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Unit 7 Plants Ch. 24 Reproduction of Seed Plants
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Structure of Flowers Flowers are reproductive organs composed of 4 kinds of specialized leaves: sepals, petals, stamens, & carpals
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Sepals & Petals Sepals - green leaves that enclose the bud before it opens, & they protect the flower while it is developing Petals - often brightly colored, found just inside the sepals –Attract insects & other pollinators to the flower
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Stamens & Carpels Stamen - the male parts, consist of an anther & a filament Filament - a long, thin stalk that supports the anther Anther - found at the tip of each filament, where pollen grains are formed
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Stamens & Carpels Carpels - (pistils) - the female parts, consists of an ovary, style, & stigma Ovary - contains 1/more ovules where eggs are produced Style - stalk connecting the ovary to the stigma Stigma - top of the style, where pollen grains land
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Pollination Most gymnosperms & some angiosperms are wind pollinated, whereas most angiosperms are pollinated by animals
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Seed & Fruit Development As angiosperm seeds mature, the ovary walls thicken to form a fruit that encloses the developing seeds
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Seed Dispersal Dispersal by Animals –Seeds dispersed by animals are typically contained in fleshy, nutritious fruits
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Seed Dispersal Dispersal by Wind & Water –Seeds dispersed by wind or water are typically lightweight, allowing them to be carried in the air or to float on the surface of the water
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Seed Dormancy Dormancy - when the embryo is alive but not growing Environmental factors such as temperature & moisture can cause a seed to end dormancy & germinate
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Seed Germination Germination - early growth stage of the plant embryo
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Vegetative Reproduction Vegetative reproduction - type of asexual reproduction Vegetative reproduction includes the production of new plants from horizontal stems, from plantlets, & from underground roots
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Vegetative Reproduction Stolons - long, trailing stems that produce roots when they touch the ground –Ex.) strawberry plants
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Plant Propagation In plant propagation, horticulturists use cuttings, grafting, or budding to make many identical copies of a plant or to produce offspring from seedless plants
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Plant Propagation Cutting - cut part of the plant stem & plant it in the ground Grafting - when a piece of stem or bud is cut from a parent plant & attached to another plant –The cut piece is called the scion
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Plant Propagation Budding - when buds are used as scions
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Agriculture Most of the people of the world depend on a few crop plants, such as wheat, rice, & corn, for the bulk of their food supply
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Agriculture Between 1970 & 2000, the amount of corn grown per acre in the US increased more than 60%
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