in the picture below, on the very left after all the ovarys have fertilised, the stigma and the style degenerate since they are not needed any more.
after this picture, the fruit gets eaten by an animal, which excretes out the seeds with its feces, which means the seed gets the necessary nutrients to grow.
in these two pictures you see that the seeds are in the middle and the fruit outside is due to the plant sending sugars around the seeds. Note where the style and stigma have degenerated (bottom part on the red apple)
credits to savannah and harriet for the two last pictures
Blog Archive
Tuesday, 26 April 2011
Friday, 8 April 2011
3.4 PLant fertlisation
• pollen grains grow all the way down the stigma, making a pollen tube
• the nucleus travels down the tube and into the ovule
A number of things will occur:
1. Ovule will fertilise that leads to formation of zygote that grows into a embrionic plant
2. Oustide of the ovule: seed coat (TESTA)
3. Formation of cotyletons (food stores for seedling)
4. Thickning of the walls of the ovary, putting things like sugar, protein that will create fruit
• the nucleus travels down the tube and into the ovule
A number of things will occur:
1. Ovule will fertilise that leads to formation of zygote that grows into a embrionic plant
2. Oustide of the ovule: seed coat (TESTA)
3. Formation of cotyletons (food stores for seedling)
4. Thickning of the walls of the ovary, putting things like sugar, protein that will create fruit
3.3a insect pollination & 3.3b wind pollination
• PLant sex = pollen grain (contains male nuclei) transfers from the anther of a plant to the stigma of another plant
• Insect gets attracted to a plant because of its nectar and colourful petals. Then some pollen grains get stuck on it, and as the insect goes to another plant the pollen grains transfer into that plants stigma
•There are 2 reasons why insects are attracted to plants
- Signals: SCENTS AND COLOUR PETALS
- Value: POLLEN (source of protein for insects) AND FOOD (nectaries produce fructose)
• The pollen is transfered by wind into the air from the anther to the stigma
• features of wind pollination:
- light pollen grain (wing features, which allow to move through the air efficiently)
- tall anthers so they are exposed to wind
- stigmas have large SA, and feather like surface so it can catch pollen easily
• The plant has no colours or scent to attract insects as it uses wind as its only transport for the pollen
• It would be a waste of nectar, since all the pollen is wind pollinated, so it it focuses all its energy on making pollen.
• Insect gets attracted to a plant because of its nectar and colourful petals. Then some pollen grains get stuck on it, and as the insect goes to another plant the pollen grains transfer into that plants stigma
•There are 2 reasons why insects are attracted to plants
- Signals: SCENTS AND COLOUR PETALS
- Value: POLLEN (source of protein for insects) AND FOOD (nectaries produce fructose)
• The pollen is transfered by wind into the air from the anther to the stigma
• features of wind pollination:
- light pollen grain (wing features, which allow to move through the air efficiently)
- tall anthers so they are exposed to wind
- stigmas have large SA, and feather like surface so it can catch pollen easily
• The plant has no colours or scent to attract insects as it uses wind as its only transport for the pollen
• It would be a waste of nectar, since all the pollen is wind pollinated, so it it focuses all its energy on making pollen.
Thursday, 7 April 2011
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