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Biology Sylvia S. Mader Michael Windelspecht Chapter 27 Flowering Plants: Reproduction Lecture Outline See separate FlexArt PowerPoint slides for all figures and tables pre-inserted into PowerPoint without notes. 1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Sexual Reproduction in Flowering Plants Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 8 anther 1 7 sporophyte seed 2 zygote diploid(2n) 6 ovule ovary MEIOSIS FERTILIZATION haploid(n) 3 egg sperm 5 microspore megaspore 4 Male gametophyte (pollen graIn) Female gametophyte (embryo sac) 2 Sexual Reproductive Strategies • A flower produces – Microspore - Male gametophyte • Becomes pollen grain – Megaspore - Female gametophyte • Becomes the female gametophyte, an embryo sac within an ovule within an ovary • Ovule becomes a seed • Ovary becomes a fruit 3 Anatomy of a Flower Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. stamen anther filament petal sepal carpel stigma style ovary ovule receptacle peduncle 4 Sexual Reproductive Strategies – Sepals protect the bud – Petals attract pollinators – Stamens: male • Anther - Saclike container • Filament - Slender stalk – Carpel: female • Stigma - Enlarged sticky knob • Style - Slender stalk • Ovary - Enlarged base enclosing ovules 5 Sexual Reproductive Strategies • Complete vs. incomplete flowers: – Complete flowers have sepals, petals, stamens, and a carpel – Incomplete flowers are missing one or more of above • Perfect vs. imperfect flowers: – Perfect (bisexual) – Imperfect (unisexual) 6 Life Cycle of Flowering Plants Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. anther Mature Seed Development of the male gametophyte: In pollen sacs of the anther , a microspore mother cell undergoes meiosis to produce 4 microspores each seed coat The ovule develops into a seed containing the embryonic sporophyte and endosperm. Development of the female gametophyte: In an ovule within an ovary, a megaspore mother cell undergoes meiosis to Produce 4 megaspores. anther mitosis ovule ovary Pollen sac ovary Ovule embryo microspore mother cell endosperm (3n) Sporophyte Seed megaspore mother cell diploid (2n) MEIOSIS DOUBLE FERTILIZATION MEIOSIS haploid (n) ovule wall tube cell Pollination Microspores During double fertilization, one sperm from the Male gametophyte Will fertilize the egg; another Sperm will join with polar nuclei to produce the 3n endosperm. Development of the sporophyte: pollen tube Pollination occurs; a pollen grain germinates and produces a pollen sperm Mature male gametophyte polar nuclei egg sperm tube cell nucleus generative cell Megaspores ovule wall Pollen grain (male gametophyte) antipodals polar nuclei egg cell Microspores develop into male gametophytes (pollen grains). One megaspore becomes the embryo sac (female gametophyte). megaspore 3 megaspores disintegrate integument micropyle synergids Embryo sac (mature female gametophyte) (Top): Courtesy Graham Kent; (Bottom): © Ed Reschke 7 Sexual Reproductive Strategies • Pollination • Transfer of pollen • Self-pollination vs. Cross-pollination • Fertilization • Pollen lands on stigma, germinates, forming a pollen tube • Mature seed contains the embryo, stored food, & seed coat 8 Development of an Eudicot Embryo Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Arabidopsis thaliana endosperm endosperm nucleus embryo suspensor zygote 1 zygote Zygote stage: Double fertilization results in zygote (true green) and endosperm. basal cell 2 Proembryo stage: Embryo (green) is multicellular and the suspensor (purple) is functional. (Proembryo): Courtesy Dr. Chun-Ming Liu; (Torpedo): © Biology Media/Photo Researchers, Inc.; (Mature embryo): © Jack Bostrack/Visuals Unlimited 9 Development of an Eudicot Embryo (continued) Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. A. thaliana A. thaliana endosperm cotyledons appearing Capsella shoot apical meristem Capsella bending cotyledons hypocotyl (root axis) epicotyl (shoot apical meristem) seed coat endosperm root apical meristem 3 Globular stage: Embryo is globe shaped. 4 Heart stage: Embryo is heart shaped. 5 Torpedo stage: Embryo is torpedo shaped; the cotyledons are obvious. radicle (root apical meristem) cotyledons 6 Mature embryo stage: The epicotyl will be the shoot system; the hypocotyl will be the root system. (Proembryo): Courtesy Dr. Chun-Ming Liu; (Torpedo): © Biology Media/Photo Researchers, Inc.; (Mature embryo): © Jack Bostrack/Visuals Unlimited 10 Monocot vs. Eudicot Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. seed coat plumule pericarp hypocotyl endosperm coleoptile radicle cotyledon embryo embryo plumule cotyledon radicle coleorhiza a. b. a: © Dwight Kuhn; b: Courtesy Ray F. Evert/University of Wisconsin Madison 11 Fruits Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Drupe True Berry exocarp chamber of ovary has many seeds pericarp exocarp (skin) mesocarp (flesh) endocarp (pit contains seed) a. A drupe is a fleshy fruit with a pit containing a single seed produced from a simple ovary. b. A berry is a fleshy fruit having seeds and pulp produced from a compound ovary. Legume Samara seed covered by pericarp wing pericarp seed c. A legume is a dry dehiscent fruit produced from a simple ovary. d. A samara is a dry indehiscent fruit produced from a simple ovary . Aggregate Fruit Multiple Fruit fruit from many ovaries of a single flower e. An aggregate fruit contains many fleshy fruits produced from simple ovaries of the same flower. one fruit fruits from ovaries of many flowers f. A multiple fruit contains many fused fruits produced from simple ovaries of individual flowers. a, b: © Kingsley Stern; c: © Dr. James Richardson/Visuals Unlimited; d: © James Mauseth; e: Courtesy Robert A. Schlising; f: © Ingram Publishing/Alamy 12 Fruit Dispersal by Animals Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. a. b. a: © Marie Read/Animals Animals/Earth Scenes; b: © Scott Camazine/Photo Researchers, Inc. 13 Fruit Types and Seed Dispersal • Seed Germination – Embryo resumes growth & metabolic activity – Length of viability is variable – Some seeds do not germinate until they have been through a dormant period • Temperate zones - Cold Weather 14 Fruit Types and Seed Dispersal • Environmental requirements for seed germination – Availability of oxygen for metabolic needs – Adequate temperature for enzyme activity – Adequate moisture for hydration of cells 15 Eudicot and Monocot Seed Structure and Germination Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. pericarp cotyledons plumule (two) endosperm cotyledon (one) coleoptile hypocotyl radicle plumule seed coat radicle cotyledon coleorhiza Corn kernel Seed structure true leaf first true leaves (primary leaves) seed coat epicotyl withered cotyledons cotyledons (two) first leaf hypocotyl coleoptile coleoptile prop root radicle hypocotyl primary root Bean germination and growth a. secondary root primary root adventitious root primary root coleorhiza Corn germination and growth b. a: © Ed Reschke; b: © James Mauseth 16 Asexual Reproduction in Plants Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Parent plant stolon Asexually produced offspring © G.I. Bernard/Animals Animals/Earth Scenes 17