* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Lab #6B
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Lab #6B Angiosperms Flowers • structure of a flower – 4 rings of modified leaves called flower organs: – 1. sepals – 2. petals – 3. stamens – 4. carpels Stigma Stamen Anther Carpel Style Filament Ovary Petal Sepal Ovule Receptacle 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Stigma Style Anther Filament Sepal Perfect flowers • male and female on same plant – – – – lilies dandelions roses virtually every fruit and vegetable plant in North America • tomatoes dandelion african violet apple blossom Imperfect flowers • male and female reproductive parts on separate flowers – but may be on the same plant – staminate flowers – carpellate flowers staminate flowers Inflorescences • inflorescences = group of cluster of flowers arranged on a stem that is comprised of a main branch or a complicated arrangement of branches • several types – raceme - unbranched main axis, flowers attached by a pedicel – spike – unbranched main axis, directly attached flowers – panicle – branched main axis – corymb – head (flower head) – also known as a composite flower Composite flowers • composite flowers = clusters of many small flowers called florets – each of which is a full flower • chicory, dandelion, chrysanthemum, yarrow, coreopsis, sunflower, dahlia, zinnia, goldenrod, aster, lettuce, thistle and Black-eyed Susan. • composites are miniaturized flowers • numerous flowers packed onto a platform called a receptacle, • so the sunflower is actually a collection of hundreds of flowers! • two kinds of flowers: disk flowers and ray flowers • disc flowers – center of the receptacle • ray flowers – surround the disc flowers (look like petals) ray flowers disc flowers Flower ovules Lilium ovary with ovules Ovary with ovule Ovary with ovules Ovules Ovule Ovules Anthers Fruit • composed of an outer wall = pericarp and the inner placenta with seeds – pericarp is made up of an exocarp, a mesocarp and an endocarp • e.g. apple – skin = exocarp; flesh = mesocarp; paper part in the center = endocarp; seeds • classified as: simple, multiple or aggregate – simple – one carpel or several fused carpels form the fruit • e.g apple – multiple – more than one flower with female parts – aggregate – number of separate carpels form the fruit Fruits – dichotomous tree • first division – fleshy or dry • I. Fleshy – A. simple (from a single ovary) or B. complex (from more than one ovary) • A. simple- drupe (hard endocarp = cherry, olive, coconut), berry (fleshy endocarp = tomato, grape, peppers, cucumbers), pome (apples, pears) • B. complex – aggregate (fruit from many carpels on a single flower = strawberry, raspberry), multiple (fruit from carpels of many flowers fused together = pineapple, corn) • II. Dry – A. fruits that split open at maturity (more than one seed) or B. fruits that do not split (one seed) • A. fruits that split – along one seam (peas, beans and peanuts), along multiple seams (okra, lilies, poppies) • B. fruits that don’t split – hard pericarp (acorns, chestnut), thin pericarp and winged (maples, ash, elm), thin pericarp no wings (sunflowers, cereal grains, grasses) Placentation • ovules develop from the placenta and are attached to the ovary wall until maturation into seeds • arrangement of the placenta = placentation – parietal – ovules on the outer ovary wall or extensions of it – free central – ovules along a central column or axis – axile – ovules along a central axis which is connected to the ovary wall Placentation Axile placentation Parietal placentation