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Sexual Reproduction in Plants

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Page 1: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Sexual Reproduction in Plants

Page 2: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Basic Plant Structure

• Plants have three vegetative organs: – roots, – stems, – and leaves.

Page 3: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Asexual Reproduction

– All plant growth occurs by cell division (mitosis) and cell elongation.

– Cell division occurs primarily in cells known as meristems.

– Meristems are regions of embryonic tissue capable of growing into new plant parts. Meristems are found in both roots and shoots.

Page 4: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

1.Primary meristems make the shoot or root grow longer. This kind of growth is called primary growth.

1.Secondary meristems make the stem or root grow larger in diameter. This kind of growth is called secondary growth. Not all kinds of plants are capable of secondary growth. Secondary growth gives rise to wood, and plants that are not capable of secondary growth do not develop wood.

Primary Growth of Stems

Page 5: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Plant Reproduction A. Asexual Reproduction

1. Because plant growth is indeterminate, each meristem can potentially develop into a complete plant. This means that it is very easy to clone plants, and many plants can grow from cuttings or broken plant parts. This is asexual reproduction (also called vegetative reproduction).

B. Sexual Reproduction 1. Flowers are special reproductive structures found in the Flowering

Plants (=Angiosperms) 2. A flower is a specialized shoot, adapted for sexual reproduction. 3. A fruit develops from a flower following fertilization.

Page 6: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Major Plant Groups• We are going to examine

several groups that show these trends:– 1. bryophytes: non-

vascular plants including liverworts and mosses.

– 2. seedless vascular plants such as ferns and horsetails

– 3. gymnosperms, which have seeds and a vascular system, such as the conifers

– 4. angiosperms, the flowering plants that dominate the world today.

Page 7: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Bryophytes• The bryophytes include

the mosses, liverworts, and hornworts

• Bryophytes have no internal vascular system.

• Bryophytes spend most of their lives as haploids: the body of the moss plant is haploid.

Page 8: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Bryophyte Life Cycle• The haploid gametophyte

plant bodies are either male or female. Each produces a different kind of gamete (eggs or sperm)

• .• The sperm are motile: they

swim through drops of water (rain or dew) to reach the eggs. The eggs are encased within the female gametophyte’s body.

Page 9: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Bryophyte Life Cycle

•After fertilization, the diploid sporophyte grows as a stalk out of the female gametophyte’s body.

•After the diploid sporophyte matures, the cells in it undergo meiosis, forming haploid spores.

•The haploid spores disperse in the wind, and go on to form new gametophyte plants.

Page 10: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Seedless Vascular Plants• The seedless vascular plants

include ferns and horsetails.

• A vascular system to distribute nutrients throughout the plant allows them to grow tall. Some ferns grow up to 80 feet tall, and some extinct horsetails were also tree-sized.

Page 11: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Fern Life Cycle• Specialized structures on

the underside of the leaves develop, and inside them meiosis occurs.

• The haploid meiotic products are released as spores, which are dispersed to new locations and germinate into gametophytes.

Page 12: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

•The haploid gametophytes are quite small, a few millimeters in diameter. They contain structures that produce sperm and eggs.

•The sperm swim to the eggs and fertilize them

•The fertilized eggs are diploid, and they grow into the new fern.

Fern Life Cycle

Page 13: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Seeds and Pollen• A major development in plant

evolution was the development of pollen grains and seeds.

• Pollen grains are the male gametophyte packaged in a hard coat that allows it to reach the female without having to swim through water. This is a large advantage on dry land.

• Seeds are diploid sporophyte embryos, packaged to survive a period of dormancy and bad environmental conditions. Seeds develop from the fertilized egg.

Page 14: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Pollination

• Pollination is the transfer of pollen from a stamen to a pistil.  Pollination starts the production of seeds. 

• To be pollinated, pollen must be moved from a stamen to the stigma.  When pollen from a plant's stamen is transferred to that same plant's stigma, it is called self-pollination.

Page 15: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Gymnosperms• Gymnosperm means “naked

seed”: their seeds develop on the outside of the plant, instead of inside an ovary as in the flowering plants.

• The most important gymnosperms today are the conifers: pines, redwoods, cedars, etc. All are woody plants with needles or scales as leaves.

Page 16: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Gymnosperms• In conifers (pine trees)

the tree produces both male and female cones.

• The male cones give off sperm in the form of pollen.

• The pollen grain travels on the wind and can land on a female cone.

Page 17: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Gymnosperms

• The female cone has water under the scales.

• The sperm gets stuck in the water and when the water dries up the sperm is carried directly to the ovaries of the female cone.

Page 18: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Angiosperms• Angiosperms are flowering plants. Most

of the plants we see are angiosperms.

• Unlike the other plant groups, angiosperms are often fertilized with the aid of animals.

• Some angiosperms have wind-dispersed pollen. Flowers on these plants are usually small and inconspicuous.

• Other angiosperms are self pollinators. Their own sperm can be used for fertilization.

Page 19: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Parts of a Flower

Page 20: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Fertilizing a flower

• For a seed to form the pollen must land on a stigma and then absorb nutrients.

• As it absorbs nutrients it grows a tube down the stigma until it reaches the ovary.

• Once it punches through to the ovary two sperm cells (created by mitosis) make their way to the ovary down the tube.

Page 21: Sexual Reproduction in Plants. Basic Plant Structure Plants have three vegetative organs: –roots, –stems, –and leaves

Fertilizing a Flower

• One sperm will fertilize the mature egg cell while the other sperm will fertilize the polar body.

• The polar body grows and turns into tissue called endosperm which will be absorbed by the mature zygote as food.