Angiosperms Flashcards
Phylum Magnioliophyta
- heterosporous
- female gametophytes tiny, within sporophyte
- few transitional fossils
- most primitive flower
- early cretaceous
angiosperm phylums
- magnoliophyta / anthophyta
primitive flower strucutre
- alternating arranged parts
- tepals
- many flattened stamens
- separate carpels
two classes of magnoliophyta
- dicots: class magnoliopsida
- monocots: Class liliopsida
how are dicots and monocots diff?
dicots: two cotyledons, vascular network, ring of vascular bundles, taproot, flower fours or fives
monocots: one cotyledon, vascular bundles, parallel leaf veins, fibrous root, flower three
Sexual life cycle of flowering plant
main plant is sporophyte
- heterosporous (spores not released)
- megasporocyte undergo meiosis to produce four megaspores, three of them die
- microsprorcytes undergo meiosis to produce two microspores
megagametophyte development
- remaining megaspore divides three times to produce 8 nuclei
- arrange to becme megagametophyte
megagametophyte structure
- three antipodals on one side of the embryo sac (will die later)
- 2 central cell nuclei
- one egg surrounded by synergids (will die later)
- micropyle under egg (opening to ovule)
microgametophyte development
- the four microspores form pollen grains with a generative nucleus and tube nucleus
- 3 apertures with tough wall outside
- cytoplasm contains vitamins and nutrients
- dicots have three apertures
- monocots have two apertures
pollination
pollen must be transferred from anther to the stigma of the flower through different mechansisms.
- insects pollinate
- opening to flower forces insect to pass by stigma
- pollinium that attached to head or tongue
- faking a female insect
- buckets
Fertilization
- sperms cells travel down polled tube from pollen grain aperature
- grows downward the style of the stigma towards ovary
- enters micropyle, one fertilizes the egg and the other fertilizes the 2 central nuclei
seed development
- zygotes grows to develop a structure within the endosperm, with two cotyledons, shoot apex, root apex and suspensor.
- the cotyledons absorb the endosperm in the process.
variations
- variation in the number of embryo sac nuclei, although there are typically 8
- ploidy of endosperm
- apomixis (some ovules have diploids)
- parthenocarpy (some original ovule cells just start growing seeds and skip fertilization)