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Ch 22 Introduction to Plants
Ch 22 Introduction to Plants

... 22.4 Flowering Plants ...
Ch 22 Introduction to Plants
Ch 22 Introduction to Plants

... 22.4 Flowering Plants ...
CHAPTER – 12 REPRODUCTION IN PLANTS
CHAPTER – 12 REPRODUCTION IN PLANTS

... 4) Seed dispersal :The carrying away of seeds from one place to another is called dispersal of seeds. Seeds are dispersed by wind, water and animals. Seeds dispersed by wind are light, have wings or hairs so that they are easily blown away by wind. Eg :- drumstick. maple, sunflower, aak ...
CHAPTER – 12 REPRODUCTION IN PLANTS
CHAPTER – 12 REPRODUCTION IN PLANTS

... 4) Seed dispersal :The carrying away of seeds from one place to another is called dispersal of seeds. Seeds are dispersed by wind, water and animals. Seeds dispersed by wind are light, have wings or hairs so that they are easily blown away by wind. Eg :- drumstick. maple, sunflower, aak ...
Section 16.3 - CPO Science
Section 16.3 - CPO Science

... • Flowers are used by plants for one purpose: sexual reproduction. • The flower parts are usually arranged in a ring around the female parts of the flower, called the pistil. ...
02471-08.1 Ways Plants Reproduce
02471-08.1 Ways Plants Reproduce

... reproduce by seeds and the rose reproduces by cuttings. Discuss the differences in reproduction. Discussion ...
Plant Classification
Plant Classification

... o Male cones produce (contains sperm) o Wind often blows pollen to female cone ...
Seedless Plants, Chapter 27
Seedless Plants, Chapter 27

... • The Plant Kingdom – Nonvascular plants with a dominant gametophyte generation (Bryophytes) – Vascular plants with a dominant sporophyrte generation • Seedless plants (club mosses, ferns, wisk ferns and horsetails) • Seed plants – Plants with naked seeds (Gymnosperms) – Seeds enclosed within a frui ...
Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land
Plants, Fungi and the colonization of Land

... • Mostly multicellular, one unicellular • Extracellular digestion/absorbtion DECOMPOSERS • Sexual (mating strands) and asexual reproduction (fragmentation, budding) • All mass of a fungus is one cell type – Hyphae (singular), mycelium (mass of hyphae) • Mushroom is the “sexual organ” • Cell wall mad ...
Genetics: The Science of Heredity
Genetics: The Science of Heredity

... 5.An offspring that is the result of asexual reproduction a. has two parents. b. developed from a zygote. c. inherited genes from two parents. d. is genetically identical to its parent. 6.Which of the following is NOT a female part of a flowering plant? a. stigma b. style c. anther d. ovary 7.Which ...
Plant Reproduction
Plant Reproduction

... Plant Reproduction Section 1 Introduction to Plant Reproduction A. Plants can reproduce both sexually and asexually. 1. In asexual reproduction a new plant can be grown from a leaf, stem, or root. 2. In sexual reproduction a sperm cell fertilizes an egg cell to form a zygote. a. Some plants have bot ...
Terminology: The Parts of a Plant
Terminology: The Parts of a Plant

... all plants produce seeds. ...
plant classification basics
plant classification basics

... C. Stamens - the male sexual part, consists of a stalk, called a filament, topped by an anther, which produces the pollen. D. Pistils - the female sexual part, consists of an ovary at the base (where the seeds form following pollination), from which rises a stalk called the style, topped by the stig ...
Discovering Plants
Discovering Plants

... Style Ovary Ovules ...
Study Guide for Plant Kingdom
Study Guide for Plant Kingdom

... 2. What two groups of plants produce seeds? ________________ and __________________ 3. Name three characteristics seeds might have for easy dispersal away from the parent plant: a. b. c. 4. _____________________- system of “tubes” throughout a plant; two types- xylem and phloem. The ______________ t ...
Kingdom Plants
Kingdom Plants

... Flowering Plants The flower has pollen, containing sperm, in male sex organs and eggs in female sex organs. ...
Plant Diversity II – The Evolution of Seed Plants
Plant Diversity II – The Evolution of Seed Plants

... Anthophyta 90% of all plant species are angiosperms. ...
General Biology 101
General Biology 101

... For pines fertilization of the egg in the female gametophyte (in the female cone) occurs one year after pollination by the male gametophyte i.e. the pollen grains. When one egg is fertilized it will become diploid, a sporophyte and an embryonic plant that is (protected within the seed coat) and give ...
SECTION 2 - Florida Union Free School District
SECTION 2 - Florida Union Free School District

...  In sporophyte stage, sex cells are produced in spore cases  Spores are released and spread by wind, water, and animals becoming new plants  Can be from vascular or nonvascular plants ...
Ch35
Ch35

... 3. Multiple fruits develop from a many flowers growing closely together on a common axis (e.g. pineapple). 4. Accessory fruits develop from tissues other than the ovary (e.g. strawberry, apples, and pears). Seeds and fruits are adapted to various means of dispersal, including wind, water, animals an ...
Kingdom: Plantae
Kingdom: Plantae

... Reproduction in Ferns • Ferns produce gametes in structures on the underside of the gametophyte • Ferns need water to complete their life cycle because sperm have to swim through a film of water to fertilize the eggs • The brown “dots” on the underside of the mature (sporophyte) fronds are spore ca ...
Reproduction in Flowering Plants
Reproduction in Flowering Plants

... from their roots. In time, an entire forest of trees may form — all part of a clone of the original tree. • Apple seeds are planted only for the root and stem system that grows from them. After a year's growth, most of the stem is removed and a twig (scion) taken from a mature plant of the desired v ...
Chapter 20 Plant Diversity
Chapter 20 Plant Diversity

... roots Gametophyte is the dominant generation Require water for reproduction ...
presentation
presentation

... Asexual Reproduction • A process of reproduction that involves only one parent plant or plant part and produces offspring identical to the parent plant. • Many plants can grow new plants asexually from their plant parts. • If a plant is cut or damaged, it can sprout new growth from the stems, roots ...
Plant Reproduction
Plant Reproduction

... • All plant life cycles are characterized by alternating of portions (haploid-to-diploid-to-haploid). • Multicellular diploid plants (sporophytes) and multicellular haploid plants (gametophytes) take turns producing each other during the reproductive life ...
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Plant reproduction



Plant reproduction is the production of new individuals or offspring in plants, which can be accomplished by sexual or asexual reproduction. Sexual reproduction produces offspring by the fusion of gametes, resulting in offspring genetically different from the parent or parents. Asexual reproduction produces new individuals without the fusion of gametes, genetically identical to the parent plants and each other, except when mutations occur. In seed plants, the offspring can be packaged in a protective seed, which is used as an agent of dispersal.
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