This document discusses different modes of reproduction in plants and animals. It explains that reproduction ensures the continuity of species and is either sexual or asexual. Sexual reproduction involves the union of male and female gametes to produce offspring, while asexual reproduction does not. In plants, sexual reproduction occurs through flowering and production of seeds, while asexual reproduction happens vegetatively from parts like stems. Animals can reproduce sexually through internal fertilization and birth of young or through laying eggs.
SCIENCE - Reproduction in plants (CLASS VII - CBSE BOARD)Pooja M
SCIENCE
Reproduction in plants
(CLASS VII)
CBSE BOARD
Types of reroduction in plants
tpes of asexual reproduction in plant
Vegetative propagation
Budding
Fragmentation
Spore formation
Sexual reproduction in plants
Parts of flower
Asexual reproduction is a process in which new organism is produced from a single parent without the involvement of gametes or cells. Many unicellular and multi cellular organisms reproduce asexually.
HOW TO PLANT GROW ? TOTAL SOLUTION WITH POWER POINT PRESENTATION, PRESENTATION IS CREATE BY MANAS KUMAR KHANDWAL, CLASS 8, SECTION B, THE ASIAN SCHOOL DEHRADUN. PLEASE SEND USEFUL SUGGESTION TO ME AT manasansha@gmail.com
SCIENCE - Reproduction in plants (CLASS VII - CBSE BOARD)Pooja M
SCIENCE
Reproduction in plants
(CLASS VII)
CBSE BOARD
Types of reroduction in plants
tpes of asexual reproduction in plant
Vegetative propagation
Budding
Fragmentation
Spore formation
Sexual reproduction in plants
Parts of flower
Asexual reproduction is a process in which new organism is produced from a single parent without the involvement of gametes or cells. Many unicellular and multi cellular organisms reproduce asexually.
HOW TO PLANT GROW ? TOTAL SOLUTION WITH POWER POINT PRESENTATION, PRESENTATION IS CREATE BY MANAS KUMAR KHANDWAL, CLASS 8, SECTION B, THE ASIAN SCHOOL DEHRADUN. PLEASE SEND USEFUL SUGGESTION TO ME AT manasansha@gmail.com
Programed instructional material: Reproduction in PlantsAtul Thakur
This is an initial attempt by my students of B.Ed. in creating Programmed Instructional material using the template I had provided them. Your observations and suggestions are welcome!
REPRODUCTION
Reproduction is the capacity of all living things to give rise to new living things. It includes the transmission of hereditary material from the parent/parents.
The two types of reproduction are:
Asexual Reproduction
Sexual Reproduction
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION
Is the simplest form of reproduction. Occurs in plants, animals, bacteria, and protists Requires one parent. Is more reliable than sexual reproduction. Doesn’t allow for any type of genetic variation.
TYPES
Sporulation
Fragmentation
Regeneration
Binary Fission
Budding
Vegetative propagation
SPORULATION
Spore is a reproductive cell that produces a new organism.
Spores are unicellular if conditions are right a spore will develop into a new individual.
They can be carried by the wind, water, or animals
FRAGMENTATION
When a organism is broken into more than one part.
Organism must have good regeneration abilities.
Create many new organisms quickly.
REGENERATION
An organism can replace/re-grow an injured or lost part
Regeneration in plants from
Roots
Stem
leaf
Regeneration in animals
For simple organisms
No vertebrates have this power
Examples are starfish and the salamander
BINARY FISSION
One parent dividing into two by mitosis
Offspring are always genetically identical
Cells may stay close together to form filaments or colonies
Examples-Bacteria and Amoebas
BUDDING
Form on part of the parent by growing an outgrowth which then detaches
Example- is Hydra and Yeast
Offspring will always be genetically identical to the parent
VEGETATIVE PROPOGATION
Plant parts make new plant
Reproduction is very quick
Disadvantage: many plants grow close to each other
Bulbs
– Underground stem
– Surrounded by colorless leaves
– Colorless leaves protect the bulb
– The green leaves store the food
Rhizomes
– Underground stem
– They store food for new plant
– At the end of Rhizomes nodes
Runners(strawberries)
– They are above ground.
– Stems – Nodes form at the end of Runners
– They grow outward
Tuber (potatoes)
– Underground stem
– Stores food
– The nodes eat the tuber
– Potatoes have eyes / buds to make new tubers and or reproduce
Grafting
– Surgically connecting two similar plants
– Ex. Apples – Not done naturally
Cutting
– Cutting off a stem or leaf to reproduce a new plant
– Must be in wet or moist area
– Combination of regeneration and fragmentation
– Not done naturally
Cloning
What is cloning?
Cloning is the creation of an organism that is an exact genetic copy of another. This means that every single bit of DNA is the same between the two!
