* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Group 3: Seed producing, Vascular Plants
Plant defense against herbivory wikipedia , lookup
Plant use of endophytic fungi in defense wikipedia , lookup
History of botany wikipedia , lookup
Plant secondary metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Ornamental bulbous plant wikipedia , lookup
Plant evolutionary developmental biology wikipedia , lookup
Plant physiology wikipedia , lookup
Plant breeding wikipedia , lookup
Plant morphology wikipedia , lookup
Plant ecology wikipedia , lookup
Ecology of Banksia wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary history of plants wikipedia , lookup
Gartons Agricultural Plant Breeders wikipedia , lookup
Fertilisation wikipedia , lookup
Pollination wikipedia , lookup
Flowering plant wikipedia , lookup
Group 3: Seed producing, Vascular Plants • Gymnosperms – Cycads – Ginko – Conifers • Angiosperms Group 3: Seed producing, Vascular Plants • 1) Seed plants don’t depend on water to reproduce – Pollen (contains sperm) combines with egg – Egg hardens into a seed • 2) Nourishment and protection – Nourish: Nutrients inside seed for the embryo – Protection: Hard shell • 3) Allow dispersal – Carried by wind, water, animals Group 3: Seed producing, Vascular Plants • Type 1: Gymnosperms • Seeds not enclosed in a fruit – produced inside cones • Cone = reproductive structure • Male cones: produce pollen • Female cones: produce eggs and seeds Group 3: Seed producing, Vascular Plants • Gymnosperm example: Conifers – Cone plants – Needle-like leaves – Common to lumber industry – Evergreen, Pine, Redwood, Cedar Conifers • Seed advantages – Don’t depend on water – Protects & nourishes embryo – Allow plants to grow in new locations • Conifers: woody cone houses seeds – Male cones: produce pollen – Female cones: produce egg • Pines, redwoods, spruce, cedar • The sporophyte is the dominant phase for seed plants. 1) Male and female seed cones grow in adult sporophytes 2) Pollen grains released from the male seed cones -- Pollen is the male gametophyte Let’s zoom into the female seed cone 3) Pollen grain sticks to the female ovule 4) Pollen tube grows from the male spore 5) Two nuclei transfer into female spore - one fertilizes the egg 6) Diploid embryo develops (sporophyte stage restarts) 7) After seeds harden, the cone reopens and the seeds are released 8) Seed will land ground 9) Seedling grows into (sporophyte)…the cycle repeats ground Plant Life Cycle Comparisons Plant type Sporophyte Gametophyte Dominant? Moss Stalk with cup (capsule) at tip, which is where spores are produced. More familiar, GAMETOPHYTE carpet-like plant that produces specialized gametes Fern More familiar, leafy plant with clusters of spore producing sacs (sori) Haploid plant body SPOROPHYTE (prothallus) is size of a finger nail, produces both male and female parts Conifer More familiar- like pine trees, produces male and female cones that produce spores Pollen grains are male gametophytes sperm, female gameotphytes are microscopic eggs SPOROPHYTE