Title: Plant Reproduction I
1Plant Reproduction I
- Unless a tree has borne blossoms in spring, you
will vainly look for fruit on it in autumn. -
- - Sir Walter Scott
2Plant Reproduction
- Asexual reproduction (cloning),
- well suited genotypes can reproduce rapidly,
- cloned offspring often have greater resources
than embryos.
- diversity, especially important
- when coping with environmental
- change,
- control of timing, number,
- dispersal, and others factors...
3Today
- Angiosperms,
- Flowers,
- Flower Development,
- Flowering,
- Graphic images of sex.
4Angiosperms Evolutionary Perspective
- Reproductive Challenges,
- dry land and swimming sperm are not very
compatible, - sessile habit requires some means of sperm,
spore, and/or seed dispersal.
5Plant Reproduction (Terrestrial)
- nonvascular gt vascular,
-
- haploid dominant gt diploid dominant,
- homosporous gt heterosporous,
- motile gametes gt nonmotile gametes,
- seedless gt seeds,
- water gt wind and animals
- gamete, spore and seed disbursement.
6Transition to Land
aquatic plants
7Alteration of Generations
Plants
Humans
- Gametophyte,
- muticellular haploid phase,
- produce gametes by mitosis, after meiosis
- Sporophyte,
- formed by the fusion of two gametophytes (male
and female) to yield a multicellular
diploid/triploid, - produce haploid spores by meiosis,
- mitosis produces gametophytes.
8Haploid Dominant gt Diploid Dominant
See Fig. 30.2
9Reproductive Bodies
- Spore (haploid) the reproductive organ in
cryptogams which, in function, corresponds to a
seed but possesses no embryo, - cryptogam a general name for plants that lack
flowers, including ferns , mosses, and algae,
- seed a plant embryo with nutritive tissue to
fuel its early growth, and surrounded by an outer
protective layer (seed coat), - embryo immature plant (more later).
10Homospory vs. Heterospory
- The principal difference between homospory and
heterospory is the separation of sexes at
different points in the life cycle,
- heterospory promotes out crossing among plants,
since male gametophytes may travel farther from
the sporophyte than spermatids (moss sperm).
11Mosses
- nonvascular (mostly)
- haploid dominant
- homosporous
- motile gametes
- seedless
- water dependent
Simple, unbranched sporophyte dependent on
gametophyte.
See Fig 29.9
12Angiosperms
- vascular
- diploid dominant
- heterosporous
- nonmotile gametes
- seeds w/ 3n endosperm
- not water dependent
see Fig. 30.10
13Angiosperm Advantages
- improved vasculature,
- extreme heterospory,
- pollen in anthers,
- ovules are reduced in form and are completely
surrounded by integuments, - results in the potential for diverse
dissemination of pollen, - results in the potential for diverse
disbursement of seeds.
14Pollen Dissemination
see Fig. 30.9
15Seed Dispersal
16Which is Domesticated?
Maize
Wheat
Rice
Wild
Domestic
Wild
Domestic
Wild
Domestic
North America
Europe
Asia
Sunflower
Soybeans
Africa
Barley
South America
Millet
Australia
Potato
Humans - or - Plants
17Angiospermssmall
18Angiospermslarge
19Amorphophallus titanumTitan Arum, Corpse flower,
Bunga Bangkai
20Amorphophallus titanumTitan Arum, Corpse flower,
Bunga Bangkai
21Flowersexual
- Androecium (male),
- all stamens,
- filament stalk,
- anther pollen bearing compartment,
- Gynoecium (female),
- all carpels,
- stigma receptive surface for pollen grains,
- style column of tissue through which pollen
grows, - ovary enlarged basal portion of the carpel,
holds ovules.
22Megaporophyll to Carpel
- .hypothesis for the origin of the carpel from a
reproductive leaf sporophyll,
- .pea fruit carpels form the pod, peas are the
ovules, - remember, integument (sporophyll tissue)
surrounds the megasporangium.
23Microsporophyll to Stamen
- Extant species showing intermediate morphologies.
24Flowerother
- Perianth,
- corolla (petals collectively),
- petal modified leaf, usually conspicuously
colored, - calyx (sepals collectively),
- sepal modified leaf, usually green.
- usually the outermost layer of the flower,
- often encloses the flower bud before blooming,
- Recepticle,
- the part of the floral stalk that holds the
floral organs.
25Variations
Trillium
Incomplete (lacking one or more floral
organs) unisexual monoecious male and female
flowers are on the same plant.
Complete bisexual
26Monoecious
27Dioecious
28More Variations
29Arabidopsis flower
- Wild-type,
- perianth,
- calyx (4 sepals),
- corolla (4 petals),
- androecium,
- 6 stamens,
- gynoecium,
- 2 carpels.
Model Flower System
30Developmental Life Cycle
31Phase Changes
32Phase Change Studies
- Genetic and molecular genetic approaches,
- isolate mutants that fail in some way to change
phase properly, - study genes, gene products and associated
molecules, and resulting structures.
33Assignmentsread pp 429 - 430read pp 734 - 735
- Homeotic Genes,
- genes that control the overall body plan through
DNA transcription control, - transcription factors,
- associate with promoter regions of genes,
influencing transcription.
Study Associated Figures
34Floral Homeotic GenesABC Hypothesis
Study Fig. 35.31
35Floral Homeotic GenesABC Hypothesis
Study Fig 35.31 b
36More Homeotic Mutants
37Phase Change Studies
Vegetative apical meristem produces leaves, and
very short internodes,
Floral meristem produces indeterminant
inflorescence, with determinant floral organs.
38Floral Meristem Identity
day length temperature water status nutrient
status hormones etc.
39Floral Transition Mutants
Inhibitory Conditions
- Circadian clock mutants,
- Photoreceptor mutants,
- Hormone mutants,
- Homeotic mutants,
- Others.
wild type
mutant
Inducing Conditions
40(No Transcript)
41Friday
- Spore formation,
- Gamete formation,
- Pollination,
- Germination.
42Friday
- pp. 775 - 783,
- Questions!!!
43Exam 1
Mean 77.7 Median 77.5
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Made the Essay worth 25 pts.