Plant KingdomMind Map
Visual interactive concept map for Plant Kingdom — NEET Biology, NCERT Class 11. Covers 7 concept branches with sub-concepts, formulas, PYQ links, and AI explanations on every node.
Chapter Overview
Concept Branches
7
Key Study Points
52
Formulas & Diagrams
40
NEET PYQs
25
NCERT Class
Class 11
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Chapter Coverage
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Plant Kingdom mind map?
7 concept branches · 16 formulas · 24 diagrams · NCERT Class 11 Biology
Plant Kingdom: Complete NCERT Map
Plant Kingdom explains how plants are classified from simple aquatic algae to advanced flowering angiosperms. NCERT classification mainly considers body organization, vascular tissues, seed formation, flower formation, and dominant phase of life cycle. Algae are mostly aquatic thallophytes; bryophytes are amphibians of the plant kingdom; pteridophytes are first vascular cryptogams; gymnosperms have naked seeds; angiosperms bear flowers, fruits, and double fertilisation. A major NEET theme is alternation of generations, where haploid gametophyte and diploid sporophyte phases alternate. As evolution proceeds, the sporophyte becomes more dominant, vascular tissues become better developed, and reproduction becomes less dependent on water.
High-Yield Study Highlights
- Cryptogams include algae, bryophytes, and pteridophytes because reproductive organs are hidden and seeds are absent.
- Phanerogams include gymnosperms and angiosperms because seed-bearing reproductive structures are visible.
- Vascular tissues first appear in pteridophytes.
- Seeds first appear in gymnosperms among the NCERT groups discussed here.
- Flowers and fruits are exclusive to angiosperms.
- Water dependence for fertilisation decreases from algae and bryophytes toward seed plants.
- Heterospory in some pteridophytes is considered a precursor to seed habit.
Algae
Algae are chlorophyll-bearing, simple, mostly aquatic organisms with a thalloid body that is not differentiated into true roots, stems, and leaves. They occur in freshwater, marine water, moist soil, tree trunks, and even in association with fungi as lichens. NCERT classifies algae mainly into Chlorophyceae, Phaeophyceae, and Rhodophyceae based on pigments, stored food, cell wall composition, and flagellation. Reproduction may be vegetative, asexual, or sexual, and sexual reproduction may be isogamous, anisogamous, or oogamous. Algae show life cycles such as haplontic, diplontic, and haplo-diplontic. They are ecologically important as oxygen producers and economically useful as food, agar, algin, carrageenan, and biofertilizer.
Bryophytes
Bryophytes are small, non-vascular plants that live mainly in moist, shaded places. They are called amphibians of the plant kingdom because they can live on land but require water for sexual reproduction. Their dominant, independent, photosynthetic phase is the gametophyte, which may be thalloid as in liverworts or leafy as in mosses. True roots, stems, and leaves are absent; instead, rhizoids help in anchorage. Sex organs are multicellular: antheridia produce male gametes and archegonia produce eggs. After fertilisation, the zygote forms a dependent sporophyte consisting of foot, seta, and capsule in mosses. Bryophytes show clear alternation of generations and are important in soil formation, succession, and peat formation.
Pteridophytes
Pteridophytes are the first terrestrial plants with well-developed vascular tissues, true roots, stems, and leaves, but they do not produce seeds. Their main plant body is a diploid sporophyte, while the gametophyte is small, independent, and often called a prothallus. They reproduce through spores produced in sporangia, usually grouped in sori or strobili. Most pteridophytes are homosporous, producing one type of spore, but Selaginella and Salvinia are heterosporous, producing microspores and megaspores. Heterospory is a major evolutionary step toward seed habit. Sexual reproduction still requires water because male gametes are motile. NEET frequently asks their vascular nature, dominant sporophyte, spore types, and examples.
Gymnosperms
Gymnosperms are vascular seed plants in which ovules are not enclosed by an ovary; therefore, seeds remain naked. They are usually perennial, evergreen, and woody, with true roots, stems, and leaves. Roots may show special associations, such as coralloid roots in Cycas with nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria and mycorrhizal roots in Pinus. Leaves are often needle-like or scale-like to reduce water loss. Gymnosperms are heterosporous, producing microspores and megaspores in male and female cones. Pollination occurs mainly by wind, and fertilisation produces an embryo inside a naked seed. Unlike angiosperms, fruits and double fertilisation are absent. NEET commonly tests naked ovules, cone structure, archegonia, examples, and adaptations.
Angiosperms
Angiosperms are the most advanced and diverse plant group. They possess flowers, fruits, and seeds enclosed within an ovary that matures into fruit. Their dominant plant body is the diploid sporophyte with well-developed roots, stems, leaves, and vascular tissues. Angiosperms are divided into monocots and dicots based on cotyledon number, venation, root system, vascular bundles, and floral parts. Their defining reproductive feature is double fertilisation: one male gamete fuses with the egg to form the zygote, while the other fuses with two polar nuclei to form triploid endosperm. This makes nutrient formation efficient and embryo-supporting. Angiosperms are economically vital as sources of food, fibres, medicines, oils, timber, spices, and ornamental plants.
Quick Revision
This topic compresses the whole Plant Kingdom chapter into exam-ready patterns. For NEET, do not study each plant group as isolated facts; compare them by plant body, vascular tissue, reproductive unit, dominant generation, fertilisation requirement, and examples. Algae are thalloid and mostly aquatic. Bryophytes are non-vascular land plants with dominant gametophyte. Pteridophytes are vascular but seedless, with dominant sporophyte. Gymnosperms are seed plants with naked ovules and cones. Angiosperms are flowering plants with enclosed seeds, fruits, and double fertilisation. The most repeated questions involve algae pigments and reserves, bryophyte dependence on water, heterospory, gymnosperm cones, monocot-dicot differences, and double fertilisation.
Mind Map
The Plant Kingdom mind map helps connect facts that are often memorized separately. Start from the central idea: plants are classified by body differentiation, vascular tissue, seeds, flowers, and life cycle. Algae are simple thallophytes. Bryophytes move to land but remain non-vascular and water-dependent. Pteridophytes introduce vascular tissues but still reproduce by spores. Gymnosperms introduce seeds but keep them naked on sporophylls or cones. Angiosperms enclose ovules inside ovaries, form fruits, and perform double fertilisation. This map is useful for last-day revision because it connects examples, dominant phases, reproductive structures, and evolutionary trends in one visual framework.
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