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13.1 Succession 13.2 Asexual Reproduction 13.3 Sexual Reproduction Pages 588-602
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Succession The gradual change in types of species found in an area over time.
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Primary Succession Begins on bare rock Examples: after glaciers recede, volcanoes spew dust and lava or after explosions. Pioneer plants are first colonizers Lichens mosses small herbaceous plants larger herbaceous plants and shrubs trees
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Secondary Succession Occurs after a disruption Examples include fire, flood, storms, plowing or digging the ground Faster transformation Bare ground grassland grass-shrub pine forest beech-maple forest
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13.2 Asexual Reproduction in Plants Vegetative reproduction LeavesStemsRoots -rhizomes-suckers -corms-fragments -stolons -tuber “eyes”
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pros and cons Advantages: -less energy investment -plantlets are more robust than seedlings Disadvantages:-lack of genetic variation
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Grafting branch is attached to a stem of another plant Branch is the scion. Donor plant is the stock.
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13.3 Sexual Reproduction in Plants Seed-protects and nourishes the embryo Endosperm-specialized nutritive layer
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Seeds Seed dispersal by wind, water, animals Gymnosperms are naked seeds Angiosperm seeds are contained in fruits
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Benefits of Sexual reproduction -Genetic variety -Dispersed away from parent plant -seed dormancy
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Gymnosperms Male cones produce microspores that develop into pollen grains Female cones produce megaspores that develop into egg-producing female gametophytes Wind pollination
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Fertilization Pollen grain lands next to ovule. Pollen tube grows to ovule. Haploid nucleus divides into two haploid sperm. One sperm fertilizes ovule Time: 13 months
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Angiosperms Male: stamenFemale: carpel
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Parts Male: stamen anther –pollen grains filament- stalk Female: carpelstyle- sticky top stigma- stalk ovary- contains ovules
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Monocot vs Eudicot flowers Monocot flowers- petals in 3’s For example: tulip, lilly Eudicot flowers – petals in 4’s or 5’s or more For example: rose
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Pollination Animal or wind Cross-pollination between plants Self-pollination between flowers Pollen lands on stigma Pollen tube grows down to ovary 2 haploid sperm: one fertilizes ovule to make a 2n seed, and one fertilizes an diploid polar nuclei that becomes a 3n endosperm
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