CBSE Class 11 Biology Chapter 3 – Plant Kingdom Revision Notes


CBSE Revision Notes for Class 11 Biology Chapter 3 – Plant Kingdom – Free PDF Download

CoolGyan’s Revision Notes for Class 11 Biology are the best for every CBSE student to comprehend while preparing for the board examinations. These notes are well designed as per the curriculum by our highly experienced subject experts. Our Class 11 Biology Revision Notes for Chapter 3 Plant Kingdom cover all the crucial topics, methodologies, facts, and figures that would help students remember what was taught in the class and increase their confidence.

Chapter NamePlant Kingdom
ChapterChapter 3
ClassClass 11
SubjectBiology Revision Notes
BoardCBSE
TEXTBOOKBiology
CategoryREVISION NOTES

CBSE Class 11 Biology Revision Notes for Plant Kingdom of Chapter 3


  • Eukaryotic, multicellular, chlorophyll containing and having cell wall, are grouped under the kingdom Plantae. It is popularly known as plant kingdom.
  • Phylogenetic system of classification based on evolutionary relationship is presently used for classifying plants.
  • Numerical Taxonomy use computer by assigning code for each character and analyzing the features.
  • Cytotaxonomy is based on cytological information like chromosome number, structure and behaviour.
  • Chemotaxonomy uses chemical constituents of plants to resolve the confusion.


Algae: These include the simplest plants which possess undifferentiated or thallus like forms, reproductive organs single celled called gametangia. It includes only Algae.
Characteristic of Algae

  • Plant body is thallus, which may be unicellular, colonial, filamentous or parenchymatous.
  • Usually aquatic but a few are also found in moist terrestrial habitats like tree trunks, wet rocks, moist soil, etc.
  • Vascular tissues and mechanical tissues are absent.
  • Reproduction is vegetative by fragmentation, asexual by spore formation (zoospores) and sexual reproduction by fusion of two gametes which may be Isogamous (Spirogyra), Anisogamous (Chlamydomonous) or Oogamous (Volvox).
  • Life cycle is various- haplontic, diplontic or diplohaplontic.

Green AlgaeBrown AlgaeRed Algae
Mostly fresh water and sub aerial.Mostly marine.Mostly marine.
Unicellular organisms abundant.Unicellular species are absent.Unicellular species fewer.
Chlorophyll a and b type.Chlorophyll a and c type.Chlorophyll a and d type.
Reserve food is starchReserve food is laminarin.Reserve food is floridean starch.
Cell wall is of cellulose.Cell wall contains cellulose and algin.Cell wall contains cellulose and poly-sulphate esters.
Fucoxanthin is absentFucoxanthin present.Phycoerythrine is present.
Zoospores present.Zoospores present.Zoospores absent.
Chlamydomonas, Ulothrix, spirogyra.Focus, Sargassum, ectocarpus.Polysiphonia, Gelidium, Porphyra etc.

Economic importance-

  1. A number of brown algae ( Laminaria, Sargassum) are used as food in some countries.
  2. Fucus and Laminaria are rich source of Iodine.
  3. Laminaria and Ascophyllum have antibiotic properties.
  4. Alginic acid is obtained from Fucus and Sargassum, which is used as emulsions.

Bryophytes – They are non-vascular mosses and liverworts that grow in moist shady region. They are called amphibians of plants kingdom because these plants live on soil but dependent on water for sexual reproduction.
Characteristic features-

  • Live in damp and shady habitats, found to grow during rainy season on damp soil, rocks, walls, etc.
  • The dominant phase or plant body is free living gametophyte.
  • Roots are absent but contain rhizoids
  • Vegetative reproduction is by fragmentation, tubers, gemmae, buds etc. sex organs are multicellular and jacketed. The male sex organ is called antheridium. They produce biflagellate antherozoids. The female sex organ called archegonium is flask-shaped and produces a single egg.
  • Sporophyte is dependent on gametophyte for nourishment.

Bryophytes Hepaticopsida (Liverworts)

  • The plant body of a liverwort is thalloid, e.g., Marchantia. The thallus is dorsiventral and closely appressed to the substrate.
  • Asexual reproduction in liverworts takes place by fragmentation, or by the formation of specialised structures called gemmae.
  • Gemmae are green, multicellular, asexual buds, which develops in small receptacles called gemma cups. The gemmae becomes detached from the parent body and germinate to form new individuals
  • During sexual reproduction, male and female sex organs are produced either on the same or on different thalli. The sporophyte is differentiated into a foot, seta and capsule. Spores produced within the capsule germinate to form
    free-living gametophytes.

