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Published byAnnis Long Modified over 9 years ago
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How Do Angiosperms Reproduce? Asexual & Sexual Methods
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Vegetative Reproduction
Form of asexual reproduction where new plants grow from parts of an existing plant (roots, stems, leaves) New plants are clones of the original plant because their genetics are the same
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Stem Modifications Rhizomes: underground stems store food and can give rise to new plants along their length Ex: ginger
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Stem Modifications Stolons:
stems that grow on top of the ground’s surface to establish new plants. Ex: strawberries, quack grass
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Stem Modifications Bulbs:
stem is only a small disk that is just above the roots Ex: green onions and garlic
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Stem Modifications Tubers:
fleshy, food-storing swellings at the tip of an underground stem Ex: potatoes
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Other Modifications Cuttings: A piece of root, stem or leaf is cut from a mature plant, and when in favorable conditions, forms its own roots and/or shoots. (ex: fruit trees) Fragmentation: broken pieces of some plants will regenerate when conditions are favorable (e.g. mosses)
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Benefits to Asexual Methods
Usually faster than reproducing with spores or seeds More uniformity than with sexual methods The only way to reproduce fruits that do not produce seeds
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Sexual Reproduction Flowers are the sexual reproductive structures of angiosperms. Sexual reproduction involves pollination and fertilization resulting in the formation of seed. Part of the flower grows into a fruit that contains seeds.
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Flower Parts Sepals Petals Stamens male organs Pistil female organ
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Stamens (Male Organs) Filament: the slender stalk
Anther: the capsule at the top of the filament
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Pistil (Female Organ) Stigma: the sticky enlargement at the top of the pistil; pollen sticks here. Style: the slender stalk of the pistil. Ovary: the swollen cavity at the base of the pistil. Female sex cells are located here.
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Pollination the transfer of pollen grains to the pistil
Pollen is produced in the anther and released when mature. Pollen contains the male gametes. A pollen grain attaches to the sticky stigma of a flower.
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Types of Pollination Self-pollination - pollen is transferred from the anther to stigma of the same flower Cross-pollination - pollen is transferred from the anther of one plant to the stigma of another
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Fertilization is the joining of male and female gametes to form a zygote A pollen tube grows down to the ovary.
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Fertilization Two sperm travel down the pollen tube --- one fertilizes the egg and the other helps to form endosperm (stored food for seed). This is called double fertilization. 3. The ovary enlarges and a seed forms.
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Seed is a complete embryo with cotyledons surrounded by an endosperm and protected by a seed coat
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Seed a) seed coat – protects the embryo
b) endosperm – stored food for young plant c) cotyledons - store food for the young plant, until it has big enough leaves to make its own food through photosynthesis. d) embryo - looks like a miniature plant inside the seed.
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Seed The seed is a new generation that contains genetic information from both the egg and pollen.
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