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Flowering Plants By Neil Bronks

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Flowering Plants. By Neil Bronks. The Parts of a Flower. Most flowers have four parts: sepals, petals, stamens, carpels. The parts of a flower. Sepals protect the bud until it opens. Petals attract insects. Stamens make pollen. Carpels grow into fruits which contain the seeds. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Flowering Plants

Flowering Plants

ByNeil Bronks

Page 2: Flowering Plants

The Parts of a Flower

• Most flowers have four parts:

• sepals,• petals,• stamens,• carpels.

Page 3: Flowering Plants

The parts of a flower

• Sepals protect the bud until it opens.

• Petals attract insects.

• Stamens make pollen.

• Carpels grow into fruits which contain the seeds.

Page 4: Flowering Plants

Stamen (male)

• Anther: pollen grains grow in the anther.

• When the grains are fully grown, the anther splits open.

Page 5: Flowering Plants

Pistil (female)

• Stigma• Style• Carpel (ovary)• Ovules (eggs)

Page 6: Flowering Plants

Parts of a Flowering Plant

Male Parts

Anther

Filament

Together called the STAMEN

Female Parts

Stigma

Style

Ovule

Ovary

Together called the CARPEL

Page 7: Flowering Plants

Pollination• Flowering plants

use the wind, insects, bats, birds and mammals to transfer pollen from the male (stamen) part of the flower to the female (stigma) part of the flower.

Page 8: Flowering Plants

Pollination

• A flower is pollinated when a pollen grain lands on its stigma.

• Each carpel grows into a fruit which contains the seeds.

Page 9: Flowering Plants

Fertilisation

• Fertilised ovules develop into seeds.

• The carpel enlarges to form the flesh of the fruit and to protect the ovary.

Page 10: Flowering Plants

PollenPollen is produced in the ANTHER

The anther explodes and pollen just goes everywhere

Some of the pollen sticks on the STIGMA

The pollen goes down a small tube to the EGG

There are lots of eggs in most plant ovaries.

Page 11: Flowering Plants

Pollen Sexual reproduction is where two different cells meet

Sex cells are called GAMETES

Pollen is the male gamete

The female gamete is the EGG

When the pollen and egg meet this is called FERTILISATION

Page 12: Flowering Plants

Ways to Scatter Pollen

Wind Insect

Page 13: Flowering Plants

Wind Scattered Pollen

Anthers

Outside

Carry a large amount of very small pollen.

Petals

Small and green

No Scent or Nectar

Examples-

Grass

Oak Trees

Page 14: Flowering Plants

Wind pollination

• Some flowers, such as grasses, do not have brightly coloured petals and nectar to attract insects.

• They do have stamens and carpels.

• These flowers are pollinated by the wind.

Page 15: Flowering Plants

Insect Scattered PollenPetals

Colourful

Scented

Contain sweet liquid called

NECTAR

Anthers contain a small amount of large pollenExample

Roses

Dandelions

Page 16: Flowering Plants

Fertilisation

When the male gamete POLLEN

Gets inside the female gamete or EGG

They form a ZYGOTE

This is the first cell of a new plant

Page 17: Flowering Plants

Zygote

• The zygote grows to form a baby plant

• The first cells divide and form an EMBRYO

Page 18: Flowering Plants

Zygote

• The embryo starts to become a root

• If the flower has lots of ovules it makes lots of seeds (Apples)

Page 19: Flowering Plants

Seed or Fruit Formation

Testa

Food Supply(OIL and STARCH)

Plumule (Stem)Radicle (Root)The two together make the

EMBRYO

Page 20: Flowering Plants

Germination – When?

Page 21: Flowering Plants

Seeds Germination

Lateral roots form

Next the shoot grows up to the light

Embryo becomes primitive root

The first leavesZygote

forms here

Wet and warm conditions

Page 22: Flowering Plants

Seed dispersal

Seeds are dispersed in many different ways:

• Wind• Explosion• Water• Animals• Birds

Page 23: Flowering Plants

Seed DispersalThe carrying of the seed (and its surrounding fruit) as far away from the parent plant as possible

WIND

Dandelion

Sycamore

ANIMALS

EATEN

Berries

STICKY

Thistles

Page 24: Flowering Plants

SELF DISPERSAL

Fruit Wall (Pod)

Pod bursts and flings seeds out

WATER DISPERSAL

A floating seed is carried by sea or river

Page 25: Flowering Plants

How birds and animals help seed dispersal

• Some seeds are hidden in the ground as a winter store.

• Some fruits have hooks on them and cling to fur or clothes.

Page 26: Flowering Plants

How birds and animals help seed dispersal

• Birds and animals eat the fruits and excrete the seeds away from the parent plant.

Page 27: Flowering Plants

Asexual ReproductionA plant produces another plant without involving a second plant

No gamete cells are used.

The plant sends out runners

Page 28: Flowering Plants

Summary

Page 29: Flowering Plants

H/Wp 188-190

Q 5,6,9,11,12,15