1 / 36

Plants: Angiosperms

Plants: Angiosperms. Remember…. What is the group of flowering plants? In what structure is the plant embryo found which is made from a flower? What is the protective structure that surrounds a seed called?. Angiosperms Seeds Fruits. A. Flowers.

Télécharger la présentation

Plants: Angiosperms

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. Plants: Angiosperms

  2. Remember….. • What is the group of flowering plants? • In what structure is the plant embryo found which is made from a flower? • What is the protective structure that surrounds a seed called? Angiosperms Seeds Fruits

  3. A. Flowers 1. Flowers are organs of reproduction in angiosperms 2. Flowers contain male and female reproductive parts

  4. 3. Parts of a flower a. Sepals- kinds of leaf that protect the bud, can be green or brightly colored b. Petals- kinds of leaf inside the sepals, protect reproductive parts of a flower • sometimes have brightly colored petals and nice smell to attract pollinators (exs. roses and lilies) • sometimes white or green and no smell (exs. grasses)

  5. c. Reproductive structures of a flower 1. Pistil (carpel)- female reproductive structure • Usually one per flower, in the center • contains stigma, style and ovary 2.Stamen- male reproductive structure • Usually several per flower, around the pistil (carpel) • Contains anther and filament

  6. 4. Types of flowers a. Perfect flowers- both male and female parts, stamen and pistil/carpel • Ex lily b. Imperfect flowers- only male (stamen) OR female (pistil/carpel) parts but not both • Ex zucchini

  7. B. Reproduction with Flowers Seeds and Fruits

  8. Stamen: Male reproductive Structure • 1. Stamen- contains anthers and filaments a. Filament- stalk that holds anther b. Anther- produces pollen grains which contain plant sperm, pollen released when it bursts open

  9. Pistil/Carpel: Female Reproductive Structure • 2. Pistil/carpel contains stigma, style and ovary a. Stigma- sticky top that catches pollen b. Style- tube that connects stigma to ovary c. Ovary- bottom of pistil that contains ovules with eggs inside Ovary

  10. Pollination • 3. Pollination- movement of pollen from anther of stamen to stigma of pistil/carpel • Can occur by wind, insects, bats, birds, and water

  11. Pollination a. Self pollination- pollen travels from anther of stamen of a flower and lands on stigma of pistil of SAME flower, or on different flower on SAME plant, must be perfect b. Cross pollination-pollen travels from stamen of a flower to pistil of another flower on a DIFFERENT but similar plant, flowers can be perfect or imperfect

  12. Self pollination vs Cross pollination Same Plant Different Plants

  13. Fertilization • 4. Fertilization- as part of sexual reproduction it is the joining of the nuclei of male (sperm) and female (egg) sex cells of flowers • Takes place inside the pistil

  14. Steps of pollination and Fertilization a. Pollen grain from anther of stamen lands on stigma of pistil b. One cell from pollen forms a pollen tube from stigma through style to ovary c. Other cell from pollen is called sperm & moves through pollen tube to ovule of ovary where egg is d. Nuclei of sperm and egg join (fertilze) to form a zygote e. Fertilzed egg develops into a seed f. Seed contains an embryo,or baby plant, plus a cotyledon (endosperm)

  15. seed embryo

  16. 5. Seeds and fruits a. Seeds- formed from mature (eggs in) ovules b. Fruits- from mature ovary, form around seeds to protect them c. Name some plants that have fruits. All angiosperms have fruits

  17. C. Parts of a seed and germination

  18. 1. Seed parts a. Seed coat- protects the embryo b. Cotyledon- inside seed, used to absorb food from endosperm of seed for developing plant embryo • Monocots (1 cotyledon) vs dicots (2 cotyledons)

  19. Seed parts c. Embryo- baby plant; has tiny root, stem and cotyledons (develop into leaves) d. Hilum- scar where seed was attached to ovary of flower

  20. 2. Germination of seeds Germination- development of embryo inside seed into a new plant with good soil and water

  21. 3. Seed dispersal • Seed dispersal- Movement of seeds for germination By wind, water, animals eating fruits and depositing seeds or carrying seeds on fur

  22. D. Asexual reproduction in plants

  23. Asexual reproduction • 1. Asexual Reproduction involves one parent • Offspring are genetically identical to their parents

  24. Types of Asexual Reproduction • Vegatative propagation- asexual reproduction that uses plant parts to grow new plants • Runners- underground stems • Tubers- “buds or eyes” part of underground stems • Spores- airborne particles stored in spore cases • Bulbs- leafy, underground stems • Cuttings- root, leaf or stem pieces

  25. Tubers Exs potatoes, yams Cuttings- asparagus roots bulbs runners

  26. E. Tropisms

  27. Tropisms/Plant Responses Tropism- growth response to a stimulus, (usually by growing in a certain direction) Stimulus- a change that causes response • Ex: light, touch, gravity or water

  28. 5. Types of tropisms&Positive Vs Negative Tropisms

  29. Positive Tropism Negative Tropism • Growth away from the stimulus • Growth toward the stimulus

  30. a. Phototropism • Plant’s growth in response to light • Leaves and stems grow towards light

  31. b. Gravitropism • Plant’s growth in response to gravity • Roots grow towards gravity and stems grow away from it

  32. c. Hydrotropism • Plant’s growth in response to water • Roots grow towards water

  33. d. Thigmotropism • Plant’s growth in response to touch • stems grow due to touch, grow around a structure • Example: poison ivy

More Related