Bryopsida (Mosses)

  • The gametophyte of mosses consists of two stages- the first stage is protonema stage, which develops directly from spores. It is creeping, green and frequently filamentous. The second stage is the leafy stage, which develops from secondary protonema as lateral bud having upright, slender axes bearing spirally arranged leaves.
  • Vegetative reproduction is by the fragmentation and budding in secondary protonema. In sexual reproduction, the sex organs antheridia and archegonia are produced at the apex of the leafy shoots.
  • Sporophytes in mosses are more developed and consist of foot, seta and capsule.
  • Common examples are Funaria, Polytrichum, Sphagnum etc.

Pteridophytes

  • They are seedless vascular plants that have sporophytic plant body and inconspicuous gametophyte. Sporophytic plant body is differentiated into true stem, roots and leaves.
  • Vascular tissue are present but vessels are absent from xylem and companion cells and sieve tube are absent.
  • Sporophytes bear sporangia that are subtend by leaf like appendages called sporophylls. In some plants (Selaginella) compact structure called strobili or cone is formed.
  • Sporangia produce spores by meiosis in spore mother cells. Spores germinate to produce multicellular thalloid, prothallus.
  • Gametophyte bears male and female sex organ called antheridia and archegonia. Water is required for fertilisation of male and female gametes.
  • Most of Pteridophytes produce spores of similar kind (homosporous) but in Selginella and Salvinia, spores are of two kinds (heterosporous) larger called megaspore that produce female gametophyte and smaller microspore that produce male gametes.


Gymnosperms:

  • Gymnosperms are those plants in which the ovules are not enclosed inside the ovary wall and remain exposed before and after fertilisation.
  • They are perennial and woody, forming either bushes or trees. Some are very large (Sequoia sempervirens) and others are very small (Zamia pygmia).
  • Stem may be unbranched(Cycas) or branched(Pinus). Root is taproot. Leaves may be simple or compound.
  • They are heterosporous, produce haploid microspore and megaspore in male and female Strobili respectively.
  • Male and female gametophytes do not have independent free-living existence. Pollination occurs through air and zygote develops into embryo and ovules into seeds. These seeds are naked.
  • Example- Pines, Cycus, Cedrus, Ginkgo, etc.

Angiosperms

  • Pollen grain and ovules are developed in specialized structure called flower. Seeds are enclosed inside the fruits.
  • Size varies from almost microscopic Wolfia (0.1cm)to tall tree Eucalyptus (more than 100m
  • The male sex organs in a flower is the stamen. It contains pollen grain.
  • The female sex organs in a flower is the pistil or the carpel. Pistil consists of an ovary enclosing one or many ovules. Within ovules are present highly reduced female gametophytes termed embryo-sacs.
  • Each embryo-sac has a three-celled egg apparatus – one egg cell and two synergids, three antipodal cells and two polar nuclei. The polar nuclei eventually fuse to produce a diploid secondary nucleus.

Angiosperms are further classified into:

  • Monocotyledons
  • Dicotyledons
MonocotyledonsDicotyledons
  1. Single cotyledons.
  2. Parallel venation.
  3. Fibrous root system.
  4. Closed vascular bundle.
  5. More number of vascular bundles.
  6. Banana, wheat, rice.
  1. Two cotyledons.
  2. Reticulate venation.
  3. Tap root system.
  4. Open vascular bundle.
  5. Less number of vascular bundles.
  6. Gram, mango, apple.
  • Double fertilisation- Each pollen grain produce two male gametes. One gametes fuse with egg to form embryo. This is called Syngamy. Other gametes fuse with two polar nuclei to form endosperm, triple fusion. Since fertilisation takes place twice, it is called double fertilisation.

Alternation of generation
Different plant groups complete their life cycles in different patterns. Angiosperms complete their life cycle in two phases- a diploid sporophytes and haploid gametophyte. The two follows each other. This phenomenon is called alternation of generation.

    1. Haplontic- Saprophytic generation is represented by only the one-celled zygote. Meiosis in zygote results into haploid spores to form gametophytes, which is the dominant vegetative phase. Example- Volvox, Spirogyra etc.

 

    1. Diplontic- Diploid sporophytes is dominant, independent, photosynthetic plants. The gametophyte is represented by single to few celled. All seed bearing plants fall under this category.

 

  1. Haplo-diplontic- Both phases are multicellular and intermediate condition is present. It is present in Bryophytes and Pteridophytes.