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Lecture 14: Seeds and Fruit: Lecture 14: Seeds and Fruit Seeds
Fruits
Fruit types
Seed dispersal
Video: seed dispersal
Real fruit samples
What is a seed?: What is a seed? A matured ovule, containing:
1. a plant __________
2. a food supply
3. covered by a _____________
Embryo: Embryo The seed contains a well-formed multicellular young plant embryo (germ)
Embryo is _________ (2n)
It will become a whole plant
Nutritive tissue: Nutritive tissue Seed contains a food supply
Stored food contains enough energy for the embryo to grow through the soil, when seedling is unable to photosynthesize.
Food source can be the _________, which is ______ (_n) – as a result of double fertilization
Seed coat: Seed coat A thick protective coat – outer layer of the seed
Formed from the _______________
Seed coat
Gymnosperm seed: Gymnosperm seed Single fertilization produces the diploid embryo (2n)
Food source is the haploid megagametophyte
Flowering plant seed: Flowering plant seed In angiosperms (flowering plants) there is
DOUBLE _______________
Which produces a diploid ________(2n) and,
A triploid (3n) __________
Endosperm is the food source
Dicot vs. monocot seed: Dicot vs. monocot seed Dicot has two cotyledons (like bean)
Endosperm (food) is kept in the _________
Monocot has one __________ which absorbs the endosperm tissue during germination (corn)
Fruit: Fruit In flowering plants – Fruit is a mature, ripened o_____ that contains the seeds
Pericarp – the ovary wall
ovary Fruit types
A. Simple
B. Aggregate
C. Multiple
A. Simple fruit: A. Simple fruit A. Simple fruit – develops from a ______ ovary of a single flower.
Simple fruits can be either fleshy or dry when mature
Simple fleshy fruit
1. __________
2. Hesperidium
3. __________
4. Pepo
5. _________
Simple fleshy fruit: Simple fleshy fruit 1. Berry – entire fruit wall is soft and fleshy at maturity. Inside is slimy.
For example, grapes, tomato, etc. 2. _______________ is a berry with tough, leathery rind (peel)
Examples: oranges, lemons, other citrus.
Simple fleshy fruit: drupe: Simple fleshy fruit: drupe 3. _______ type – outer part of fruit wall is soft and fleshy, inner part is hard and stony
For example: ______________________
Simple fleshy fruit: pepo: Simple fleshy fruit: pepo 4. ________ – also a fleshy fruit with a tougher outer rind
All member of the squash family: pumpkin, melons, cucumbers
Simple fleshy fruit: pome: Simple fleshy fruit: pome 5. Pomes: most of the fleshy part of pomes develops from the enlarged base of the perianth (corolla and calyx) that has fused with the ovary wall
Pomes include ___________________
Simple dry fruit: capsule: Simple dry fruit: capsule Simple dry fruits are dry (not fleshy) at maturity. Simple dry fruits that open at maturity include: capsules and legumes
Capsule – fruit is dry at maturity and splits open along several seams
Example: Cotton
Simple dry fruit: Legumes: Simple dry fruit: Legumes Legumes are dry at maturity and split open along _______ seams
Examples: pea pods, bean pods, peanut
Simple dry fruits: Simple dry fruits Simple dry fruits that do NOT open at maturity include
Caryopsis: seed coat is fused to the ovary wall (cereal grains like ____________________)
Nuts: single-ovary wall and seed coat remain separate, ovary wall is very hard (acorns)
B. _____________: B. _____________ __________ fruit develops from one flower with many separate pistils/carpels, all ripening simultaneously
Examples: strawberry, raspberries, blackberries
C. Multiple fruit: C. Multiple fruit Multiple fruit develops from ovaries of several flowers borne/fused together on the same stalk
For example: ____________
What is the purpose of the fruit?: What is the purpose of the fruit? The main function of the fruit is to disperse the seeds
Dispersal is important because
1. It spreads the progeny in order to colonize new environments
2. Reduces ______________ for resources with parents
3. Reduces the chances of predators destroying all of the plant’s yearly seed production
Four types of seed dispersal:
A. Self dispersal
B. ______ dispersal
C. Water dispersal
D. _______ dispersal
A. Self dispersal: A. Self dispersal Plants disperse their seeds by forceful ejection – explosive fruits!
Witch hazel, squirting cucumber (jet propulsion)
Self dispersal: Self dispersal The peanut plant sows (buries) its own seeds!
Geocarpic: carpel grows inside the earth (soil)
B. Wind dispersal: B. Wind dispersal Fruit and seeds may have special devices for wind dispersal
Plumes catch wind currents: Dandelion
Trees take advantage of their great heights for wind dispersal. Fruits with wings are used to slow the descent to land: maple, ash fruit
C. ___________ Dispersal: C. ___________ Dispersal Fruits and/or seeds use flotation devices to travel by water (in rivers, oceans, etc.)
Fruit may have air spaces and corky floats: for example ________________
D. Animal dispersal: D. Animal dispersal Plants have _____________ with animals to accomplish seed dispersal
Many plants depend on animals for seed dispersal; they may offer a nutritional reward
Animals learn to recognize ripened fruit colors
Fleshy fruits eaten and dispersed with feces
Animal dispersal: Animal dispersal Some dry fruit attach and cling to animals (they hitchhike on the animals)
Some have Velcro-like hooks that cling to animal fur (burdock, cockleburs)
Others have sticky substances that stick to host (mistletoe)
Video on seed dispersal: Video on seed dispersal Watch the video, take notes, answer these questions:
What carries the dandelion seeds for miles?
What feature of trees gives them a particular advantage when dispersing seeds by air?
How does the squirting cucumber disperse its seeds?
Although plants use wind and water, what do most plants use as carriers for their seeds?
Blackberries on a tree do not ripen simultaneously, why?
What plant do elephants help to disperse? How do they do it? What percentage of these seeds germinate in elephant dung? Why?