Tag: structure of male and female reproductive structures
Questions Related to structure of male and female reproductive structures
A non-nutritive structure is
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Tapetum
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Endosperm
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Integument
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Palisade parenchyma
Study of fruit is known as
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Pomology
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Palynology
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Dendrology
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Anthology
Pomology (from Latin pomum (fruit) + logy) is a branch of botany that studies and cultivates fruit.
Development of seed from an unfertilised egg is called as
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Vivipary
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Parthenocarpy
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Apomixis
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Apospory
After fertilization____develops into seed and___into fruit.
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Endosperm and Ovary
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Ovary and ovule
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Embryo sac and ovary
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Ovule and ovary
Plant fertilization is a process in which a male gamete, pollen, is transferred to the female reproductive organ to fuse with an ovule, as a part of the sexual reproduction. After fertilization, the ovule develops into a seed and the ovary develops into the fruit.
How many generation and genotypic cells are present in angiosperm seeds.
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Three and two respectively
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One and two respectively
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Two and three respectively
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One and three respectively
Identify the incorrect statement.
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Drupe develops from monocarpellary inferior ovary with stony endocarp
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Phyllode is analogous to cladophyll
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Supporting roots arise from lower nodes in maize
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Axillary buds are modified into woody, pointed structures in Citrus
Seed coat is formed by
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Integument
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Nucellus
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Fruit wall
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None of the above
Integument is an envelope of one or more layers, each of two or more cell layers, covering the ovule, leaving only a pore, the micropyle, through which the pollen tube can enter. It may develop into the testa or seed coat. Seed coat is the outer protective covering of a seed.
The structures develops into the seed once fertilization has occurred is
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Integument
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Cotyledon
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Ovule
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Ovary
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Endosperm
The event of double fertilization and subsequent growth and development results in the development of ovule into the seed. Each seed contains a young plant embryo and nutritive tissue (the endosperm), both of which are surrounded by a protective seed coat (derived from integument). Monocots have persistent endosperm that serves as amain source of food in the mature seed. Eudicots endosperm nourishes the developing embryo and subsequently stores food in its cotyledons. During development of seed from an ovule following fertilization, the ovary wall surrounding it enlarges and develops into a fruit wall while ovary makes fruit. Thus, the correct answer is D
The structures that develops into the fruit once fertilization has occurred is
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Integument
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Cotyledon
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Ovule
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Ovary
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Endosperm
The event of double fertilization and subsequent growth and development results in the development of ovule into the seed. Each seed contains a young plant embryo and nutritive tissue (the endosperm), both of which are surrounded by a protective seed coat (derived from integument). Monocots have persistent endosperm that serves as a main source of food in the mature seed. Eudicots endosperm nourishes the developing embryo and subsequently stores food in its cotyledons. During development of seed from an ovule following fertilization, the ovary wall surrounding it enlarges and develops into a fruit wall while ovary makes fruit. Thus, the correct answer is D
The endosperm tissue in plants
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Differentiates to form root structures
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Provides nutrients to the plant embryo
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Gives rise to male gametes that make up pollen
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Makes up the photosynthetic cells inside the leaves
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Forms the tissues that transport water and nutrients
The endosperm is the tissue produced inside the seeds of the flowering plants by triple fusion of two central nuclei and one male nuclei in embryo sac. This tissue surrounds the embryo and provides nutrition to it in the form of starch while in some seeds these are completely absorbed by the time they mature, in others, the endosperm is present till the seeds germinate.