1 / 20

Ch 8 Part 2

Ch 8 Part 2. Fruits. Fruit - Matured ovary and its accessory parts Contains seeds All fruits develop from flower ovaries and accordingly are found exclusively in flowering plants. Tomato fruit. Fruits. Fruit Regions Exocarp - Skin Endocarp - Inner boundary around seed(s)

geona
Télécharger la présentation

Ch 8 Part 2

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. Ch 8 Part 2

  2. Fruits • Fruit- Matured ovary and its accessory parts • Contains seeds • All fruits develop from flower ovaries and accordingly are found exclusively in flowering plants. Tomato fruit

  3. Fruits • Fruit Regions • Exocarp - Skin • Endocarp - Inner boundary around seed(s) • Mesocarp - Tissue between exocarp and endocarp Peach fruit • Three regions collectively called pericarp.

  4. Fruits • Variability of fruits • Can consist of only ovary and seeds • Can include adjacent flower parts • May be fleshy or dry at maturity • May split or not split • May be derived from a one or more ovaries

  5. Fruits • Fleshy Fruits - Mesocarp at least partly fleshy at maturity. • Simple fleshy fruits develop from flower with single pistil. • Drupe - Simple fleshy fruit with single seed enclosed by hard, stony endocarp (pit) Drupes: peaches, almonds, olives

  6. Fruits • Simple fleshy fruits • Berry • From compound ovary, with more than one seed, and with fleshy pericarp • True berry - With thin skin and relatively soft pericarp • Tomatoes, grapes, peppers, blueberries, bananas • Pepo - Relatively thick rind • Pumpkins, cucumbers Grape berries

  7. Fruits • Berry • Hesperidium - Leathery skin containing oils • Citrus • Pome- Flesh comes from enlarged floral tube or receptacle that grows up around ovary. • Endocarp papery or leathery • Apples, pears - Core and a little of adjacent tissue is from ovary; remainder is from floral tube and receptacle Apple pomes

  8. Fruits • Dry Fruits - Mesocarp dry at maturity • Dehisicent or indehiscent • Dehiscent fruits - Split at Maturity • Follicle - Splits along one side • Larkspur, milkweed, peony • Legume - Splits along two sides • Legume family: peas, beans, lentils, peanuts Milkweed follicle Legumes

  9. Fruits • Dehiscent fruits • Siliques and silicles - Split along two sides, but seeds on central partition, which is exposed when two halves separate. • Silique - More than three times longer than wide • Silicle - Less than three times longer than wide • Mustard family: broccoli, cabbage Silicle Silique

  10. Fruits • Dehiscent fruits • Capsules - Consist of at least two carpels, and split in a variety of ways • Irises, poppies, violets, snapdragons Capsules

  11. Fruits • Dry Fruits • Indehiscent Fruits - Do Not Split at Maturity • Single seed united with pericarp • Achene - Base of seed attached to pericarp. • Sunflower seed, buttercup, buckwheat • Nut - Similar to achene, but larger, with harder and thicker pericarp, and a cluster of bracts at base • Acorns, hazelnuts, hickory nuts Inside of sunflower achene Acorn

  12. Fruits • Indehiscent Fruits • Grain (Caryopsis) - Pericarp tightly united with seed • Grasses: corn, wheat, rice, oats, barley • Samara- Pericarp extends as wings for dispersal. • Maples, ashes, elms Corn section • Schizocarp - Twin fruit that breaks into one-seeded segments called mericarps Samaras • Parsley family: carrots, anise, dill Schizocarp of mericarps

  13. Fruits • Aggregate Fruits • Derived from single flower with several to many pistils • Individual pistils mature as clustered unit on single receptacle. Blackberry aggregate fruits • Raspberries, blackberries, strawberries • Multiple Fruits • Derived from several to many individual flowers in single inflorescence • Mulberries, Osage orange, pineapples, figs Osage orange multiple fruit

  14. Fruit and Seed Dispersal • Dispersal by Wind • Fruits: Samaras, plumes or hairs on fruit • Seeds: Small and lightweight, or with wings

  15. Fruit and Seed Dispersal • Dispersal by Animals • Seeds pass through digestive tract. • Fruits and seeds adhere to fur or feathers. • Oils attract ants. • Elaiosomes on bleeding hearts used as food by ants. Seeds from bleeding hearts. Elaiosome is white. • Water Dispersal • Some fruits contain trapped air for floatation.

  16. Seeds • Structure • Ovules develop into seeds. • Cotyledons - Food storage organs that function as “seed leaves” • Embryo = cotyledons and plantlet • Plumule - Embryo shoot • Epicotyl - Stem above cotyledon attachment • Hypocotyl - Stem below cotyledon attachment • Radicle - Tip of embryo that develops into root Bean seed

  17. Seeds • Epigeous germination • Hypocotyl lengthens, bends and becomes hook-shaped. • Top of hook emerges from ground, pulling cotyledons above ground. Epigeous germination • Hypogeous germination • Hypocotyl remains short and cotyledons do not emerge above surface.

  18. Germination • Germinationis beginning or resumption of seed growth. • Some require period of dormancy. • Brought about by mechanical or physiological factors, including growth-inhibiting substances present in seed coat or fruit • Break dormancy by mechanical abrasion, thawing and freezing, bacterial action, or soaking rains. • Scarification - Artificially breaking dormancy • After ripening - Embryo composed of only of few cells when fruit ripens; seeds will not germinate until embryo develops.

  19. Germination • Favorable environmental factors needed for germination. • Water and oxygen • Light or its absence • Proper temperature range • Enzymes in cytoplasm begin to function after water is imbibed.

  20. Longevity • Seed viability varies, depending on species and storage conditions. • Viability extended: • At low temperatures • When kept dry • Vivipary - No period of dormancy; embryo continues to grow while fruit is still on parent. Vivipary in red mangrove

More Related