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Download Unit V Anatomy and Physiology
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Unit V Anatomy and Physiology Learning Goal 5 Analyze patterns of growth, development and reproduction in plants, animals, and humans Plant Reproduction • Alternation of Generations Division of a plant life cycle into a diploid, spore-producing generation and a haploid, gameteproducing generation. • Bryophytes (mosses and liverworts) Gametophyte is larger than the sporophyte which grows out of it. • Ferns Gametophyte is much smaller than the sporophyte and is free-living for much of its lifespan and nourishes itself through photosynthesis. • Angiosperms Gametophytes are small structures that are retained inside the sporophyte. Female gametophytes are embedded in floral tissues. Male gametophytes are released into the environment as pollen grains. • Flower Structure Flowers develop from the end of a floral shoot called a receptacle. Tissues of the receptacle differentiate into four whorls: The calyx is the outermost whorl and is made up of leaflike sepals. The corolla includes the petals. The stamens in which male gametophytes form. They consist of filaments topped by anthers in which pollen forms. The innermost whorl is the carpel in which female gametophytes form. It consists of an ovary with one or more ovules in which eggs develop and fertilization takes place. • Flower Classifications Complete flowers – contain all four whorls. Incomplete flowers – lack one or more of the whorls. Perfect flowers – have both kinds of sexual parts. Imperfect flowers – have stamens or carpels but not both. Monoecious - each plant has some male flowers with only stamens and some female flowers with only carpels. Dioecious – a given plant produces flowers having only stamens or only carpels. • Pollination, Fertilization, and Germination Pollination – pollen makes contact with the stigma of a flower. Fertilization – sperm from the pollen grain moves down to the ovary via a pollen tube where it fuses with the egg to create an embryo located within a seed. Seeds are protected in a fruit which is mature ovary. Germination – the seed sprouts and develops into a mature sporophyte. • Asexual Reproduction in Flowering Plants Fragmentation – cells in a piece of the parent plant dedifferentiate and regenerate missing plant parts. Apomixis – a diploid embryo develops from an unfertilized egg. Cloning – Genetically identical plants develop from the underground stems of parent plants. Plant Development • Plant Hormones Auxins – stimulate plant growth by promoting cell elongation . Gibberellins – promote lengthening of plant stems by stimulating both cell division and cell elongation. Cytokinins – play a major role in stimulating cell division in rapidly dividing meristem tissues of root and shoot tips. Ethylene – a gas given off by plants that plays a role in regulating plant responses such as dormancy of seeds and buds, seedling growth, stem elongation, fruit ripening, and separation of fruits, leaves and flowers from the plant body. Brassinosteroids – regulate the expression of genes associated with a plant’s growth responses to light. Abscisic Acid – inhibits growth in response to environmental cues such as lack of water. Jasmonates and Oligosaccharins – help protect plants against pathogens and predators. Animal Reproduction Asexual Reproduction Produces offspring with genes from only one individual. One to many cells of a parent’s body develop directly into a new individual. Produces genetically identical offspring which can be an advantage in stable environments. It is rapid and can produce large numbers of offspring. Occurs in many aquatic invertebrates and some terrestrial annelids and insects. Rare among vertebrates. • Types of Asexual Reproduction Fission – the parent separates into two or more offspring of approximately equal size. Budding – a new individual grow and develops while attached to the parent. Fragmentation – pieces separate from the parent’s body and develop into new individuals. Parthenogenesis – offspring produced by the growth and development of an egg without fertilization. • Sexual Reproduction Offspring produced as a result of the union between sperm and egg cells of two parents. Main advantage is generation of genetic diversity among offspring which is better in a changing environment. • Gametogenesis Production of gametes from germ cells. Germ cells divide by meiosis to produced haploid gametes. • Spermatogenesis Produces haploid sperm cells by the process of meiosis. Spermatogonia produced from male germ cells divide into four functioning sperm cells. • Oogenesis Oogonia produced from female germ cells divide by meiosis to produce one functioning egg cell and three nonfunctioning polar bodies. • Fertilization External – occurs in most aquatic invertebrates, bony fishes and amphibians. Sperm and eggs are shed into the surrounding water. Internal – takes place in invertebrates such as annelids, some arthropods,and some mollusks, and all terrestrial vertebrates. Eggs must be fertilized within the body of the female. • Development Oviparous – Embryos develop in an egg outside the body of the female. Ovoviviparous – Embryos develop within eggs inside the body of the female, hatch, and are born live. Viviparous – Embryos develop and are nourished within the body of the female. • Embryonic Development Cleavage – first mitotic divisions in the zygote that form a ball of cells called a morula, followed by a blastula, a ball of smaller and smaller cells called blastomeres Gastrulation – produces and embryo with three distinct tissue layers, the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. Organogenesis – the process by which the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm develop into organs. Apoptosis – programmed cell death that eliminates tissues no longer required.