Fertilisation: Flowering Plants (Edexcel International A Level Biology): Revision Note
Fertilisation in Flowering Plants
Sexual reproduction in flowering plants requires the transfer of pollen between male and female parts of flowers
The development of flowers occurs in the reproductive stage of the plant life cycle
Flowers contain all the necessary organs and tissues required for sexual reproduction by pollination
Key structures of the flower include
The anther - where pollen is produced
The stigma - part of the female reproductive organ which receives the pollen
The ovary - where the female gametes are located
Flowers usually contain both male and female reproductive parts
The male reproductive parts produce pollen
The transferal of pollen from the anther to the stigma is known as pollination
Double fertilisation
After pollination has occurred, the pollen grain begins to 'grow' or 'germinate' and a pollen tube grows from the pollen grain down the style to the ovary of the plant
As the pollen tube grows towards the ovary, two haploid male nuclei move down the tube
These are known as the pollen tube nucleus and the generative nucleus
At some point, as it travels down the pollen tube, the generative nucleus divides by mitosis to form a further two haploid male nuclei
These are the male gametes
The two haploid male nuclei travel down the pollen tube towards the female ovule
As the pollen tube reaches the ovule, the pollen tube nucleus breaks down and the two haploid male nuclei pass into the ovule so that fertilisation can occur
In fact, a process known as double fertilisation occurs:
One haploid male nucleus fuses with the nucleus of the egg cell to form a diploid zygote
The other haploid male nucleus fuses with two polar nuclei present in the ovule to form a triploid endosperm nucleus, which will form the endosperm (the food supply for the embryo plant when it begins to germinate)
The process of double fertilisation in plants, in which one male nucleus fuses with the two polar nuclei to form the triploid endosperm nucleus and the other fuses with the egg cell to form the diploid zygote
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Students often get confused between pollination and fertilisation in plants, but they are not the same thing. Think of pollination as the plant’s equivalent to sexual intercourse in mammals – after sexual intercourse, the male sex cells (sperm) have been deposited into the female. But, for fertilisation to occur, the nucleus of a male sperm cell has to fuse with the nucleus of a female sex cell (egg) and the sperm has to travel to find the egg before this happens. It’s exactly the same in plants!
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