Component 2.4 - Pollination And Fertilisation Flashcards

1
Q

Insect vs wind pollinated - petals

A

Insect: colourful petals with nectar guides
Wind: petals usually absent, small, green

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2
Q

Insect vs wind pollinated - nectar

A

Insect: scent and nectar (mainly sucrose)
Wind: no scent or nectar

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3
Q

Insect vs wind pollinated - anther

A

Insect: anthers within the flower
Wind: anthers hanging outside the flower

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4
Q

Insect vs wind pollinated - stigma

A

Insect: stigma within flower
Wind: large, feathery stigma hangs outside flower

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5
Q

Insect vs wind pollinated - pollen

A

Insect: small quantities of sticky, sculptured pollen
Wind: large quantities of smooth pollen

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6
Q

Development of male gamete

A

1) Mitosis to form large numbers of pollen mother cells

2) Diploid mother cell forms 4 haploid cells - meiosis

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7
Q

What is the role of the tapetum

A

It is a layer of cells around the pollen sac providing nutrients to the pollen grains and has a significant role in the formation of the cell wall

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8
Q

What special features does the pollen cell wall have

A

It is tough and chemical resistant which means 1) it resists desiccation so the pollen can move around 2) UV light cannot penetrate seed so DNA is protected from mutation

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9
Q

How is pollen released

A

Outer layers of the anther dry out causing tension in the lateral grooves which pulls the anther apart and edges of the pollen sac away

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10
Q

Development of female gamete

A

1) Megaspore mother cell splits into four haploid megaspores- meiosis
2) Three of the four cells disintegrate
3) Remaining cell undergoes 3 rounds of mitosis - 8 haploid nuclei within embryo sac
4) 1 is the female gamete and 2 fuse to firm a diploid polar nucleus

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11
Q

What is the role of the nucellus

A

Provide nutrients

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12
Q

Disadvantages of self-fertilisation

A

1) Relies on independent assortment and crossing over for genetic variation. Less variation than cross-fertilised species
2) Greater chance if two recessive alleles being brought together in fertilisation

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13
Q

Advantages of self-fertilisation

A

Can preserve successful genomes are suited to a stable environment

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14
Q

What is pollination?

A

The transfer of pollen from an anther to a stigma

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15
Q

Advantages of cross pollination

A

1) Combines gametes from two individuals (random fertilisation), meiosis and mutation results in increased variation
2) Outbreeding reduces chance of harmful allele combinations

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16
Q

How do plants ensure cross pollination?

A

1) Anther is below stigma so pollen can’t fall on it
2) Pollen cannot germinate on the stigma of the flower that produced it
3) Separate male or female flowers/plants

17
Q

Describe the growth of the pollen tube in double fertilisation

A

1) Pollen grain germinates if on a compatible stigma
2) Mitosis of pollen grain nucleus to produce generative nucleus (which splits into two male gametes) and a pollen tube nucleus
3) Pollen tube grows under control of pollen tube nucleus through the digestion of the style by hydrolase enzymes
4) Pollen tube grows through micropyle and passes into embryo sac

18
Q

What happens after the pollen tube has reached the embryo sack

A

1) The pollen tube nucleus disintegrates
2) Pollen tube opens releasing two male gametes
3) Male gamete fuses with female gamete to make a diploid zygote
4) Male gamete + two polar nuclei fuse to form a primary endosperm nucleus

19
Q

What happens to the triploid nucleus?

A

It divides by mitosis to generate endosperm tissue which takes over from the nucellus to provide nutrients, acting as an important food storage tissue

20
Q

Describe the development of the fruit and seed

A

1) Integument dries out and becomes testa
2) Micropyle remains as a pore in the testa
3) Ovule develops into a seed
4) The ovary wall develops into a fruit wall enclosing the seeds
5) Diploid zygote divides by mitosis to form diploid embryo (plumule, radicle and one or two cotyledons)

21
Q

What’s the difference between monocotyledon and dicotyledon?

A

In a dicotyledon the endosperm absorbs into the cotyledons so it is a non-endospermic seed but in a monocotyledon the endosperm remains as food store whilst the cotyledon stays small.

22
Q

How is a one seeded fruit formed in a monocotyledon (endospermic seed)?

A

The testa of the seed fuses with the ovary wall.