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Plants

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Plants 9.4 Reproduction in Plants – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plants


1
Plants
  • 9.4 Reproduction in Plants

2
Flowering and Gene Expression
  • Flowering involves a change in gene expression in
    the shoot apex.
  • Vegetative structures roots, stems, and leaves
  • When a seed germinates, the young plant is in the
    VEGETATIVE PHASE.
  • Can last for weeks, months, years

3
Flowering and Gene Expression
  • Flowering involves a change in gene expression in
    the shoot apex.
  • The change from vegetative to REPRODUCTIVE PHASE
    is marked by the production of the parts of
    flowers instead of leaves by the shoot apical
    meristems.
  • Flowers allow for sexual reproduction.
  • What is sexual reproduction?
  • Why is it beneficial? What are its challenges?

4
Flowering and Gene Expression
  • Flowering involves a change in gene expression in
    the shoot apex.
  • What triggers the change from vegetative to
    reproductive phase?
  • Temperature can play a role
  • Day length
  • More precisely it is the length of dark period
  • Some plants are short-day (ie long-night) plants
    Poinsettia
  • Others are long-day (ie short-night) plants Red
    clover
  • Why does the length of night matter?

5
Flowering and Gene Expression
  • The switch to flowering is in response to the
    length of light and dark periods in many plants.
  • Light plays a role in the inhibition or
    activation of genes that control flowering.
  • Experiments have shown that plants measure the
    length of dark periods.
  • A pigment in leaves of plants is used to measure
    the dark
  • Called phytochrome
  • Switches between two forms PR and PFR
  • PFR is the active form
  • Receptor proteins in the cytoplasm are able to
    bind PFR not PR

6
Flowering and Gene Expression
  • How does the plant use phytochrome to measure the
    length of dark?
  • When PR absorbs red light it is converted to PFR
  • When PFR absorbs far-red light it is converted to
    PR
  • In normal sunlight, the red light is more
    plentiful, so PR is rapidly converted to PFR
  • However, PR is more stable, so in the dark the
    PFR slowly converts back to PR

7
Flowering and Gene Expression
  • In long-day plants, large amounts of the PFR
    remain after the short night.
  • The binding of PFR to the receptor promotes the
    transcription of a flowering time gene (FT).
  • The FT mRNA is transported in the phloem to the
    shoot apical meristem
  • In the meristem, it is translated into FT
    protein.
  • The FT protein then binds to a transcription
    factor.
  • This binding activates other genes necessary for
    flowering to occur.

8
Flowering and Gene Expression
  • In short-day plants, the binding of PFR to the
    receptor inhibits the transcription of the
    flowering time gene.
  • At the end of long nights, very little PFR
    remains.
  • The inhibition fails.
  • The transcription and translation of genes needed
    for flowering are signalled.
  • QUESTION
  • Contrast the control of flowering in short and
    long day plants.

9
Mutualism between flowers and pollinators
  • Most flowering plants use mutualistic
    relationships with pollinators in sexual
    reproduction.
  • Sexual reproduction requires the transfer of
    pollen.
  • QUESTION
  • List methods of pollen transfer.
  • State advantages and disadvantages of each.

10
Mutualism between flowers and pollinators
  • Animals that transfer pollen are known as
    pollinators.
  • Examples birds, insects, rodents
  • Mutualism a close association between 2
    organisms where both organisms benefit.
  • Question
  • Explain how both plants and animals benefit from
    this relationship.

11
Parts of a flower
  • Draw your version of the structure of an animal
    pollinated flower
  • Label and annotate
  • Discuss how this structure aligns with its
    function.
  • See pg 431

12
Pollination, fertilization, and seed dispersal
  • Success in plant reproduction depends on
    pollination, fertilization, and seed dispersal.
  • Pollination is the process by which pollen is
    transferred from the anther (male part) to the
    stigma (female part) of the plant.

13
Pollination, fertilization, and seed dispersal
  • when pollen has landed on the stigma of a
    suitable flower of the same species, a chain of
    events happens that ends in the making of seeds
  • A pollen grain grows a tiny tube, all the way
    down the style to the ovary.
  • This pollen tube carries a male gamete to meet
    the ovary in an ovule.

14
Pollination, fertilization, and seed dispersal
  • Fertilization the process during which two
    gametes join and their chromosomes combine, so
    that the fertilised cell contains a normal
    complement of chromosomes.

15
Pollination, fertilization, and seed dispersal
  • The fertilized ovule goes on to form a seed,
  • contains a food store and an embryo that will
    later grow into a new plant.
  • The ovary develops into a fruit to protect the
    seed.

16
Pollination, fertilization, and seed dispersal
  • Seeds can not move themselves, yet often travel
    long distances from the parent plant.
  • Why?
  • How?

17
Pollination, fertilization, and seed dispersal
  • Seed dispersal
  • Reduces the competition between offspring and
    parent.
  • Helps spread the species.

18
The structure of seeds
  • Draw the internal structure of a seed
  • Label and annotate
  • See page 434
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