1 / 53

Plant Reproduction

Plant Reproduction. Mostly About Reproductive Organs in Plants - Chapter 8. Plant Kingdom. Gymnosperms - naked seeded plants don’t have flowers and don’t use insects to transport pollen. This group includes pines, junipers, bald cypress, cicadas, podocarpus and the ginkgo tree.

laksha
Télécharger la présentation

Plant Reproduction

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 Mostly About Reproductive Organs in Plants - Chapter 8

  2. Plant Kingdom Gymnosperms - naked seeded plants don’t have flowers and don’t use insects to transport pollen. This group includes pines, junipers, bald cypress, cicadas, podocarpus and the ginkgo tree. Angiosperms - have flowers and often use insects to transport pollen. Includes dicots and monocots. Dicots – you know their characteristics This group includes oaks, roses, blueberries, honeysuckle, cactus and grapes. Monocots – you know their characteristics This group includes palms, grass, corn, orchids and bamboo.

  3. Don’t forget that all plants undergo “alternation of generations” in their cycle of existance. Each generation alternates between the diploid sporophyte and the haploid gametophyte.

  4. Reproductive Organs

  5. Male or Pollen cones ofred pine (Pinus resinosa).

  6. Early second year cone of Knobcone Pine (Pinus attenuata). This is the female cone of a Gymnosperm,

  7. Flowers (dicot)

  8. Monocot flower.

  9. Complete flowers have sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils. Flower #1 is a complete flower. Incomplete flowers are missing one of more of the four basic parts. Flowers #2 & #3 are incomplete. Perfect flowers have both stamens and pistils. Flower #1 is a perfect flower. Imperfect flowers have either stamens or pistils, but not both. Flower #3 is an imperfect flower. Staminate flowers have only stamens. Pistillate flowers have only pistils. Monoecious plants have imperfect flowers with both sexes growing on the same plant. Dioecious plants have imperfect flowers with only one sex growing on each plant.

  10. Complete Flower

  11. female IncompleteFlower male

  12. Pollination • Wind – simple, plain, w/o nectar • Vector pollination – large, fragrant, showy, w/ nectar

  13. Other adaptations to help aide or encourage pollination • Platforms (petal clusters) • Nocturnal • Devices (hammerback) • Opening size • Special scents • Self-pollination is less adaptive

  14. Cross pollination is favored • Male flowers below female flowers • Male flower matures before female flowers • Anthers mature first in complete flowers • Stigma longer than stamens

  15. Pollen.

  16. Pollinators

  17. Pollination does NOT equal FertilizationTransfer of pollen is NOT thejoining of egg and sperm

  18. Fertilization

  19. Fertilization

  20. Seed formation • Post fertilization • Wall of ovule = hard seed coat • Zygote divides = embryo • Triploid central cell = endosperm

  21. Many arctic plants cannot flower until the length of day light hours has reached at least a minimum value (long day plants). This means that warmer temperatures will not result in early flowering of the species, as it is dependent on light hours. Many temperate zone plants are short-day plants, where the shorter days of fall act as a trigger for flowering.

  22. Most plant species are day-neutral plants, which means their blooming times are controlled by temperature, moisture, or environmental factors other than day length

  23. Seeds

  24. Cones of (clockwise from top-left):Loblolly Pine (Pinus taeda)Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana)Gray Pine [with seeds] (Pinus sabiniana)Knobcone Pine (Pinus attenuata Gymnosperm seed.

  25. Dicot seed.

  26. Monocot seed

  27. Fruit Development • Ovary enlarges and ripens • Seeds contained within • Dry or fleshy

  28. Do you know fruits from vegetables?

  29. Seed Dispersal

  30. Seed Germination

  31. Summary

  32. Asexual Reproduction • Vegetative reproduction • From some vegetative organ rather than from the flower • Includes roots, stems, leaves • Part takes root and grows into a “clone” of the parent plant • Strawberries and spider plants produce runners over the ground, irises and ferns produce rhizomes underground, daffodils and hyacinths produce daughter bulbs and potatoes produce daughter tubers.

  33. Plant Hormones

  34. Plant Growth

  35. Growth • Meristem tissue - source of new cells in plant growth • apical meristem - produce growth in length (primary growth)lateral meristem - produce growth in thickness (secondary growth)

  36. Primary Growth: the growth initiated by the apical meristems of a plant or shoot. Basically what is meant by this term is the initial new growth of the plant stem and root. The parts of the stem and root which are the primary growth are mostly the very ends where the most growth is taking place and will take place.

More Related