Tag: post fertilization - plants
Questions Related to post fertilization - plants
Which part of the flower forms the fruit?
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Whole flower
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Only stamens and carpel
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Only ovary
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Only carpel
A fertilized, fully grown and ripened ovary forms a fruit. After the process of fertilization, the ovary swells up and develops into a fruit.
Thus, the correct answer is option (C), 'Only ovary'.
The seed contains the future plant or embryo which develops into seedling under appropriate conditions.
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True
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False
Seeds contain embryo.
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True
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False
Seed is the ripened ovule or mature integumented megasporangium in which outer integument convert into testa and inner integument are grown up as tegmen and after fertilization, the embryo is placed inside seed in dormant state and grow into a new plant in favorable condition.
The megasporangium of the angiosperms on maturation gives rise to
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Cotyledons
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Seed
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Fruit
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Endosperm
Collar like outgrowth arising from the base of ovule and forming a sort of third integument is known as
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Caruncle
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Aril
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Operculum
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Perisperm
Collar like outgrowth arising from the base of ovule and forming a sort of third integument is known as aril. It is typically coloured, hairy and fleshy structure. It is edible in some of the species of plant. It helps in pollination as the insects gets attracted by its beautiful colour.
Seeds are called as products of sexual reproduction because they
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Give rise to new plants
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Are formed by fusion of gametes
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Are formed by fusion of pollen tubes
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Can survive for longer periods
Morphologically the white fluffy edible mass in maize is
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Seed coat
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Endosperm
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Perisperm
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Seed
Endosperm develops after the formation of embryo. It functions as the nutritive tissue for the growing embryo. The endosperm is found as liquid (coconut water) and solid (coconut kernel, white fluffy part of maize). The endosperm found in maize is of nuclear type.
In coconut black covering (thin layer) adherent to the kernel around the endosperm is
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Mesocarp
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Seed coat
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Pericarp
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Epicarp
In the case of coconut plant, the hard shell forms the inner layer of fruit (endocarp). Inside the shell, there is a seed which is covered by a seed coat. This seed coat is brown in colour and attached to the kernel which is endosperm. The seed coat is a thin layer which is protective in nature.
Which of the following triggers the ripening of fruits?
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Ethylene
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Indoleacetic acid
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Gibberellic acid
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Kinetin
Ethylene helps fruits ripen by making them softer, through the breakdown components of the cell walls, and sweeter, through the conversion of starches to sugars. Unlike the other plant hormones, ethylene is actually a gas and is distributed through the air, not through the plant body. One of the coolest things about ethylene is that it is released in a positive feedback loop, a little bit of ethylene causes more to be released, which causes even more to be released, and so on. A benefit of this fact is that you can take an unripe fruit (a pear, plum, or peach, for example) and put it in a paper bag with riper fruit (bananas work well for this) and ethylene will accumulate, making the unripe fruit soft and sweet. Indoleacetic acid, gibberellic acid and kinetin does not triggers the ripening process.
Parthenogenesis is the development of
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Fruit without hormones
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Fruit without fertilisation
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Egg without fertilisation
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Embryo without fertilisation
Parthenogenesis is a type of asexual reproduction in which the offspring develops from unfertilized eggs. It is particularly common among arthropods and can also be found in some species of fish, amphibians, birds and reptiles, but not in mammals.