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Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II Chapter 30/38 QuickTime™ and decompressor are needed to see

Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

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Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II. Chapter 30/38. Seed plants - vascular plants that produce seeds. 3 adaptations that seed plants have: 1 Gametophyte more reduced. 2 Seed evolved. 3 Pollen evolved. Gametophytes of seed plants almost invisible. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

Chapter 30/38

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• Seed plants - vascular plants that produce seeds.

• 3 adaptations that seed plants have:

• 1Gametophyte more reduced.• 2Seed evolved. • 3Pollen evolved.

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Page 4: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• Gametophytes of seed plants almost invisible.

• Gametophytes still exist - plants can destroy themselves at this stage if there something wrong with plant.

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• Seed - sporophyte embryo packaged with food supply within protective coat.

• Seed plants produce 2 different types of sporangia - produce 2 different types of spores: megaspores (female gametophyte) and microspores.

• Gametophytes stay in sporophyte as it develops.

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• Ovule - integuments (part protective covering), megaspore, and megasporangium.

• Female gametophyte develops inside megaspore; produces 1 + egg cells.

• Fertilized egg develops into sporophyte embryo.

• Whole ovule develops into seed.QuickTime™ and a decompressorare needed to see this picture.

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Page 10: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• Microspores (pollen) – light, carried through air.

• Pollen will create pollen tube - allow sperm to travel down into female gametophyte.

• 2 groups of seed plants: gymnosperms and angiosperms.

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Gymnosperms• 4 phyla of gymnosperms still around.• Phylum Ginkgophyta contains only

Ginkgo biloba.

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Page 14: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• Phylum Cycadophyta - cycads - look like palm trees.

• Phylum Gnetophyta - 3 different types of plants (ephedra)

• Phylum Coniferophyta - largest phyla - conifers - from reproductive structure, cone.

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Page 22: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

Conifers• Conifers are evergreen - keep leaves

all year long.• Needles help in dry conditions.• Conifers include pines, firs, spruces,

larches, yews, junipers, cedars, cypresses, and redwoods.

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Life cycle of gymnosperms• Conifers - heterosporous (develop

male and female gametophytes)• Produce pollen cones and ovule

cones.• During pollination, pollen falls on

ovule.• Creates pollen tube that digests

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• Megaspore, now fertilized, goes through meiosis to produce 4 haploid cells.

• 1 cell turns into female gametophyte, others (archegonia) will develop within gametophyte.

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Page 28: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

Angiosperms• Angiosperms - flowering plants -

produce flowers, fruit.• Phylum Anthophyta - all

angiosperms.• Divided into 2 groups: monocots and

dicots. • Monocots - leaves with parallel veins,

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Page 30: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• Angiosperms - long tracheids - help transport water, support plant.

• Flower specialized for reproduction.• Most angiosperms rely on pollination

through animals; grasses - random chance.

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Page 32: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• Flower - specialized shoot - 4 circles of modified leaves: sepals, petals, stamens, and carpals.

• Sepals - base of flower - modified leaves that enclose flower before it opens.

• Petals lie inside ring of sepals - usually colorful in animal pollinated plants.

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Page 34: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• Male organ - stamen - thin, stalk-like filament with sac at top.

• Anther - produces haploid spores that develop into pollen grains.

• Female organ - pistil - contains 3 parts: stigma, style, ovary.

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• Stigma - sticky top part of flower which extends beyond flower, catches pollen.

• Style connects stigma to ovary at base of pistil which allows sperm to reach ovules.

• Ovary - enlarged area at base of pistil - contains one or more ovules.

• Entire structure - carpal.• Ovule contains egg nucleus.

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• Fruit - mature ovary. • As seeds develop from ovules

after fertilization - wall of ovary thickens to form fruit.

• Fruit helps protect seeds while they disperse.

• Some fruits, dandelion, modified to catch wind.

• Burrs that stick to animals - fruits.

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• Fruit develops after pollination triggers hormonal changes - cause ovarian growth.

• Wall of ovary becomes pericarp (thickened wall of fruit)

• If flower not pollinated - fruit will not develop.

• 3 different types of fruits.QuickTime™ and a decompressorare needed to see this picture.

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• Simple fruits come from single ovary (cherries)

• Aggregate fruit (blackberry) - single flower with several carpals.

• Multiple fruit (pineapple) develops tightly clustered group of flowers.

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Page 45: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• Ovules - contain female gametophyte, embryo sac.

• Angiosperm life cycle starts with mature flower on sporophyte plant and ends with germinating seed.

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• Anthers of flower produce microspores that form male gametophytes (pollen).

• Ovules produce megaspores that form female gametophytes (embryo sacs).

• After its release from anther, pollen carried to sticky stigma of carpal.

• Plants can self-pollinate; cross-pollination better.

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• Pollen grain begins growing from stigma toward ovary.

• Discharges 2 sperm cells into female gametophyte.

• 1 sperm fuses with egg nucleus to form diploid zygote.

• Develops into embryo.• Embryo has rudimentary root;

one (in monocots) or two seed leaves (in dicots), cotyledons.

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• Other sperm nucleus fuses with 2 polar bodies to form endosperm, (triploid or 3n) in monocots.

• Dicots - nutrition goes directly to cotyledons.

• As ovules develop into seeds, ovary develops into fruit.

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• Seedling uses food stored in either endosperm (monocot) or cotyledon (dicot) to start growth.

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The fruit• Ovary of flower develops into fruit,

protects enclosed seeds, aids in dispersal by wind or animals.

• Wall of ovary becomes pericarp, (thickened wall of fruit)

• Apples - fleshy from swollen receptacles.

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Page 57: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

• As seed develops - enters dormancy - allows it to survive until conditions favorable.

• 1st organ to emerge from germinating seed - radicle, embryonic root.

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Page 59: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II
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Asexual reproduction• Plants can clone - vegetative

reproduction.• Fragmentation - parent plant

separates into parts - reform whole plants.

• Scientists use this process to clone plants used for novelty.

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Page 63: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

Co-evolution• Certain animals only eat certain

plants - forced evolution of one another.

• Plants evolved special fragrances - forces evolution of specific animals to pollinate these plants.

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Page 65: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II

Plants and human welfare• All fruit and vegetable crops -

angiosperms.• Corn, rice, wheat, - grass fruits.• Use plants for medicinal

purposes; more than 25% of our prescriptions come from plants.

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Page 67: Plant Reproduction and Plant Diversity II