Which plant loses economic value if its fruits are produced by induced parthenocarpy?
Answers
Answered by
0
PLANT REPRODUCTION-AN OVERVIEW
It is a daunting but exciting task to attempt both an orientation
to plant development and an overview of the reviews in this
special issue on plant reproduction. Our purpose in this article
isto provide a guide to the key points of plant development
and reproduction, pointing out not only the general themes
that are common among angiosperms but also some of the
exceptional species and events that illustrate the diversity of
types adapted to specific selective forces. We view the elucidation
of developmental mechanisms in plant reproduction as
both a goal in itself and a prelude to a more comprehensive
appreciation of the evolutionary steps that have led to the diversity
of existing angiosperm species. Severa1 previous reviews
(Walbot, 1985; Goldberg, 1988) discuss more fully the earlier
state of the art of many aspects of plant development and
reproduction.
Evolution has hit upon at least two distinctly different strategies
for being multicellular: the animal strategy, in which the
organism-and, within limits, its cells-can move, and the plant
strategy, in which both the organism and its cells are largely
fixed in place. These two strategies underlie everything the
organism does, from the way it responds to predators and
obtains nutrition to the way it reproduces. For example, in
animals, the entire body plan and the organ systems are generally
established during embryo development. As organs grow,
they receive new cells from stem cell populations whose
derivatives have a limited range of possible pathways of differentiation.
By contrast, all postembryonic plant structures
emerge from apical meristems that arise early in embryonic
development. These meristems serve as reservoirs of cells
throughout plant development, replenishing themselves while
giving rise to lateral meristems, which in turn develop into organs
such as leaves (see Steeves and Sussex, 1989).
Although there is continuous organogenesis from the shoot
apical meristem, this cell population matures over time. The
meristem produces juvenile Ieaves initially, followed by adult
leaves; in maize, and possibly other plants as well, the same
apical meristem earlier gave rise to embryonic leaves
(cotyledons). Reproductive development begins with the transition
of the apical meristem from producing vegetative
Similar questions