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Chapter 24 Reproduction of Seed Plants

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Chapter 24 Reproduction of Seed Plants 24.1 Reproduction with Cones and Flowers Essential Questions What are the reproductive structures of gymnosperms and angiosperms? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 24 Reproduction of Seed Plants


1
Chapter 24Reproduction of Seed Plants
  • 24.1
  • Reproduction with Cones and Flowers

2
Essential Questions
  • What are the reproductive structures of
    gymnosperms and angiosperms?
  • How does pollination differ between angiosperms
    and gymnosperms?

3
Alternation of Generations
  • All plants have a life cycle in which a diploid
    sporophyte generation alternates with a haploid
    gametophyte generation
  • Gametophyte plants produce male and female
    gametes
  • When the gametes join, they form a zygote that
    begins the next sporophyte generation
  • In seed plants the diploid sporophyte is the
    recognizable plant.
  • The gametophyte is hidden inside of the cones
    (gymnosperms) and flowers (angiosperms).

4
Figure 24-4
5
Figure 24-1
6
Life Cycle of Gymnosperms
  • Takes place in cones, which are produced by a
    mature sporophyte plant.
  • Pollen cones are male cones and produce male
    gametophytes, which are called pollen grains.
  • One pollen grain will divide to produce two sperm
    nuclei.
  • Seed cones are female and produce female
    gametophytes.
  • Ovules in which the female gametophyte develops
    are found near the base of each scale.
  • When mature, the ovules contain a few large egg
    cells, each ready for fertilization by the sperm
    nuclei.

7
Male and Female Pine Cones
Male Cone
Female Cone
8
Pollination
  • The gymnosperm life cycle takes two years to
    complete.
  • The cycle begins in the spring as the male cones
    release enormous numbers of pollen grains.
  • The wind carries the pollen to the female cones
    and are caught in a sticky secretion called the
    pollination drop.

9
Fertilization and Development
  • If a pollen grain lands near an ovule, the grain
    splits open and begins to grow a pollen tube,
    which contains two haploid sperm.
  • Once the pollen tube reaches the female
    gametophyte, one sperm disintegrates and the
    other fertilizes the egg contained within the
    female gametophyte.
  • More than one egg cell can be fertilized but only
    one embryo will develop.
  • Fertilization produces a diploid zygote the new
    sporophyte plant.

10
Structure of Flowers
  • Flowers are reproductive organs that are composed
    of four kinds of specialized leaves sepals,
    petals, stamens, and carpels.

11
Sepals and Petals
  • Outermost circle of floral parts contains the
    sepals, which are green and resemble leaves.
  • Sepals enclose the bud before it opens and
    protects the flower while it is developing.
  • Petals are found just inside the sepals and are
    often brightly colored to attract insects and
    other pollinators to the flower.
  • Sepals and petals are sometimes called sterile
    leaves because they do not produce reproductive
    cells.

12
Stamens
  • Stamen is the male part and produces the haploid
    male gametophyte
  • consists of an anther and a filament
  • filament is a long, thin stalk that supports the
    anther
  • anther is an oval sac found at tip of filament
    and is where meiosis takes place, producing make
    gametophytes i.e. pollen grains

13
Carpels
  • Carpel is the female part and produces the
    haploid female gametophyte
  • innermost flower parts, also called pistils
  • Each carpel has a base that forms an ovary
    containing ovules that produce female
    gametophytes
  • A narrow stalk called the style attaches the
    ovary to the stigma
  • Stigma is a sticky portion on the end of the
    style where pollen grains land

14
Life Cycle of Angiosperms
  • Begins when mature sporophyte produces flowers
  • Each flower contains anthers and an ovary
  • Inside anthers, each cell undergoes meiosis and
    produces four haploid spore cells
  • Each of these cells becomes a pollen grain with a
    thickened cell wall to protect it when it is
    released from the anther
  • Nucleus undergoes one mitotic division to produce
    two haploid nuclei

15
Contd
  • Ovary contain the ovules in which female
    gametophyte develops
  • A single diploid cell goes through meiosis to
    produce four haploid cells, three of which
    disintegrate
  • Remaining cell undergoes mitosis to produce eight
    nuclei
  • Eight nuclei and surrounding membrane are called
    embryo sac

16
Contd
  • Embryo sac is contained within ovule and is the
    female gametophyte
  • The egg nucleus, near the base of the
    gametophyte, is the gamete and will become the
    zygote if fertilization takes place
  • The zygote grows into a new sporophyte plant also
    called a seedling.

17
Figure 24-7
18
Pollination
  • Once gametophytes have developed inside the
    flower, pollination takes place.
  • Most gymnosperms and some angiosperms are wind
    pollinated
  • Most angiosperms are pollinated by animals
  • Animals are mainly insects, birds, and bats that
    carry pollen from one flower to another
  • Insect pollination is more efficient than wind
    pollination
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