1 / 15

Goal # 7 Plant Reproduction

Goal # 7 Plant Reproduction. I. Reproductive Organs. Flower = Plant part containing all the reproductive organs of a flower. Used in plant identification Reproductive organs are responsible for Fertilization Seed production Pollination.

rowdy
Download Presentation

Goal # 7 Plant Reproduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Goal # 7PlantReproduction

  2. I. Reproductive Organs • Flower = Plant part containing all the reproductive organs of a flower. • Used in plant identification • Reproductive organs are responsible for • Fertilization • Seed production • Pollination

  3. 2. Petals-Colorful structures that encase the reproductive parts-used for luring in pollinators

  4. 3. Sepals • Leaflike • Encircle the peduncle below the petals • Peduncle: the base of the flower

  5. 4. Stamen • Male reproductive organ of a flower • Filament – stalk that holds up the anther • Anther • Located at the tip of the stamen • Produces pollen (plant sperm) • Pollen shakes off anther and drops onto female organs

  6. 5. Pistil • Female organ • Ovary • Bottom portion of the pistil • Contains 1+ ovules • Ovules contain 1 egg each

  7. Variations • Incomplete Flower: A flower that lacks 1+ organs • Ex) sweet corn – no petals

  8. II. Reproductive Methods

  9. Pollination • The pollen is transferred from the anther to the pistil. • By wind, water or animals • Self-Pollination • Cross-Pollination

  10. C. Plants pollinated by animals produce nectar • Nectar is a food of liquid including proteins and sugars • Collects at the base of petals • Animals trying to get the nectar get pollen on them • The animal flies to another flower and the pollen brushes off. • Plants that produce nectar attract pollinators with color/scent

  11. D. Fertilization • A pollen grain rests at the tip of the stigma • A long tube (pollen tube) grows down into the ovary. • The pollen moves into the ovule and fertilizes the egg.

  12. E. Seeds • Seeds develop from flowers • The wall of the ovule becomes the seed coat

  13. F. Fruits • The ovary enlarges and becomes the fruit • A fruit is a structure that holds the seeds • fleshy (apple/grape/tomato/cucumber) • Dry (peanuts/sunflower seeds/walnuts)

  14. G. Seed Dispersal • Animals distribute seeds by eating fruits • Raccoons, deer, bears, humans • Spit seeds • Digest seeds • Drop seeds (birds) • Bury seeds (squirrels) • Wind & Water transport seeds

More Related