Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
EKU General Botany lab Flowering Plants Phylum Anthophyta or Magnoliophyta OVULE DEVELOPMENT by Ross Clark, Ph.D. Eastern Kentucky University photos from various sources Flowering plant ovary and ovules microsporangium Note: anthers ovary ovules locules very young ovule How many locules are there in these ovaries? ovary wall How many carpels make up this ovary? slightly older ovules Both of these photos are transverse sections of flower buds. Flowering plant megasporangium and functional megaspore metaphase I of meiosis MEIOSIS megasporangium is only one cell thick! Note megasporocyte Note that the entire ovule has grown in size, the integuments have thickened and now completely surround the megasporangium. Note ovary wall, locule, funiculus, integuments, micropyle, megasporangium, megaspore. Flowering Plants: Growth of female gametophyte 8-nuclear (7-celled) mature female gametophyte 2-nuclear gametophyte In all pictures, note the gametophyte, megasporangium, micropyle (when visible) and locule. 4-nuclear gametophyte Flowering plant: mature gametophyte and fertilization the moment of double fertilization ! The mature (7-celled, 8-nuclear) gametophyte. Male and female gametes fusing Polar nuclei fusing Notice that the micropyle end is at opposite ends of these two pictures. Semi-mature dicot seed site of old gametophyte suspensor seed coat (from integuments) endosperm (3n or more) hypocotyl epicotyl cotyledon remnants of megasporangium Flowering plant: summary of ovule development