How does one go about making an exact genetic copy of an organism? There are a couple of ways to do this: artificial embryo twinning and somatic cell nuclear transfer.
This power point is prepared to made easy to understand the method of asexual reproduction in plants for students.It covers both Natural and Artificial Methods of Asexual Reproduction in plants.
This is a quick review which may save your time...
Enjoy... :)
7th grade Life Science Powerpoint on the basics of plant reproduction. Flowers, pistil, stamen, pollination, fertilization, pollen dispersal, seed dispersal.
Programed instructional material: Reproduction in PlantsAtul Thakur
This is an initial attempt by my students of B.Ed. in creating Programmed Instructional material using the template I had provided them. Your observations and suggestions are welcome!
REPRODUCTION
Reproduction is the capacity of all living things to give rise to new living things. It includes the transmission of hereditary material from the parent/parents.
The two types of reproduction are:
Asexual Reproduction
Sexual Reproduction
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION
Is the simplest form of reproduction. Occurs in plants, animals, bacteria, and protists Requires one parent. Is more reliable than sexual reproduction. Doesn’t allow for any type of genetic variation.
TYPES
Sporulation
Fragmentation
Regeneration
Binary Fission
Budding
Vegetative propagation
SPORULATION
Spore is a reproductive cell that produces a new organism.
Spores are unicellular if conditions are right a spore will develop into a new individual.
They can be carried by the wind, water, or animals
FRAGMENTATION
When a organism is broken into more than one part.
Organism must have good regeneration abilities.
Create many new organisms quickly.
REGENERATION
An organism can replace/re-grow an injured or lost part
Regeneration in plants from
Roots
Stem
leaf
Regeneration in animals
For simple organisms
No vertebrates have this power
Examples are starfish and the salamander
BINARY FISSION
One parent dividing into two by mitosis
Offspring are always genetically identical
Cells may stay close together to form filaments or colonies
Examples-Bacteria and Amoebas
BUDDING
Form on part of the parent by growing an outgrowth which then detaches
Example- is Hydra and Yeast
Offspring will always be genetically identical to the parent
VEGETATIVE PROPOGATION
Plant parts make new plant
Reproduction is very quick
Disadvantage: many plants grow close to each other
Bulbs
– Underground stem
– Surrounded by colorless leaves
– Colorless leaves protect the bulb
– The green leaves store the food
Rhizomes
– Underground stem
– They store food for new plant
– At the end of Rhizomes nodes
Runners(strawberries)
– They are above ground.
– Stems – Nodes form at the end of Runners
– They grow outward
Tuber (potatoes)
– Underground stem
– Stores food
– The nodes eat the tuber
– Potatoes have eyes / buds to make new tubers and or reproduce
Grafting
– Surgically connecting two similar plants
– Ex. Apples – Not done naturally
Cutting
– Cutting off a stem or leaf to reproduce a new plant
– Must be in wet or moist area
– Combination of regeneration and fragmentation
– Not done naturally
Cloning
What is cloning?
Cloning is the creation of an organism that is an exact genetic copy of another. This means that every single bit of DNA is the same between the two!
How does one go about making an exact genetic copy of an organism? There are a couple of ways to do this: artificial embryo twinning and somatic cell nuclear transfer.
This power point is prepared to made easy to understand the method of asexual reproduction in plants for students.It covers both Natural and Artificial Methods of Asexual Reproduction in plants.
This is a quick review which may save your time...
Enjoy... :)
7th grade Life Science Powerpoint on the basics of plant reproduction. Flowers, pistil, stamen, pollination, fertilization, pollen dispersal, seed dispersal.
A dam can also be used to collect or store water which can be evenly distributed between locations. Dams generally serve the primary purpose of retaining water, while other structures such as floodgates or levees (also known as dikes) are used to manage or prevent water flow into specific land regions. The earliest known dam is the Jawa Dam in Jordan, dating to 3,000 BC
1. The life-span of all living things is limited. Living
things produce other organisms like themselves and thus
ensure the continuity of their species.
This process is called reproduction.
It is a natural process due to which the species continues
to exist even if individual plants or animals of that type die.
There are two important modes of reproduction:
1) Asexual reproduction.
2) Sexual reproduction.
A new individual of a species is created through the
union of their gametes. Such reproduction is called sexual
reproduction.
Reproduction without the union of gametes is called
Asexual reproduction.
2. Plants like the grape vine, sugarcane, rose are produced
from their vegetative parts. This is called asexual
production.
However, in flowering plants, fruits and seeds are
produced. This is sexual reproduction in plants.
Vegetative reproduction
Reproduction from parts of the plants
such as the root, stem or leaf is called
vegetative reproduction. This is natural
method.
