Q'bic Ch. 37 Vegetative Plant Development
Q'bic Ch. 37 Vegetative Plant Development
Q'bic Ch. 37 Vegetative Plant Development
Chapter 37
Embryo Development
Begins once the egg cell is fertilized
-The growing pollen tube
enters angiosperm embryo
sac and releases two sperm cells
-One sperm fertilizes central
cell and initiates endosperm
development (nutrients for embryo)
-Other sperm fertilizes
the egg to produce
a zygote
-Cell division soon
follows, creating
the embryo
Embryo
Development
The first zygote division is asymmetrical, resulting in two unequal
daughter cells
-Small cell divides repeatedly forming a ball of cells, which will
form the embryo
-Large cell divides repeatedly forming an elongated structure
called a suspensor
-Transports nutrients to embryo
The root-shoot axis also forms at this time
-Roots near suspensor cells and shoots at other end.
Suspensor
Multiple parallel
and perpendicular
divisions, accompanied
by apical growth divisions
lengthening the root
shoot axis
Root apical meristem
-STM encodes a
transcription factor
with homeobox region
stm mutant
Abnormal cell
division create stub
rather than a root
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Morphogenesis
The heart-shaped globular stage gives rise to bulges called
cotyledons
-Two in eudicots and one in monocots
These bulges are produced by embryonic cells, and not by
the shoot apical meristem
-This process is called morphogenesis
-Results from changes in planes and rates of cell division
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More Morphogenesis
Changes
-As development proceeds, the cells with multiple potentials are
restricted to the meristem regions
-Many meristems have been established by the time
embryogenesis ends and the seed becomes dormant
Endosperm Information
Endosperm varies between plants
-In coconuts it is liquid
-In corn it is solid
Seeds
-In many angiosperms,
development of the embryo
is arrested soon after
meristems and cotyledons
differentiate
-The integuments develop
into a relatively impermeable
seed coat
-Encloses the seed with its dormant
embryo and stored food
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Seeds
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Aggregate Fruits
Derived from
many ovaries of
a single flower;
strawberries,
blackberries.
Unlike tomato,
these ovaries
are not fused
and covered by
a continuous
pericarp.
Sepals of a
single flower
Seed
Ovary
Multiple Fruits
Individual flowers
form fruits around
a single stem. The
fruits fuse as seen
with pineapple.
Pericarp of
individual flower
Main stem
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Fruits
Developmentally, fruits are fascinating organs
that contain 3 genotypes in one package:
-The fruit and seed coat are from the prior
sporophyte generation
-The developing seed contains remnants
of the gametophyte generation (????)
-The embryo represents the next
sporophyte generation
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Fruit Dispersal
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Germination
Germination is defined as the emergence of
the radicle (first root) from the seed coat
Germination begins when a seed absorbs
water & oxygen is available for metabolism
-Often requires an additional
environmental signal such as specific
wavelength of light
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Germination
New growth comes from delicate meristems
As the sporophyte pushes through the seed
coat, it orients with the environment such that the
root grows down & shoot grows up
-Usually, the root emerges before the shoot
-The shoot becomes photosynthetic, and the
postembryonic phase is under way
Cotyledons may be held above or below the ground
-May become photosynthetic or shrivel
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Germination
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