ScienceProgress Biology Sample
ScienceProgress Biology Sample
5 Flowers
stigma
carpel
stamen anther style (female
(male reproductive
reproductive organ)
organ) filament
ovary
ovule
●● Figure 2 An insect-pollinated
flower
➜➜Insect-pollinated flowers
Insects are attracted to flowers because of their scent or brightly
coloured petals. Many flowers produce a sweet liquid, called nectar,
which insects feed on.
The female part of the flower is the carpel. It is made up of a
stigma, style and an ovary. Inside the ovary are ovules, each of
which contains a female sex cell. The stigma is sticky so that pollen
grains stick to it.
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The male parts of the flower are the stamens. Each consists of a
pollen
b) cross pollination
anther
stigma
Pollen grains are also adapted for insect pollination. Some pollen grains
are hairy or spiky, and others are sticky, so they attach to the insect.
? Questions
1 How are insect-pollinated
flowers adapted to attract
➜➜Wind-pollinated flowers insects?
Plants like wild grasses and cultivated cereals are wind pollinated. 2 What is the female part of a
flower called? Name all the
Wind-pollinated flowers don’t need to be attractive to insects, so parts that make it up.
they are usually small and do not produce nectar or have large 3 What is the male part of a
colourful petals. The anthers dangle in the breeze, and the pollen flower called? Name the
is blown away. The pollen grains are very small and light so they parts that make it up.
are easily carried on the wind. A lot of pollen is produced, which 4 Explain how a wind-
increases the chances of a pollen grain reaching the stigma in pollinated flower is
another flower. The stigmas are long and feathery, which gives a adapted for its function.
large surface area for catching pollen.
anther
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2.6 Seed and fruit formation
➜➜Fertilisation
A flower is fertilised when the nucleus of a male pollen grain
sex cell, inside a pollen grain, fuses with the male sex cell
nucleus of a female sex cell in the ovule. stigma
pollen tube
●● Figure 2 Pollination
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The pollen tube carrying the male sex cell reaches
Fruit or vegetable
Many foods we call vegetables are actually fruits.
For example, courgettes, cucumbers, pepper and
pumpkins are all fruits. If you cut them open you ●● Figure 4 Fertilisation happens inside the ovule
will see the seeds inside. Pea pods are fruits, and
the peas inside are seeds.
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2.7 Seed dispersal
➜➜Wind dispersal
Some seeds get blown away
from the parent plant by the
wind. These seeds are usually
very light, or have ‘wings’ or
‘parachutes’ to help them travel
further. Sycamore fruits, like
those in Figure 1, spin as they
fall from the tree, and get carried
on the breeze.
Poppies have large seed heads
filled with small seeds. When the
wind blows, the seeds get shaken
out of the holes at the top of the
seed head.
Dandelions produce many tiny
fruits from each flowerhead. Each
fruit is attached to a ‘parachute’
of feathery hairs, which keep the
fruit airborne for a long distance.
The seed is inside the fruit. ●●Figure 2 Poppy seed heads. Can ●● Figure 3 A dandelion clock. How
you see the holes that the seeds are many fruits do you think there are on
shaken out of? this single flowerhead?
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➜➜Animal dispersal
➜➜Water dispersal
Coconuts are fruits, and the white flesh and milk inside make up
the seed. Coconuts are waterproof and can float. If they fall off
a tree into the sea or rivers, they can be carried for thousands of
kilometres. If they are washed up on a beach they may germinate to
form a new tree.
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➜➜ Planning and designing
investigations
➜➜What affects how fast sycamore fruits fall?
Sycamore fruits are dispersed by the wind.
The fruits spin as they fall. The further from the tree
the fruits travel the better it will be for the new plant’s
survival. If the fruits fall more slowly they will probably
land further from the parent tree.
1 Why is it better for a new plant’s survival if the seeds are dispersed
further from the parent plant? ●●Figure 1 Sycamore fruits
containing the seeds
Some students investigated the time it took for model sycamore fruits
to fall to the floor. They made their models as shown in Figure 2.
cut
bend
wing length of wing
cut cut bend cut
leg
fold fold
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The students’ results are shown in the table.
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