The new plant that grows by this
method is exactly like the parent plants.
3. When branches of plants like the rose, hibiscus are
planted in the ground they take root and a new plant grows
from them.
When we bury a potato, sweet potato, onion, turmeric in
the ground, a new plant begins to grow from them, Potato,
turmeric, onion or chrysanthemum are underground stems.
Sweet potato is a root. They carry out the function of
vegetative reproduction.
From the root and stem
4. • Buds grow on the margins of the
bryophyllum leaf. They take root
when the leaf falls on the ground
and a new plant grows from them.
From leaves
Artificial method : Grafting
A branch of the plant one wants to grow is inserted into
the cut made on the stock (stem or stump) of another plant
and tied there firmly.
The branch to be grown is called scion.
If the scion gets a good supply of water with the
required salts dissolved in it from the stock, a new plant
with the desired qualities can be obtained.
Ex. Mango, chickoo.
5. • Plants like bacteria, fungii , algae do not have parts like
the root, stem , leaf and flower. These plants reproduce
by mean of cell division, budding and sporogenesis.
• Unicellular living things reproduce by cell division. When
the cell has grown, the nucleus in the cell divides and forms
two nuclei.
• After that, the protoplasm also divides and two
independent cells are formed. The new cell also divides in
the same way when it has grown.
• This kind of reproduction is seen in bacteria, algae and
chlorella.
Cell division
6. • This kind of reproduction is seen in living
things like yeast.
• In this, original cell gets a little swelling.
Soon a part of its nucleus enters the
swelling and a bud is formed.
• The bud grows and in time becomes a cell.
This original is called the parent cell.
• The nucleus of the parent cell divides to
form two nuclei.
• One nucleus and some protoplasm enters
the swelling or bud.
• Later, this bud separates from the parent
cell. It becomes an independent organism.
Reproduction from buds is called budding.
Budding
7. • Sporogenesis
• Reproduction from spores is called
sporogenesis.
• You must have seen the fungus that grows
on bread or pickles.
• Spores begin to grow when they find
favorable conditions, that is, when they get
enough moisture, warmth and oxygen.
• Then a new plant grows from each spore.
8. • Segmentation
• In algae (spirogyra) small pieces or segments are formed
due to decomposition or some other reason.
• An independent plant grows from every segment.
Reproduction in plants
Sexual Asexual
Vegetative Cell division Sporogenesis Segmentation
From the stem From the root From the leaf
9. In flowering plants, flowers are the organ of reproduction.
The androecium and gynoecium in the flower are important
for reproduction.
The androecium is the male part and gynoecium is the
female part.
When the pollen grains from the androecium fall on the
stigma of the gynoecium they begin to grow there. This is
called pollination.
As the pollen tube grows from the pollen grain, male
gametes are formed in it.
They unite with female gemetes in the ovary. This union is
called fertilization.
Fertilization produces a single cell called the zygote.
This leads to the formation of the seed and fruit.
10. • The seed takes root in the ground and a new plant grows.
• Sexual and asexual reproduction is seen in animals, as in
plants.
• The distinction of male and female organisms is seen in
animals of higher order. The male has the male gamete
while the female has the female gamete.
• As a result of their union a zygote is formed in the womb
of the female. The division and growth of the zygote leads
to the birth of the new individual.
• Based on how a new organism is born, animals can be
divided into two kinds : oviparous and viviparous.
Oviparous animals are those which hatch from an egg.
• Viviparous animals are born from the womb of the
mother.
11. • The young of snakes, hens and other birds first grow in the
egg. After the zygote has been formed as a result of the
union of the male and female gametes, a protective shell is
formed around it.
• This is what we call egg. The nutrition required for the
zygote is provided inside the egg itself.
• When the growth of the zygote is complete the organism
breaks the egg and emerging from it lives as an
independent individual.
• The zygote of animals like rabbit, rat , cat, man grows in
the mother’s womb. The womb is in the mother’s
abdomen.
• The zygote is nourished through the mother.
12. • When its growth is complete the offspring emerges from
the womb.
• The young one depends upon the mother for its nutrition
for some time after its birth. The mother suckles the young
one.
Unicellular animals like amoeba reproduce by cell
Division. In animals like hydra
Reproduction takes place by
budding.
13. A cat’s young one is like the cat itself. When a mango seed
takes root in the soil, it is a mango tree that grows from it.
After a period of time mangoes will grow on the new tree.
When a rose branch is planted in the soil a rose bush grows
from it.
It means that a species of animal or plant continues to exist
through reproduction. In other words, the species is
perpetuated.
Animal or plant species are perpetuated by reproduction.
Reproduction may be of different types :
1) Vegetative
2) Sexual or asexual