Biology, asked by jainritika750, 1 month ago

Write short note on dwarf male oedogonium

Answers

Answered by anshvohra24
2

Explanation:

Dwarf males are small, short, antheridium-producing filaments attached near the oogonia (female sex organ). These dwarf males are derived by repeated cell division of multiflagellate androspores. When an oogonial mother cell divides it forms a swollen oogonium bound by a supporting cell.

Answered by amardeeppsingh176
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Dwarf males are tiny, short filaments attached close to the oogonia that produce antheridium (female sex organ). Repeated cell division in multiflagellate androspores produces these miniature males. A bloated oogonium is created when an oogonial mother cell divides and is bound by a supporting cell.

Oedogonium is a genus of filamentous green algae in the family Oedogoniaceae that is typically discovered in calm freshwater bodies of water. They frequently hang from other plants or live as an unattached mass. Normally unbranched and only one cell thick, oedogonium filaments.

The nannandrous species are heterothallic (dioecious), meaning that antheridia and oogonia are born on separate strands. This form of nannandrium, also known as a dwarf male, generates antheridia on a very short filament.

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