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Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

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Page 1: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Reproduction in Angiosperms

IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Page 2: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Reproduction in flowering plants

Flowering plants contain their reproductive organs in the flower

Flowers are often hermaphrodite structures both male and female parts

Page 3: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Draw and Label …

A diagram showing the structure of a dicotyledonous animal pollinated flower

Sepal, petal, anther, filament, stigma, and ovary

See Figure 10.27 (Clegg)

Page 4: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

The Buttercup Flower

Page 5: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Parts of the flower

Sepals: Collectively called the calyx Enclose the flower in the bud and are usually small, green, and leaf like

Petals: Collectively called the corolla Often colored and conspicuous (may attract insects and other animals)

Stamens: The male part of the flower Consist of anthers (housing pollen grains) and the filament (stalk)

Carpels: The female part of the flower There may be one or many & they may be fused together or free

standing Each carpel consists of an ovary and a stigma (which receives pollen)

Page 6: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Addressing some vocabulary …

Pollination: is the transfer of pollen from a mature anther to a receptive stigma The pollen may come from the anthers of the

same flower or flowers of the same plant Self pollination

Or, the pollen may come from flowers on a different plant of the same species

Cross pollination

Page 7: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

So, how is that pollen transferred?

Typically by insects and wind Insect pollinated plants typically produce nectar

which attracts insects to the flower

Although in some species, pollen can be transferred by: Birds Bats Running water

Page 8: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

What comes after pollen transfer … ?

FERTILIZATION!!! Can only occur after pollen has landed on the

stigma and has germinated there Fertilization is the fusion of male and female

gametes to form a zygote

Page 9: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

What’s double fertilization?

The pollen grain produces a pollen tube, which grows down between the cells of the style and into the ovule

The pollen tube delivers two male nuclei One fuses with the egg The other fuses with another nucleus

triggers the formation of the food store for the developing embryo

Page 10: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

Fertilization in a flowering plant

Page 11: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

How are seeds formed and dispersed?

Seeds develop from the fertilized ovule After fertilization:

The zygote grows by mitotic division (embryonic root, stem, and cotyledon)

As the seed matures, the outer layers become the protective seed coat (testa) and the whole ovary develops into the fruit.

The water content of the seed decreases The seed moves into a dormancy period

Page 12: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

The Seed

The seed is a form in which the flowering plant may be dispersed

Seed dispersal is the carrying of the seed away from the vicinity of the parenting plant

Wind, animals, water, and explosive mechanisms help disperse seeds

Page 13: Reproduction in Angiosperms IB Topic 9.3.1-9.3.3

The structure of a dicotyledonous seed (broad bean seed)