Chapter 38 Plant Reproduction and Development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 67
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 38 Plant Reproduction and Development

Description:

Movie bat pollination. Fertilization. The union of egg and sperm to produce a zygote (2N) ... Ovary Fruit. Movie Seed Development. Embryo Development ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:184
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 68
Provided by: james949
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 38 Plant Reproduction and Development


1
Chapter 38 Plant Reproduction and
Development
2
Flowers
  • Sexual organs of Angiosperms.
  • Develop from compressed shoots with four whorls
    of modified leaves.

3
Flower Whorls
  • 1. Sepals
  • 2. Petals
  • 3. Stamens
  • 4. Carpels

4
Sepals
  • Whorl of sterile leaf-like structures.
  • May be brightly colored.
  • Function
  • Protect other flower parts.
  • Attract pollinators.

5
Petals
  • Whorl of sterile flower parts.
  • Often brightly colored.
  • Function
  • Attract pollinators.

6
Stamens
  • Male reproductive flower structure.
  • Function
  • Produce pollen (sperm).

7
Stamen Structure
  • Anther - pollen producing sac.
  • Filament - stalk.

8
Carpel
  • Female reproductive flower structure.
  • Also called pistil.
  • Function
  • Produce embryo sac (eggs).

9
Carpel Structure
  • Stigma receives the pollen.
  • Style stalk.
  • Ovary contains the ovules.

10
Ovule
  • A rudimentary seed before fertilization.

11
Flowers
  • Are highly variable in form, shape, and color.
  • Not all flowers contain the same combination of
    whorls.

12
Flower Variations
  • Complete Flowers - have all four whorls.
  • Incomplete Flowers less than all four whorls.

13
Flower Variations
  • Perfect Flowers - have stamens and carpels.
  • Imperfect Flowers - have stamens or carpels.

Staminate Flower
Carpellate Flower
14
Monoecious Plants
  • Staminate and pistillate flowers are on the same
    plant.
  • Ex corn
  • Tassel staminate flowers
  • Ears carpellate flowers

15
Dioecious Plants
  • Have staminate or pistillate flowers, but not
    both.
  • Ex Holly, Ginkgo
  • Comment - "Seedless" plants may be a staminate
    plant.
  • Ex male Ginkgo

16
Pollen Development
  • Pollen is the male gametophyte.
  • Starts with a 2N cell called a microsporocyte.

17
Microsporocyte
  • Undergoes meiosis and produces 4 Microspores
    (1N).
  • Each Microspore undergoes mitosis and produces a
    pollen grain, which is the male gametophyte.

18
Mature Pollen Grain
  • Special cell wall.
  • Tube Nucleus (cell).
  • Generative Nucleus (cell) which will divide and
    produce two sperm nuclei.

19
(No Transcript)
20
Homework
  • Reading Chapters 37, 38
  • Chapter 37 today
  • Chapter 36 Wed. 4/9
  • Chapter 38 - Friday
  • Ts Lab data coming soon

21
Embryo Sac Development
  • The Embryo Sac is the female gametophyte.
  • Starts with a megasporocyte (2N).

22
Megasporocyte
  • Undergoes meiosis and produces 4 Megaspores (1N).
  • Three of the megaspores abort, leaving only one
    to develop into the embryo sac.

23
Megaspore
  • Undergoes three rounds of mitosis to produce a
    sac with 8 nuclei.
  • The nuclei may wall off or may remain as part of
    a large cell.

24
Embryo Sac
  • 3 Antipodal cells.
  • 2 Polar nuclei (1 cell)
  • 2 Synergid cells
  • 1 Egg cell

25
(No Transcript)
26
Pollination
  • The transfer of pollen from a stamen to the
    stigma.

27
Pollen Vectors
  • Bees Flies
  • Butterflies Moths
  • Birds Beetles
  • Bats Wind

28
Comment
  • Movie bat pollination
  • The flower is usually highly adapted to the
    pollen vector.
  • Ex
  • Colors
  • Rewards
  • Scents
  • Shape

29
Fertilization
  • Movie
  • The union of egg and sperm to produce a zygote
    (2N).

30
Angiosperms
  • Have double fertilization.
  • 1. Egg sperm ? zygote
  • 2. Polar nuclei sperm ? Endosperm

31
Endosperm
  • Is Triploid (3N) tissue that will be used as a
    nutrition source for the embryo.

32
After Fertilization
  • Zygote ? Embryo
  • Ovule ? Seed
  • Ovary ? Fruit

33
Movie Seed Development
34
Embryo Development
  • Root/shoot polarity set with 1st cell division.
  • Mature embryo has all three primary tissues,
    apical meristems etc.

