petal 22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B

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Transcript petal 22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B

22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
The student is expected to:
6G recognize the significance of meiosis to
sexual reproduction
and
10B describe the
interactions that occur among
systems that perform the functions
of transport, reproduction, and
response in plants
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
KEY CONCEPT
Reproduction of flowering plants takes place within
flowers.
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
Flowers contain reproductive organs protected by
specialized leaves.
• Sepals and petals are modified leaves.
– Sepals are outermost
layer that protects
developing flower
sepal
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
– Petals can help to attract animal pollinators
petal
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• A stamen is the male structure of the flower.
stamen
filament
anther
– anther produces pollen grains
– filament supports the anther
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• The innermost layer of a flower is the female carpel.
stigma
carpel
style
ovary
– stigma is sticky tip
– style is tube leading from stigma to ovary
– ovary produces female gametophyte
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
Flowering plants can be pollinated by wind or animals.
• Flowering plants pollinated when pollen grains land on
stigma.
• Wind pollinated flowers have small flowers and large
amounts of pollen.
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• Animal pollinated flowers have larger flowers and less
pollen.
– many flowering plants pollinated by animal pollinators
pollen grains
– pollination occurs as animal feeds from flower to flower
– animal pollination more efficient than wind pollination
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
Fertilization takes place within the flower.
• Male gametophytes, or pollen grains, are produced in the
anthers.
– male spores produced in
anthers by meiosis
– each spore divides by
mitosis to form two
haploid cells
– two cells form a
pollen grain
single pollen grain
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• One female gametophyte can form in each ovule of a
flower’s ovary.
– four female spores produced in ovule by meiosis
– one spore develops into female gametophyte
– female gametophyte contains seven cells
– one cell has two nuclei, or polar nuclei
– one cell will develop into an egg
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• Pollination occurs when a pollen grain lands on a stigma.
pollen tube
sperm
stigma
– one cell from pollen grain forms pollen tube
– other cell forms two sperm that travel down tube
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• Flowering plants go through the process of double
fertilization.
female
gametophyte
egg
sperm
polar nuclei
ovule
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• Flowering plants go through the process of double
endosperm
fertilization.
– one sperm fertilizes
the egg
seed coat
– other sperm unites
with polar nuclei,
forming endosperm
– endosperm provides
food supply for
embryo
embryo
22.2 Reproduction in Flowering Plants TEKS 6G, 10B
• Each ovule becomes a seed.
• The surrounding ovary grows into a fruit.