1 / 17

Plant Reproduction & Response to the Environment

Plant Reproduction & Response to the Environment. Seeds. These features enable. seeds to survive harsh environmental conditions and then sprout when favorable conditions exist. A plant structure that contains an embryo, contains nutrients for the embryo, and is covered with a protective coat.

lucian
Télécharger la présentation

Plant Reproduction & Response to the Environment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plant Reproduction & Response to the Environment

  2. Seeds • These features enable seeds to survive harsh environmental conditions and then sprout when favorable conditions exist. • A plant structure that contains an embryo, contains nutrients for the embryo, and is covered with a protective coat

  3. Seeds • Seeds have one or more cotyledons that store or help absorb food for the sporophyte. • Plants whose seeds are part of fruits are called angiosperms (flowing plants) • Plants whose seeds are not part of fruits are called gymnosperms (non-flowering plants)

  4. Alternation of Generations • Gametophyte (haploid)generation produces gametes. • Sporophyte (diploid)generation produces spores that can grow to form the next gametophyte generation. Gametophyte generation—maple pollen Sporophyte generation—maple tree

  5. Alternation of Generations • Diploid sporophyte generation alternates with a haploid gametophyte generation • Gametophyte of gymnosperms are in the cones, and in angiosperms they are in the flowers

  6. Reproduction in Gymnosperms • Two types of cones: • Pollen cone (male cone) – produce pollen • Seed cone (female cone) – contains the ovules, where the eggs are held • Pollination – transfer of pollen from the male structure to the female structure • Fertilization and development then occur

  7. Reproduction in Gymnosperms

  8. Reproduction in Angiosperms • Occurs in the flower • Most angiosperms are pollinated by animals (insects, birds) • Double fertilization • One sperm fertilizes the egg and becomes the zygote • A second sperm fertilizes the embryo sac and becomes the food supply

  9. Reproduction in Angiosperms

  10. Reproduction in Angiosperms • The ovary becomes the fruit • Seeds are dispersed by animals, wind, and water • Germination – early growth of the plant

  11. Germination

  12. Structure of a Flower • Sepals – enclose the bud • Petals – attract pollinators • Stamen – male structure • Filament – long, thin stalk that supports the anther • Anther – produces pollen • Carpels(or pistils) – female structure • Ovary – contains the ovules • Style – stalk of the carpel • Stigma – sticky surface where pollen lands

  13. Structure of a Flower

  14. Asexual Reproduction • Vegetative reproduction– production of new plants from stems, leafs, and roots • Cutting – pieces of plant cut off and planted • Grafting & budding– a stem or bud is cut from one plant & attached to another

  15. Plant Hormones • Auxins – stimulate cell elongation • Cytokinins – stimulate cell division • Gibberellins – produce increases in size • Ethylene – stimulates fruit to ripen

  16. Plant Responses • Tropisms – responses of plants to environmental stimuli • Gravitropism – response to gravity • Phototropism – response to light • Thigmotropism – response to touch • Positive – in the direction of the stimulus • Negative – away from the stimulus

  17. Plant Responses

More Related