Contributor: Hannah Brooks. Lesson ID: 12835
Have you ever seen two rose bushes out on a date? Of course not! So, how do plants reproduce? Learn the interesting ways plants continue on from generation to generation!
Blooming flowers usually mark spring, but flowers are more than just a beautiful part of a plant. They are the reproductive system of angiosperms.
In a previous Plants lesson, you learned that vascular plants are organized based on how they reproduce. If you missed or need to review the last series of lessons, find them in the right-hand sidebar under Related Lessons.
This lesson takes a more in-depth view of plant reproduction. If you remember, there were three modes of reproduction: spores, cones, and flowers.
Plants like ferns release spores. These are tiny structures that are capable of growing into a new organism on their own. This is the simplest form of reproduction in plants.
Spores allow for a wide distribution of offspring, but they do not increase genetic diversity for a species.
Genetic diversity is all a species's genetic makeup. Species with high genetic diversity can survive disease and environmental changes, while species with low genetic diversity can be vulnerable to damage and death.
If a plant does not use spores, it will use seeds to develop offspring. Seeds are a product of sexual reproduction in plants and provide necessary nutrients for the development of plants.
Sexual reproduction helps provide genetic diversity for species. Both gymnosperms — plants with cones — and angiosperms — plants with flowers — carry out sexual reproduction, but angiosperms use flowers to hold developing seeds.
Pollen is the male cell that fertilizes a plant's egg cell.
In a gymnosperm, pollen reaches the egg when the wind blows the pollen onto a female cone. Female cones hold eggs but do not store them inside like a flower; therefore, pollen can quickly meet an egg cell.
Once the pollen and egg are united, fertilization occurs, and a seed develops in the cone. These cones provide minimal protection to the developing plant seeds.
Angiosperms have flowers that can better protect the developing seed. Flowers have several important parts.
You will learn more about flower components in the Got It? section, where you will complete a virtual flower dissection! For now, focus on what drives the actual creation of a new plant: pollination.
Pollination occurs when pollen is transferred from the male anther to the female stigma.
This can happen through self-pollination, where the plant pollinates itself, or through cross-pollination, where other flowers pollinate the stigma. Insects like bees and butterflies and animals like hummingbirds aid cross-pollination.
Once the pollination occurs, a tube grows into the flower. This tube allows the pollen to reach the egg cell, leading to fertilization.
Pollination must occur before fertilization can occur!
A zygote forms that will eventually develop into a whole new plant. This zygote will be the developing plant found within a seed.
Seeds are essential to plants because they protect and support plants as they develop from fertilization into new plants.
Seeds have a seed coat that protects the inside of the seed from damage. Inside the seed is a large store of food and nutrients for the developing plant.
Plants use various reproductive strategies to continue producing plants, ranging from simple spores to complex flower interactions. Plant reproduction happens throughout the year, so pay attention the next time you walk outside.
In the Got It? section, you will learn more about flowers and their role in reproduction.