Study

PLANT PROPAGATION

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  • These are enlarged underground stems with tiny holes called "eyes". New plants grow from these eyes.
    TUBERS
  • These are underground stems consisting mainly of fleshy pile of leaves.
    BULBS
  • It is the process of transferring pollen grains from the male anther of a flower to the female stigma.
    POLLINATION
  • These are modified stems that are cylindrical in shape and grow horizontally near the surface of the ground.
    RHIZOMES
  • It is the MALE parts in plants.
    POLLEN
  • It is the process by which the embryo grows from a seed.
    GERMINATION
  • It is a young developing plant.
    EMBRYO
  • It develops into a new plant's stem
    HYPOCOTYL
  • It is the first leaf or one of the first leaves of a plant which is usually folded within a seed. It is also called a seed leaf.
    COTYLEDON
  • It is the transfer of pollen from the anther of a flower to the stigma of the same flower.
    SELF-POLLINATION
  • It contains a miniature plant, called an embryo, that can develop into a fully grown plant.
    SEED
  • Sexual propagation occurs when a new plant is produced even WITHOUT the union of male and reproductive parts in the flower of the plant.
    ASEXUAL PROPAGATION
  • It is the tube through which sperm from the pollen reaches the egg cell, and fertilizes the plant to form seeds.
    POLLEN TUBE
  • It occurs when the pollen from one plant's anther moves to the stigma of another.
    CROSS POLLINATION
  • It develops into a new shoot or young plant.
    EPICOTYL
  • It is a part inside the ovary and it contains a small cell. When the cell is fertilized, it turns into a seed, which can then grow into a new plant.
    OVULE
  • Modified stem grows above or below the ground and from which shoots of new plants may grow.
    TRUE
  • The outer shell of a seed that protects the embryo.
    SEED COAT
  • It is the FEMALE parts in plants.
    EGG
  • It becomes the root.
    RADICLE
  • Plant propagation is the process of growing new plants from a variety of sources: seeds, cuttings, and other plant parts.
    TRUE
  • Stem-cutting is another common asexual propagation technique, suited well to herbs and house plants. It involves taking a section of stem from a parent plant and manipulating it to create a new plant.
    TRUE
  • It is a fertilized egg cell that results from the union of an egg and the male part.
    ZYGOTE
  • Asexual propagation occurs when a new plant is produced from the union of male and reproductive parts in the flower of the plant.
    SEXUAL PROPAGATION