SEXUAL REPRODUCTION IN
PLANTS
Advantages
Often Less Expensive
Genetic Diversity
Easy to Spread
Disadvantages
Some seeds are hard to grow
Never 100% sure of what you will end up with
Key Structures in Angiosperms
Flowers
Fruits
Seeds
FLOWERS
Flowers
Reproductive Organ
of the Plant
Stamen produces
Pollen
Pistil produces Ovules
Grain/Grass Flower
POLLINATION
Pollination
The transfer of pollen from a stamen to the ovules
in a pistil (Angiosperms).
The transfer of pollen from a male cone to the
ovules in a female cone (Gymnosperms).
Pollination
Self-Pollination
when ovules are
pollinated by the plant
that produced it
Cross-Pollination
when ovules are
pollinated by a plant
other than the one
that produced it
Pollination
Many fruit trees
require crosspollination from
another variety of the
same fruit to ensure
the most genetic
diversity.
Insect Pollination
Bird Pollination
Mammal
Pollination
Australian Honey Possum
Wind Pollination
Hand Pollination
Corpse Flower
When Pollination Happens
Ovules are fertilized now called seeds
Ovary begins to swell as seed mature
FRUIT
Fruit
Is the swollen ovary
of a plant
Contains seeds and
often stored food
Fruit Structure
The basic, 3-layer structure shared by all fruits:
Pericarp the thickened wall of fruit that
encases & protects the seed
Exocarp skin/outermost layer
Mesocarp pulp
Endocarp pit
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Fruit Structure
Common Fruit Types
SEEDS
Worlds Largest
coco du mer Coconut
Parts of the Seed
Seed Coat protective shell
Endosperm where most food for the seed is
stored in monocots
Embryo the little plant inside
Cotyledons the seed leaves, where all the food
is stored in dicots
Parts of the Seed
Spread of
Seeds
Wind
Water
Animal
Spread of Seeds: Wind
Spread of Seeds: Water
Spread of Seeds: Animal
Germination
The sprouting of the
seed
Germination
Requires proper:
Light/Dark
Temperature
Oxygen
Moisture
Moisture
Stimulates
chemical reactions
and growth
Oxygen
Cell respiration needs O2
Cell respiration converts sugar & starch
to energy
Light
Some seeds need
total darkness
Some need light
Temperature
Most seeds need
60o 80o F
Germination
Stratification
when a seed
must be
exposed to cold
before it can
germinate.
Germination
Scarification
when the seed
coat must be
broken down
chemically or
mechanically
Example: Lupines
Key Structures in
Gymnosperms
Cones
Seeds
Cones
Cones can be male or
female
Sexually reproduce
Cones
Pollen is produced in
male cones
Seeds
Ovules develop
in female cones
Seeds
After pollination,
seeds develop
in female cones
Seeds
After pollination,
seeds develop
in female cones
Seeds
After pollination,
seeds develop
in female cones
Recap
Seeds
Often Less Expensive
Genetic Diversity
Easy to Spread
Key Structures
Flowers
Fruits
Seeds
Cones
Key Terms
Angiosperm
Gymnosperm
Pollination
Germination