35
Endosperm
  • Monocots - large tissue.
  • Dicots - transfer the energy over to the embryo's
    two cotyledons.

36
Seed Coat
  • Formed from the integuments of the ovule.
  • Hard layer to protect the seed.

37
Fruit
  • A mature ovary.
  • Sometimes includes other plant parts.
  • Ex apple

38
Movie Fruit Development
39
Fruit Functions
  • Protect the seeds.
  • Aid in seed dispersal.

40
Fruit Types
  • Fleshy soft ovary walls.
  • Dry hard ovary walls.

41
Fruit Types
  • Simple Fruit from a single ovary.
  • Ex Peach, Cherry
  • Aggregate Fruit from a flower with multiple
    carpels.
  • Ex Raspberry
  • Multiple Fruit develops from several flowers
    into one structure.
  • Ex Pineapple

42
(No Transcript)
43
Seeds
  • Contain a miniature plant.
  • Main dispersal mechanism for plants.
  • Embryo is often dormant when the seed is mature.

44
Seed Dormancy
  • When a seed is not actively growing.
  • Used to increase the chances that the plant will
    develop when conditions are favorable.

45
Seed Dormancy
  • Usually controlled by plant hormones.
  • May require changes in temperature, moisture,
    etc. before growth will continue.

46
Imbibition
  • The absorption of water by a seed.
  • First step in seedling growth.
  • Causes swelling which ruptures the seed coat.
  • Starts metabolism to resume growth.

47
Germination
  • The continuation of growth of the plant within a
    seed.
  • Root usually emerges first.
  • Shoot tip must break through the soil surface.

48
Role of Light
  • Light is the usual clue that the shoot has broken
    above ground.
  • Light causes many growth changes in the shoot
  • Ex. Leaves to expand
  • Stem elongation rate decreases

49
Asexual Reproduction
  • Offspring produced by mitosis.
  • Also called cloning.

50
Normal Method
  • Fragmentation of the plant body so that new
    plants are formed.
  • Ex Cuttings Grafting Offshoots

51
High-Tech Methods
  • Tissue Culture.

52
Tissue Culture
  • Clumps of cells grow into embryoids which can be
    used to regenerate whole plants.
  • Often used in genetic engineering of plants.

53
  • Protoplast Fusion. A "naked" plant cell
    (no cell wall).
  • Used to create new hybrids

54
Plants
  • Frequently use both sexual and asexual
    reproduction depending on the environment.
  • Asexual - stable
  • Sexual - unstable

55
Plant Development
  • Growth increase in size
  • Development changes in body form and structure.

56
Plant Problems
  • Determining the direction of cell growth because
    of the cell wall.

57
Control Mechanism
  • Cytoskeleton determines the direction of cell
    expansion.
  • Cellulose Microfibrils are arranged in parallel
    strips as guided by microtubules in the cell
    membrane.

58
(No Transcript)
59
Cell Expansion
  • Increase in cell size is usually caused by turgor
    pressure.
  • Direction of cell increase is at right angles to
    the cellulose mircofibrils.

60
(No Transcript)
61
Cell Differentiation
  • Depends on the control of gene expression.
  • (review previous chapters on this topic)

62
Pattern Formation
Juvenile
Mature
  • The development of specific structures in
    specific locations.
  • Important in plants since cells dont usually
    migrate.

63
Positional Information
  • Gradients of chemicals that provide clues of
    position of cells to each other.
  • Ex why some cells develop into shoots and others
    into roots.

64
Organ-Identity Genes
  • Genes for normal organ development.
  • Used in positional information to determine which
    organ the cells should develop into.

65
Example
  • The combination of three genes that give rise to
    the flower parts.
  • A ? sepals
  • A B ? petals
  • B C ? stamens
  • C ? carpels

66
Mutations
  • Cause other floral parts to form in the flowers.
  • (review Chapter 21).

67
Summary
  • Know the general structures of flowers.
  • Know the general life cycle of flowers.
  • Review the items on plant development.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com