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24.1 Reproduction in Flowering Plants

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Presentation on theme: "24.1 Reproduction in Flowering Plants"— Presentation transcript:

1 24.1 Reproduction in Flowering Plants

2 Q: What are flowers? A: Flowers are reproductive organs that are composed of four different kinds of specialized leaves: sepals, petals, stamen, & carpels

3 Sepal-encloses the bud before opening.
Petal-attract insects. Found inside the sepal.

4 The Structure of Flowers
Male Parts Stamen-contains anther & filament Anther-structure on which pollen grains are produced.

5 Female Parts Carpel-Innermost part of a flower that produces & shelters the female gametophytes. Contains: Stigma-Sticky part at the top of style; specialized to capture pollen. Pistil-Single carpel or several fused carpels; contains the ovary, style, & stigma. Ovules-Future seeds

6 Q: How does fertilization in angiosperms differ from fertilization in other plants?
A: The process of fertilization in angiosperms is distinct from that found in other plants. Two fertilization events take place --one produces the zygote and the other a tissue, called endosperm within the seed.

7 Development of: Male Gametophytes Female Gametophytes

8 Pollination mostly by wind &animals
Fertilization-zygote & endosperm.

9 Pollination & Fertilization
Pollen from the male anther, sticks to the female stigma and goes down to the ovule. Fertilization occurs on the seed.

10 WB pgs Skip #21-24.


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