Reproduction in Plants
Reproduction in Plants
• Concept of pollination
• Alternation of generations
INTRODUCTION
– Life cycles
• Before a seed can grow into a new plant they have to be fertilized by
pollen.
• Petals: They are used to attract insects by their bright colour and scent.
• Stamens: This is where pollen is made. It is the male part of the flower.
The stamen has two parts: the filament (a thin stalk) and the anther which
is where pollen is made
– Seed and fruit dispersal: This is when the seed is spread around,
away from the plant that made it
• Carpel/Pistil
• The inner layer of each ovule has a layer called the nucellus – which
nourishes the developing embryo sac
• At the apex of the ovule is a small opening through the integuments called
the micropyle. This is where the pollen tube will enter.
• The embryo sac (megaspore) enlarges and the haploid nucleus divides by
first round of mitosis to form 2 haploid nuclei
• The two haploid nuclei then undergo a second round of mitosis to form 4
haploid nuclei within the one embryo sac. A third and final round
of mitosis occurs to produce 8 haploid nuclei
• Cell membranes and a thin cell wall form around 6 of the haploid nuclei
• The two remaining haploid nuclei remain free and are called polar nuclei
• The egg cell is present at the bottom of the embryo sac
• The egg cell will start the new sporophyte generation if it is fertilized
• It is surrounded by:
• 3 antipodal cells.
– filament
Describe the formation and structure of Pollen grain and its adaptation
1. Self-pollination: where a flower allows pollen to fertilise the egg cell within
the ovary of the same plant – disadvantageous to species as resulting seeds
less likely to form healthy plant
Self-Pollination
Pollination Methods
• Wind: pollen is produced in very large amounts by the flower and is usually
small, light and smooth to allow easy transfer by wind, e.g., grasses
• Animal: pollen is produced in relatively small amounts grains are larger and
stickier and they are usually transferred by insects (examples include
dandelions, daisies, tulips, roses), birds, bats,
• Assignment
3. FERTILISATION
• Fertilization is the process of fusion of the female gamete, the ovum or egg
and the male gamete produced in the pollen tube by the pollen grain.
• The pollen grain adheres to the stigma, a pollen tube grows and penetrates
the ovule and the pollen tube burst into the embryo sac.
• The pollen grains attaches itself to the stigma of the female reproductive
structure, the pollen tube grows and enters the ovule making a tiny pore
called a micropyle and the pollen tube burst into the embryo sac.
• Two types of nucleus, the vegetative tube and generative nuclei of the
pollen grain pass into the pollen tube.
• The generative nucleus enters the pollen tube and divides by mitosis
to form two haploid nuclei called sperm nuclei
• The sperm nuclei enter the embryo sac and ‘double fertilisation’
occurs:
• Other fuses with the two polar nuclei to form triploid (3n)
endosperm cell which goes on to absorb nutrients and
functions as a food store
• The pollen grains attaches itself to the stigma of the female reproductive
structure, the pollen tube grows and enters the ovule making a tiny pore
called a micropyle.
• The pollen tube grows near the style and curls to the bottom of the ovary
and then near the receptacle.
• The pollen tube then breaks into the ovule through the micropyle and then
the micropyle bursts into the embryo sac.
• In the embryo sac, one of the male nucleus fuses with the nucleus of the
egg and forms a diploid zygote. This process is known as true fertilization or
syngamy
• The other male gamete or nucleus enters further into the embryo sac and it
fuses with two polar nuclei. This gives rise to a triploid nucleus called the
primary endosperm nucleus.
• It gives stimulus to the plant due to which ovary develops into fruit and
ovules develop into seeds.
Seed Formation
• The integuments become the wall of the seed called the testa. The
micropyle closes.
• The ovule becomes a seed, which contains a dormant plant embryo, food
reserve, and the protective coat called the testa.
• The embryo is made up of the radicle or future root and the plumule or
future shoot.
• The endosperm cells divide many times and absorb the nucellus. This is the
nutrition (mainly fats, oils and starch) for the embryo
• Testa and endosperm are the two covering layers of the embryo.
• During embryo development the cotyledons absorb the food reserves from
the endosperm.
• The endosperm is almost degraded in the mature seed and the embryo is
enclosed by the testa.
• E.g. pea (Pisum sativum), beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) and soyabean (Glycine
max).
• Eg maize • Eg beans
Class Assignment
• Events of germination
(b)
Bryophyta:
Pteridophyta:
Angiosperms: