Notes On Studying Pollen Germination
Notes On Studying Pollen Germination
1. Objective:
2. Materials Needed:
o Glass slide.
3. Procedure:
4. Observation:
5. Outcome:
Outbreeding Devices
4. Self-Incompatibility:
5. Unisexual Flowers:
o Monoecious Plants: Male and female flowers are on the same plant (e.g., castor,
maize).
▪ Outcome: Prevents autogamy but allows geitonogamy.
o Dioecious Plants: Male and female flowers are on different plants (e.g., papaya).
1. Definition:
o A dynamic process ensuring compatibility between pollen and pistil, crucial for
successful fertilization.
Key Concepts:
2. Recognition Process:
o Pollen grain germinates on stigma, forming a pollen tube through a germ pore.
o Pollen tube grows through stigma and style tissues, reaching the ovary.
▪ Two male gametes are already present and carried by the pollen tube.
Definition:
1. Emasculation:
2. Bagging:
o Definition: Covering emasculated flowers with a bag (usually made of butter paper)
to prevent contamination from unwanted pollen.
o Steps:
▪ The stigma is exposed when receptive and pollinated with desired pollen.
Endosperm Development
Embryo Development
Seed Formation
Fruit Development
1. Transformation:
o Ovules → Seeds.
o Ovary → Fruit (pericarp forms fruit wall).
2. Types:
o True Fruits: Develop from ovary (e.g., mango, guava).
o False Fruits: Thalamus contributes (e.g., apple, strawberry).
3. Seed-Fruit Relationship: Number of ovules determines number of seeds.
4. Dispersal Mechanisms: Adaptations for spreading seeds.
Importance of Seeds
1. Agriculture:
o Crucial for food storage and crop raising.
o Dormancy aids in storage and survival.
2. Viability:
o Varies greatly; some last months, others hundreds of years (e.g., Lupinus
arcticus: 10,000 years).
3. Reproductive Capacity:
o Orchids and parasitic species like Orobanche produce thousands of seeds.
o Tiny seeds (e.g., Ficus) grow into massive trees producing billions of seeds.
Questions to Explore
1. Number of eggs per embryo sac, sacs per ovule, ovules per ovary, and flowers per
plant.
2. Examples of plants with large seed numbers and biomass production (e.g., Ficus,
orchids).