College Level Biology

Page 185

pollen sacs, which is where the pollen is formed. There are nectaries or a single nectary at the base of the stamens that secrete the food reward for the pollinators. In the middle of the flower are the carpels, collectively called the gynoecium. These are the female parts of the flower in which the megasporangia form. They enclose the ovules that have an egg inside. The ovule, after fertilization, will mature into a seed with the carpel maturing into a fruit. These carpels and fruit are unique to the angiosperm type of plant. A perfect bisexual flower will have both stamens and carpels, while a unisexual or imperfect flower will have no stamens (called carpellate) or no carpels (called staminate). Some plants will have staminate and carpellate flowers on the same plant and are monoecious. Species that have separate plants with staminate and carpellate flowers are called dioecious. The receptacle is the stem to which the flower or inflorescence is attached with the peduncle being the stalk of a flower. The calyx or cluster of sepals most resemble the leaves because they are green. Sepals can be separate (polysepalous) or fused (synsepalous), forming a tube rather than separate sepals. The corolla (or petals) of the flower will attract insects and birds for pollination).

POLLINATION Pollination involves the transfer of pollen from the anthers to the stigma of the same plant species so that there can be germination and growth of the pollen tube to the ovule. There can be self-pollination in some species or cross-pollination. Pollen transfer happens by water, wind, insects, birds, and other animals. Most of the animal crosspollination happens because of bees. They feed on the nectar and pollen so they can pollinate one or more species of plant. Plants that have adapted to this will have a flower that has a landing platform for the bees. These flowers are often yellow or blue in color in order to attract the bees. The first phase of pollination involves the landing of a pollen grain on a stigma of a receptive plant. It has glandular tissue that nourishes the pollen tube as it elongates and grows down the style of the flower. Flowers have a chemical mechanism that prevents 177


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Summary of the Course

5min
pages 250-252

Quiz

3min
pages 246-249

Key Takeaways

0
page 245

Ecosystems

3min
pages 239-240

Population Ecology

3min
pages 241-242

Quiz

3min
pages 232-235

Key Takeaways

0
page 231

Respiratory Systems

3min
pages 218-220

Endocrine Systems

3min
pages 225-226

Immune Systems

5min
pages 221-224

Reproductive Systems

6min
pages 227-230

Digestive Systems

1min
page 217

Nervous Systems

2min
pages 215-216

Quiz

3min
pages 209-211

Key Takeaways

0
page 208

Fungal Reproduction

2min
pages 203-204

Fungal Physiology

1min
page 202

Fungal Anatomy

5min
pages 198-201

Ecology of Fungi

3min
pages 205-207

Quiz

2min
pages 193-196

Plant Biotechnology

0
page 191

Key Takeaways

0
page 192

Transpiration

3min
pages 189-190

Fruits

1min
page 187

Pollination

2min
pages 185-186

Soil Utilization and Plant Nutrition

2min
page 188

Flowers

0
page 184

Quiz

2min
pages 173-176

Reproduction of Plants

1min
page 183

Plant Morphology

3min
pages 180-182

Key Takeaways

0
page 172

Protista

5min
pages 164-168

The Different Animal Phyla

3min
pages 169-171

Quiz

3min
pages 152-155

Archaea

6min
pages 160-163

History of Evolution on Earth and Origin of Species

11min
pages 143-150

Key Takeaways

0
page 151

Modern Synthesis in Evolution

3min
pages 141-142

Natural Selection

7min
pages 137-140

Quiz

3min
pages 132-135

Genome

1min
page 127

Regulation of Gene Expression

3min
pages 128-130

Gene Mutations

1min
page 126

Chromosomes and Genes

3min
pages 124-125

DNA and Genetics

1min
pages 122-123

Dominant Inheritance

1min
page 120

Quiz

2min
pages 112-115

Key Takeaways

0
page 111

Chloroplasts

3min
pages 108-110

Photosynthesis

4min
pages 105-107

Fermentation

2min
pages 102-104

Oxidative Phosphorylation

4min
pages 99-101

Glycolysis

5min
pages 94-97

Quiz

3min
pages 90-92

Krebs Cycle or Citric Acid Cycle

0
page 98

Meiosis

1min
pages 86-88

Mitosis

1min
page 85

The Cell Cycle

1min
page 84

Mitochondrial Physiology

1min
page 82

Endoplasmic Reticulum

0
page 77

Nucleus

1min
page 76

Organelles

1min
page 74

Cytoskeleton

0
page 75

Key Takeaways

0
page 67

Bacterial Motility

1min
page 66

Quiz

2min
pages 68-71

Prokaryote Cell Division

2min
page 65

Classifying Bacteria

1min
page 64

Bacterial Genetics

1min
page 62

Bacterial Physiology

1min
page 61

Bacterial Communication

1min
page 63

Quiz

3min
pages 53-55

Prokaryote Structure

5min
pages 57-60

Non-Human Viral Infections

2min
pages 50-51

Epidemics from Viruses

1min
page 48

The Virome

1min
page 43

Virus Replication

3min
pages 44-45

Viruses and Disease

1min
page 47

Origins of Viruses

1min
page 38

The Replication of the Viral Genome

1min
page 46

Viral Structure

3min
pages 39-42

What is a Virus?

1min
page 37

Proteins

2min
pages 24-25

Nucleic Acids

1min
page 26

Quiz

2min
pages 31-34

Key Takeaways

0
page 30

Water and Biology

3min
pages 27-29

Organic molecules

3min
pages 19-20

Lipids

2min
pages 22-23

Preface

5min
pages 9-11
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