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Pollination and Flower Structure02:40

Pollination and Flower Structure

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Flowers are the reproductive, seed-producing structures of angiosperms. Typically, flowers consist of sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels. Sepals and petals are the vegetative flower organs. Stamens and carpels are the reproductive organs.  
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Speciation is the evolutionary process resulting in the formation of new, distinct species—groups of reproductively isolated populations.
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Fruits form from a mature flower ovary. As seeds develop from the ovules contained within, the ovary wall undergoes a series of complex changes to form fruit. In some fruits, such as soybeans, the ovary wall dries; in other fruits, such as grapes, it remains fleshy. In some cases, organs other than the ovary contribute to fruit formation; such fruits are called accessory fruits.
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The Angiosperm Life Cycle02:39

The Angiosperm Life Cycle

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Plants have a life cycle split between two multicellular stages: a haploid stage—with cells containing one set of chromosomes—and a diploid stage—with cells containing two sets of chromosomes. The haploid stage is the gamete-producing gametophyte, and the diploid stage is the spore-producing sporophyte.
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Seed Structure and Early Development of the Sporophyte02:33

Seed Structure and Early Development of the Sporophyte

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Seed structures are composed of a protective seed coat surrounding a plant embryo, and a food store for the developing embryo. The embryo contains the precursor tissues for leaves, stem, and roots. The endosperm and cotyledons—seed leaves—act as the food reserves for the growing embryo.
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Comparing Mitochondrial, Chloroplast, and Prokaryotic Genomes02:16

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The present-day mitochondrial and chloroplast genomes have retained some of the characteristics of their ancestral prokaryotes and also have acquired new attributes during their evolution within eukaryotic cells. Like prokaryotic genomes, mitochondrial and chloroplast genomes neither bind with histone-like proteins nor show complex packaging into chromosome-like structures, as observed in eukaryotes. Unlike mitotic cell divisions observed in eukaryotic cells, mitochondria and chloroplasts...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Feb 8, 2026

Live Confocal Imaging of Developing Arabidopsis Flowers
07:27

Live Confocal Imaging of Developing Arabidopsis Flowers

Published on: April 1, 2017

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Where Have All the Flowers Gone?

Philippa Marrack1

  • 1Department of Biomedical Research, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO 80206 marrackp@njhealth.org.

Journal of Immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)
|June 20, 2018
PubMed
Summary

No abstract available in PubMed .

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