1 / 12

REPRODUCTON IN PLANTS

REPRODUCTON IN PLANTS. The reproduction of new individual from their parents is known as reproduction. There are two of reproduction: Asexual reproduction Sexual reproduction. Asexual reproduction. FRAGMENTATION BUDDING SPORE FRMATION VEGEVATIVE PROPAGATION. SEXUAL REPRODUCTION.

lavi
Télécharger la présentation

REPRODUCTON IN PLANTS

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. REPRODUCTON IN PLANTS • The reproduction of new individual from their parents is known as reproduction. • There are two of reproduction: • Asexual reproduction • Sexual reproduction

  2. Asexual reproduction • FRAGMENTATION • BUDDING • SPORE FRMATION • VEGEVATIVE PROPAGATION

  3. SEXUAL REPRODUCTION 1. POLLINATION 2.FERTILISATION 3.SEED DISPERSAL

  4. Reproduction in plant • Reproduction :the production of the new individual from their parents . • Vegetative part : roots, stems, and leaves are called the Vegetative parts. • Reproductive parts; flowers are the reproductive part of a plant. • Asexual reproduction :the reproduction which is done by the vegetative part. • Sexual reproduction : the reproduction which is done by the reproductive part .

  5. Vegetative propagation: reproduction is through the vegetative part of the plant. • Eyes of potato: bud's on the potato .These scars are called Eye. • Budding :the small bulb like projection coming out from the yeast cell is called a Bud. The bud gradually grow and get form the parent and form a new cell. • A flower may be unisexual with either the male or the female reproductive part .

  6. . Reproductive area of a flower • This photograph shows the yellow-orange anthers that are the pollen-containing part of the male stamen of this flower. The anthers are connected by stalks known as filaments. The female stigma and style are also seen here, as green and yellow respectively. • Corbis/George B. Diebold

  7. Pollination and fertilization Pollination means transferring pollen (a male cell) from the male stamen, which includes the filament and anther, to the female carpel, which includes the stigma, ovary and style (1). Pollen is produced in the anther of the stamen (2), and released when mature (3). If pollen grains attach to a stigma of a flower of the same species, a pollen tube in the style transports the pollen into the ovary, and then into an ovule, which is a female cell (4). The ovule is fertilized by the pollen and then turns into a seed.

  8. The most important task for any animal, from the tiniest insects to elephants and whales, is to produce young. Animals need to reproduce to make sure that their species survives. There are two main aims in reproduction—to have as many young as possible and for those young to live long enough to reproduce themselves. To achieve these aims, some animals, such as many fish and frogs, produce large numbers of offspring but leave their survival to chance. Although thousands of eggs may be laid, many will be eaten by other creatures and only a few make it to adulthood. Other animals, such as monkeys, big cats and humans, have small numbers of young but look after them carefully to give them the best possible chance of survival. .

  9. ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION The very simplest single-celled living things reproduce without sex. The cell divides in two to make two identical copies of the parent organism. Some many-celled creatures such as hydras and some sponges produce young as buds on the parent. The new individual detaches itself when it is large enough to survive alone. Again, it is identical to its parent. A few kinds of insect, such as aphids and ants, as well as some small water creatures, reproduce by an asexual process called parthenogenesis. The female’s egg develops without the need for fertilization by a male and all the eggs hatch into females ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION The very simplest single-celled living things reproduce without sex. The cell divides in two to make two identical copies of the parent organism. Some many-celled creatures such as hydras and some sponges produce young as buds on the parent. The new individual detaches itself when it is large enough to survive alone. Again, it is identical to its parent. A few kinds of insect, such as aphids and ants, as well as some small water creatures, reproduce by an asexual process called parthenogenesis. The female’s egg develops without the need for fertilization by a male and all the eggs hatch into females ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION The very simplest single-celled living things reproduce without sex. The cell divides in two to make two identical copies of the parent organism. Some many-celled creatures such as hydras and some sponges produce young as buds on the parent. The new individual detaches itself when it is large enough to survive alone. Again, it is identical to its parent. A few kinds of insect, such as aphids and ants, as well as some small water creatures, reproduce by an asexual process called parthenogenesis. The female’s egg develops without the need for fertilization by a male and all the eggs hatch into females SEXUAL REPRODUCTION Most creatures reproduce sexually—a female’s egg must be fertilized by a male’s sperm in order for the egg to develop into a new being. The young is not an identical copy of either parent but a unique individual with characteristics from both mother and father. Fertilization may happen inside or outside the female’s body.

  10. fermentation: a chemical process where carbohydrates are broken down into other substances. One example of fermentation is the process that uses yeast and sugar to produce alcohol. Another fermentation process also uses yeast and sugar to produce bread. Bread yeast, or baker's yeast, is a type of sac fungus. It reproduces by a process called budding. Bread yeast causes bread to rise by releasing carbon dioxide, which gets trapped in the dough. The Ancient Egyptians were the first to discover that allowing dough to ferment produced gases that made bread lighter.

  11. Pollen grains All flowering plants produce pollen grains as part of fertilization. Pollen cells and ovule cells are produced inside the flowers, and the two join together to make seeds, which can then grow into new plants. The pollen grains shown here have been photographed at more than 1,000 times their actual size. Pollen grains are also a common source of allergies in humans as they are light enough to easily be inhaled.

  12. Made by

More Related