Download SEXUAL REPRODUTION IN FLOWERING PLANTS

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
SEXUAL REPRODUTION IN FLOWERING PLANTS
1.
Significance of Sexual Mode of Reproduction.
(i)
Sexual reproduction promotes diversity of characters in the offspring’s.
(ii)
It results in new combinations of genes brought together in the gamete and this reshuffling
increases genetic variation.
(iii)
It plays prominent role in the origin of new species.
(iv)
The sexual mode of reproduction incorporates process of combining DNA from two different
individuals during reproduction.
2.
Flow chart showing Asexual and Sexual Reproduction.
3.
Angiosperms. It is phylum comprising of the flowering plants. The gametes are produced
within the flowers and the ovules are enclosed in a carpel.
4.
Sexual Reproduction in Flowering Plants. The Sexual reproduction in plants take place in
the following steps:

The reproductive parts of angiosperms are located in the flower.

Stamens and carpels are the reproductive parts of a flower which contain the germ cells.

The male gametes, which are present in pollen grains of the plant.

The female organ of a flower called ‘carpel’ or ‘pistil’ makes the female gametes, which are
present in ovules of the plant.

The male gametes present in pollen grains fertilise the female gametes present in ovules.

The fertilised ovules grow and become seeds.

The seeds produce new plants.
5.
Parts of a Flower. The flowers are usually bisexual, i.e., male and female reproductive parts
are present in the same plant. The flower is attached to the plant by a stalk or pedicel.

The main parts of a flower are-sepals, petals, stamens and carpels (pistil).

Sepals are usually green, leaf-like parts in the outermost circle of a flower. The function of
sepals is to protect the flower in its initial stages when it is in the form of a bud.

Petals are the colourful parts of a flower whose base lies inside the sepals. The function of
petals is to attract insects for pollination and to protect the reproductive organs, which are at
the centre of the flower.

Stamen and carpel constitute the reproductive parts of a flower.

Stamen is the male reproductive organ of the plant. A flower usually has a number of
stamens in it.

Each stamen is made up of two parts a filament, the stalk of stamen and an anther, the
swollen top of stamen. Anther is the upper bilobed part and each lobe contains two pollen
sacs within which numerous pollen grains are produced that are yellowish in colour.

Carpel (Pistil) is present in the centre of a flower and is the female reproductive organ of the
plant. It is made up of three parts stigma, style and ovary.
Stigma is the terminal part of carpel, which may be sticky and helps in receiving the pollen
grains from the anther of stamen during pollination.
Style is the middle elongated part of the carpel which connects stigma to the ovary.
Ovary is the swollen bottom part of carpel, which contains ovules and each ovule has an egg
cell – the female gamete. Carpel in a flower is surrounded by a number of stamens.
6.
Unisexual. It is the plant whose flowers contain either stamens or carpels but not both.
Example: Papaya, watermelon.
7.
Bisexual. It is the plant whose flowers contain both stamens and carpels.
Example: Hibiscus, Mustard.
8.
Pollination. It is the transfer of pollen grains from the anther of a stamen to the stigma of a
carpel. The pollen grains are transferred by many agents, such as insects (bees and
butterflies), birds, man, wind and water.
Pollination is of two types – self-pollination and cross pollination.
9.
Self-Pollination. It is the transfer of pollen grains from the anther of a flower to the stigma of
the same flower or another flower of the same plant. It is seen in pea and China rose plant.
Advantages:
(i)
Self-pollination in bisexual flowers ensures continuity of the race.
(ii)
It helps to preserve the parental characters, as the gametes from the same flower are
involved.
(iii)
It is not necessary for flowers to produce nectar or scent or be colourful.
Disadvantages:
(i)
New varieties cannot be obtained by self-pollination.
(ii)
The genetic defects of the breed cannot be removed.
(iii)
Repeated self-pollination leads to loss of vigour and vitality of the species.
10.
Cross-Pollination. It is transfer of pollen grains from the anther of one flower to the stigma
of another flower of a different plant of the same species. It is common in majority of
flowering plants. Cross-pollination occurs with the help of two main groups of agents – biotic
such as insects, birds and man; and abiotic such as wind and water.
Advantages:
(i)
Cross-pollination results in healthier offspring’s.
(ii)
Seeds produced by cross-pollination have much better germinating capacity.
(iii)
More abundant and viable seeds are produced.
(iv)
Variations are introduced by cross-pollination.
Disadvantages:
(i)
Plants have to depend on external agencies for pollination
(ii)
The pollen grains have to be produced in large quantity to ensure pollination.
11.
Gametes. The cells involved in sexual reproduction are called gametes. The male gametes in
animals are called ‘ovum’ or ‘egg’.
12.
Zygote. The cell which is formed b the fusion of a male gamete and a female is called zygote,
i.e., it is a ‘fertilised ovum’ or ‘fertilised egg’.
13.
Embryo. It is the stage of development between the zygote or fertilised egg and the newly
formed offspring.
14.
Fertilisation. It is defined as the fusion of a male gamete (sperm) with a female gamete (an
ovum or egg) to form a zygote during sexual reproduction.
15.
Fertilisation in Plans. Pollination is followed by fertilisation in plants.

After the pollen lands on a suitable stigma, it has to reach the female germ cells in the ovary.

The pollen tube grows out of the pollen grain through the style to reach the ovary.

After fertilisation, the zygote divides several times to form an embryo within the ovule.

The ovule then develops a tough coat and gets converted into a seed.

The seed contains the future embryo which develops into seedling.

The ovary develops and ripens to form a fruit.

The process of double fertilisation occurs inside each embryo sac, in which tow fusions,
syngamy and triple fusion take place.

When one male gamete fuses with the egg contained in the embryo sac of the ovule. This
fusion of male and female gametes is called syngamy and its product is the zygote.

The other male gamete fuses with the two polar nuclei and this process is called triple fusion,
where three nuclei are involved in the fusion process, one male gamete and tow polar nuclei.
16.
Germination. It is the initial stages in the growth of a seed to develop into a seedling under
appropriate conditions.