cedars, cycads.
- Angiosperms: flowering plants; seeds enclosed in fruit. Most numerous.
- Monocots (one seed-leaf): rice, wheat, maize, banana, palm. Parallel-veined leaves.
- Dicots (two seed-leaves): mango, pea, mustard, neem. Net-veined leaves.
Animalia (key phyla):
- Porifera: sponges. Pore-bearing; aquatic.
- Coelenterata / Cnidaria: jellyfish, corals, hydra. Stinging cells.
- Platyhelminthes: flatworms — tapeworm, planaria.
- Nematoda: roundworms — Ascaris, hookworm.
- Annelida: segmented worms — earthworm, leech.
- Arthropoda: jointed legs, exoskeleton — insects, spiders, crabs. Largest phylum.
- Mollusca: snails, octopus, oysters. Soft-bodied, often with shell.
- Echinodermata: starfish, sea urchin. Marine, spiny skin.
- Chordata: notochord. Subdivides into vertebrates (fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals).
Vertebrate classes:
- Pisces (fish): cold-blooded, gills, fins, scales. Lay eggs in water.
- Amphibia: frog, toad, salamander. Cold-blooded, breathe through skin + lungs. Tadpole stage in water.
- Reptilia: snake, lizard, turtle, crocodile. Cold-blooded, scaly skin. Lay eggs.
- Aves (birds): warm-blooded, feathered, lay eggs. Adapted for flight.
- Mammalia: warm-blooded, hair, mammary glands, viviparous (live birth) — except echidna, platypus (egg-laying mammals).
Plants & animals — adaptations and fun facts
Worked example
Plant adaptations:
- Cactus: spines (modified leaves), thick stems store water — desert adaptation.
- Lotus: floating leaves, hollow stems — aquatic.
- Mangroves: salt-tolerant roots (pneumatophores) — coastal mud.
- Pitcher plant: insectivorous — supplements nitrogen in poor soil.
- Banyan tree: aerial prop roots; can cover acres.
Animal adaptations:
- Camel: hump stores fat; long legs; can drink 40 L of water at once.
- Polar bear: thick fur, white camouflage, layer of blubber.
- Chameleon: changes colour for camouflage and communication.
- Octopus: 3 hearts, 9 brains (1 central + 8 in arms), blue blood (copper-based).
Largest, fastest, smallest facts:
- Largest animal: blue whale (up to 30 m, 180 tonnes).
- Largest land animal: African elephant.
- Tallest animal: giraffe (up to 5.5 m).
- Fastest land animal: cheetah (~110 km/h).
- Fastest bird (in level flight): peregrine falcon during dive (~390 km/h).
- Smallest bird: bee hummingbird (~5 cm).
- Smallest mammal: bumblebee bat.
Symbiosis examples:
- Mutualism (both benefit): bee + flower (pollination + nectar).
- Commensalism (one benefits, other unaffected): barnacles on whales.
- Parasitism (one benefits, other harmed): tapeworm in human.
Reproduction:
- Asexual: budding (yeast, hydra), binary fission (amoeba), spore formation (fungi, ferns).
- Sexual: most plants and animals. Fusion of male and female gametes.
- Vegetative propagation in plants: cutting (rose), grafting (mango), layering (jasmine).
Pollination:
- By wind (anemophily) — grasses.
- By insects (entomophily) — bees, butterflies. Bright flowers, scent, nectar.
- By birds (ornithophily) — hummingbirds.
- By water (hydrophily) — Vallisneria.
Fruit types:
- Simple: from one ovary — mango, plum.
- Aggregate: from many ovaries of one flower — raspberry, strawberry.
- Composite: from many flowers — pineapple, jackfruit.
Photosynthesis vs respiration:
- Photosynthesis: CO₂ + H₂O → glucose + O₂. Only in green plants, during daytime.
- Respiration: glucose + O₂ → CO₂ + H₂O + energy. All living cells, day and night.
- Net effect: plants are a CO₂ sink during daytime, net O₂ source.
India's biodiversity hotspots: Western Ghats, Eastern Himalayas, Indo-Burma, Sundalands (Nicobar). Together host ~7% of world's biodiversity in ~2.4% of land.