Plant Reproduction 
By: 
Muhammad Iqbal khan 
SS Biology 
Govt. Higher Secondary School Mochh Distt. Mianwali Pakistan 
Email ID: mikhan1313@yahoo.com 
Mob: 092313544815 
Skype: iqbal8180
• Is a seed alive? Is a fruit alive? Answer 
as completely as you can on your own 
paper. (Hang on to your paper until the 
end of class.) 
WORK 
TOGETHER
Asexual Reproduction 
• Asexual reproduction is natural 
“cloning.” Parts of the plant, such as 
leaves or stems, produce roots and 
become an independent plant. 
• List some benefits and some drawbacks 
to asexual reproduction.
Sexual Reproduction 
• Sexual reproduction requires fusion of 
male cells in the pollen grain with 
female cells in the ovule. 
• List some advantages and drawbacks to 
sexual reproduction.
Terms to know: 
• Haploid: having a single set of 
chromosomes in each cell. 
• Diploid: having two sets of 
chromosomes in each cell. 
• Mitosis: cell division, which produces 
two genetically identical cells. 
• Meiosis: reduction division, which 
produces four haploid reproductive 
cells.
Plant Life Cycle
Animals vs. Plants 
Plant Reproduction Animal Reproduction 
Life cycle Alternation of 
generations 
No alternation of 
generations 
Gametes Haploid gametes Haploid gametes 
Spores Haploid spores No spores 
Gametes made 
by 
Haploid gametophyte, 
by mitosis 
Diploid organism, by 
meiosis 
Spores made 
by 
Diploid sporophyte, by 
meiosis No spores
Alternation of Generations 
• Plants have a double life cycle with two 
distinct forms: 
• Sporophyte: diploid, produce haploid 
spores by meiosis. 
• Gametophyte: haploid, produce 
gametes by mitosis.
Non-flowering plants 
• Mosses, ferns, and related plants have 
motile, swimming sperm. 
• What kind of environmental conditions 
would be required for reproduction in 
these plants? 
• What kinds of limits does external 
reproduction impose on these plants?
Moss Life Cycle
Fern Life Cycle
Conifers 
• Conifers (also non-flowering plants) 
have reduced gametophytes. 
• Male gametophyte is contained in a 
dry pollen grain. 
• Female gametophyte is a few cells 
inside of the structures that become 
the seed.
Conifer life cycle
Conifer pollination 
• Conifers are wind-pollinated plants. 
• Chance allows some pollen to land on the 
scales of female cones. 
• Pollen germinates, grows a pollen tube 
into the egg to allow sperm to fertilize the 
egg. 
• What are some advantages and 
disadvantages to wind pollination?
Pollen go-betweens 
• Showy flowers are the result of selection 
for more efficient pollination strategies. 
• Flower parts are modified leaves. Those 
that were brightly colored attracted 
insects in search of pollen. 
• Why would insects search for pollen? 
What other rewards do flowers offer? 
• What are advantages and disadvantages 
to relying on insects as pollinators?
Flowers
Flower Parts
Incomplete flowers 
• Flowers are complete if they have all 
parts, and perfect if they have both male 
and female parts. 
• Grass flowers: incomplete, usually 
imperfect (separate male and female 
flowers) 
• A tulip is complete (though the sepals 
are the same color as the petals) and 
perfect.
Imperfect flowers
Angiosperm Life Cycle
Gametogenesis: Male
Gametogenesis: Female
Double Fertilization
Flower to Fruit
Ovule to Seed
Seed Anatomy
Seed Germination
• Use what you have learned about plant 
life cycles to explain why most mosses 
and ferns live in moist environments, but 
flowering plants can live just about 
anywhere. 
WORK 
TOGETHER

Plant reproduction, sexual and asexual

  • 1.
    Plant Reproduction By: Muhammad Iqbal khan SS Biology Govt. Higher Secondary School Mochh Distt. Mianwali Pakistan Email ID: [email protected] Mob: 092313544815 Skype: iqbal8180
  • 2.
    • Is aseed alive? Is a fruit alive? Answer as completely as you can on your own paper. (Hang on to your paper until the end of class.) WORK TOGETHER
  • 3.
    Asexual Reproduction •Asexual reproduction is natural “cloning.” Parts of the plant, such as leaves or stems, produce roots and become an independent plant. • List some benefits and some drawbacks to asexual reproduction.
  • 4.
    Sexual Reproduction •Sexual reproduction requires fusion of male cells in the pollen grain with female cells in the ovule. • List some advantages and drawbacks to sexual reproduction.
  • 5.
    Terms to know: • Haploid: having a single set of chromosomes in each cell. • Diploid: having two sets of chromosomes in each cell. • Mitosis: cell division, which produces two genetically identical cells. • Meiosis: reduction division, which produces four haploid reproductive cells.
  • 6.
  • 7.
    Animals vs. Plants Plant Reproduction Animal Reproduction Life cycle Alternation of generations No alternation of generations Gametes Haploid gametes Haploid gametes Spores Haploid spores No spores Gametes made by Haploid gametophyte, by mitosis Diploid organism, by meiosis Spores made by Diploid sporophyte, by meiosis No spores
  • 8.
    Alternation of Generations • Plants have a double life cycle with two distinct forms: • Sporophyte: diploid, produce haploid spores by meiosis. • Gametophyte: haploid, produce gametes by mitosis.
  • 9.
    Non-flowering plants •Mosses, ferns, and related plants have motile, swimming sperm. • What kind of environmental conditions would be required for reproduction in these plants? • What kinds of limits does external reproduction impose on these plants?
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12.
    Conifers • Conifers(also non-flowering plants) have reduced gametophytes. • Male gametophyte is contained in a dry pollen grain. • Female gametophyte is a few cells inside of the structures that become the seed.
  • 13.
  • 14.
    Conifer pollination •Conifers are wind-pollinated plants. • Chance allows some pollen to land on the scales of female cones. • Pollen germinates, grows a pollen tube into the egg to allow sperm to fertilize the egg. • What are some advantages and disadvantages to wind pollination?
  • 15.
    Pollen go-betweens •Showy flowers are the result of selection for more efficient pollination strategies. • Flower parts are modified leaves. Those that were brightly colored attracted insects in search of pollen. • Why would insects search for pollen? What other rewards do flowers offer? • What are advantages and disadvantages to relying on insects as pollinators?
  • 16.
  • 17.
  • 18.
    Incomplete flowers •Flowers are complete if they have all parts, and perfect if they have both male and female parts. • Grass flowers: incomplete, usually imperfect (separate male and female flowers) • A tulip is complete (though the sepals are the same color as the petals) and perfect.
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21.
  • 22.
  • 23.
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26.
  • 27.
  • 28.
    • Use whatyou have learned about plant life cycles to explain why most mosses and ferns live in moist environments, but flowering plants can live just about anywhere. WORK TOGETHER

Editor's Notes

  • #4 Fast, no mate required. Beneficial for plants that must compete for scarce resources. However, all individuals are genetically identical.
  • #5 Fusion of egg and sperm cells. May be limited to a certain season. Slower than asexual reproduction. Allows genetic mixing, increasing variability in a population.
  • #10 Reproduction in these plants requires wet conditions, and requires having male and female parts close together. Living conditions, plant size, and genetic mixing is limited.
  • #16 Pollen itself is a protein-rich food for insects. Some plants offer other rewards, such as nectar.