Seed Plants

Gymnosperms

The four phyla of gymnosperms are cycads, ginkgo, gnetophytes, and conifers.

Gymnosperms have naked seeds. The seeds of angiosperms are contained within a fruit.

Gymnosperm Diversity

We will examine conifers in some detail during this lab class but will use photographs on the Internet to study the other three divisions. Click on the links below to view photographs of them.

Cycads

Cycads re cone-bearing palmlike plants found mainly in tropical and subtropical regions today. They were very numerous in the
Mesozoic Era.

Click here for The Cycad Encyclopedia.

Ginkgo

There is only one species of Ginkgo left. It survived due to Chinese planting them along roadsides.

Click here for information and photographs.

Gnetophytes:

Welwitschia (2 photographs and information)

Welwitschia and Ephedra (information and photographs)

Conifers

Conifers are the largest group of gymnosperms. They include evergreen trees such as pine, cedar, spruce, fir, and redwood trees.

1. Examine the leaves of pine on display.

The leaves of conifers are needle-like and are adapted for dry conditions such as hot summers or freezing winters. Needles lose water slower than broad, flat leaves and therefore do not need to be shed during seasons when water is scarce, so most conifers are evergreen.

Reproduction in Pine

1. Read Life Cycle of Seed Plants in the lecture notes.

2. Draw the life cycle of pine and include the following terms: eggs, embryo, fertilization, megagametophyte, megasporangium, megaspore, meiosis, microgametophyte, microsporangium, microspores, and zygote.

3. Observe the pine pollen cones on display. Is this structure haploid or diploid?

img002.jpg (95648 bytes) Pine pollen cones

4. View a slide showing a section (l.s.) of a pine pollen cone. Identify the microsporangium. Identify the microgametophytes. What is another name for microgametophyte?

img004.jpg (119914 bytes) Pine pollen (staminate) cone X 40

5. View a pine seed cone on display. Are there any seeds within the cone?

img003.jpg (32769 bytes) Seed Cone

6. View a slide showing a longitudinal section of a pine seed cone. Identify the integument, ovule, megasporangium, and megagametophyte. Which of these structures is part of the sporophyte? Which are haploid? Which are diploid?

img005.jpg (158836 bytes) Pine seed (ovulate) cone X 40
img006.jpg (138838 bytes) Pine Seed Cone X 40

7. View the pine seeds on display. From your drawing of the life cycle of pine, identify the structures that are part of the seed.

img007.jpg (24373 bytes) Pine seeds

Angiosperms

Create another diagram of the life cycle of seed plants that includes the following terms: eggs, embryo, fertilization, megagametophyte, megasporangium, megaspore, meiosis, microgametophyte, microsporangium, microspores, and zygote. This diagram will be used as a reference when viewing the reproductive structures of angiosperms.

Flower Parts

1. Obtain a monocot flower such as lily and identify the following structures: anther, filament, stamen, stigma, style, ovary, pistil, petals, sepals. State the function of each of these structures.

Lily flower.jpg (130634 bytes) Lily reproductive structures

2. Remove the petals, stamens and pistil. 

flower parts.jpg (106106 bytes) Stamens and pistil

3. How many petals are present? How many sepals? Is lily a monocot or a eudicot? List three characteristics that can be used to distinguish between monocots and eudicots.

Within the Ovary

1. Use a scalpel to cut a thin cross section slice from the ovary.  This can be done by cutting across the ovary and then slicing a thin section next to the first cut. Use a dissecting microscope to determine the number of carpels within the ovary. Identify the ovules. Which structures on the life cycle diagram are found within the ovules?

img013.jpg (56242 bytes) Lily ovary c.s. X 40

2. View a prepared slide of a lily mature female gametophyte. Identify the megagametophyte, Find the megagametophyte on the life cycle diagram. Try to find an egg and polar nuclei.

lily gametophyte1.jpg (175385 bytes) Lily gametophyte
lily gametophyte2.jpg (195313 bytes) Lily gametophyte

The photograph below shows a megaspore mother cell. It will divide by meiosis to produce megaspores.

lily ovulary megaspore mother cell X 100.jpg (192383 bytes) Lily ovulary megaspore mother cells X 100

 

img014.jpg (146041 bytes) Lily ovulary megaspore mother cells X 40
img015.jpg (128697 bytes) Megagametophyte 4 nuclei stage X 100

Within the Anther

1. Use a scalpel to cut a thin cross-section of a lily anther and view it under a dissecting microscope. Identify the microsporangium. Are pollen grains visible? What structures on the life cycle diagram are contained within the anther?

Meiosis occurs within the anther to produce microspores. Microspores undergo mitosis to produce microgametophytes (pollen grains). 

2. If you were unable to get a good view of a lily anther in the dissection above, view a prepared slide of a lily anther c.s. and identify the microsporangium and pollen grains. Find where these two structures are located on your life cycle diagram.

img010.jpg (114883 bytes) Cross section of a lily anther X 40

3. View a slide of lily pollen. identify the two nuclei.

img012.jpg (63042 bytes) Lily pollen X 200

4. View slides of germinated pollen. Note the three nuclei within the pollen tubes. One is a tube nucleus. It directs the growth of the pollen tube. The other two are sperm.

After Fertilization: Embryonic Development

1. The photograph below shows a developing lily embryo. Where does an embryo occur on the life cycle diagram?

img016.jpg (124684 bytes) Lily developing embryo X 40

2. View a slide of a Capsella early embryo. Identify the suspensor and cotyledons. Is Capsella a monocot or a eudicot?

img017.jpg (66771 bytes) Shepherd’s Purse (Capsella) embryo X 100

3. View a slide of a Capsella mature embryo. Identify the cotyledons, the tip of the growing root (root apical meristem) and the tip of the growing shoot (shoot apical meristem).

img018.jpg (132511 bytes) Capsella mature embryo X 40

4. Obtain a bean seed that has been soaking in water. Cut the seed in half so that each cotyledon is visible and examine it using a dissecting microscope. Identify the embryo.

img019.jpg (56104 bytes) Bean seed

5. Obtain a corn that has been soaking in water and cut it lengthwise. Use a dissecting microscope to identify the embryo, the cotyledon, and the endosperm.

img020.jpg (53676 bytes) Corn seed

6. Observe beans and corn on display that have been recently germinated. Identify the cotyledons on the beans. Can you see cotyledons on the corn? Can you identify the coleoptile?

germination.jpg (220679 bytes) Monocot and Eudicot Germination
 

Fruits

Angiosperms are distinguished from Gymnosperms in that the seeds are enclosed in a covering called the fruit.

Observe the sliced tomato. It is produced from several fused carpels. Can you see the carpels? How many are there?

Observe a strawberry or a blackberry. These fruits are formed from a single flower that contained many pistals.

Observe a pineapple. This fruit is produced by the fusion of many flowers. Can you see each individual fruit?