Examples of seed in the following topics:
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- The fruit has a single purpose: seed dispersal.
- Modifications in seed structure, composition, and size aid in dispersal.
- Some animals, such as squirrels, bury seed-containing fruits for later use; if the squirrel does not find its stash of fruit, and if conditions are favorable, the seeds germinate.
- Humans also play a major role in dispersing seeds when they carry fruits to new places, throwing away the inedible part that contains the seeds.
- Summarize the ways in which fruits and seeds may be dispersed
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- Monocot and dicot seeds develop in differing ways, but both contain seeds with a seed coat, cotyledons, endosperm, and a single embryo.
- The seed, along with the ovule, is protected by a seed coat that is formed from the integuments of the ovule sac.
- The ovules after fertilization develop into the seeds.
- In monocot seeds, the testa and tegmen of the seed coat are fused.
- The structures of dicot and monocot seeds are shown.
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- The evolution of seeds allowed plants to reproduce independently of water; pollen allows them to disperse their gametes great distances.
- Seed plants, such as palms, have broken free from the need to rely on water for their reproductive needs.
- Storage tissue to sustain growth and a protective coat give seeds their superior evolutionary advantage.
- Furthermore, seeds remain in a state of dormancy induced by desiccation and the hormone abscisic acid until conditions for growth become favorable.
- Seed plants dominate the landscape and play an integral role in human societies.
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- A fertilized, fully grown, and ripened ovary containing a seed forms what we know as fruit, important seed dispersal agents for plants.
- As the seed develops, the walls of the ovary in which it forms thicken and form the fruit, enlarging as the seeds grow.
- Regardless of how they are formed, fruits are an agent of seed dispersal.
- Once eaten, tough, undigested seeds are dispersed through the herbivore's feces.
- The winged shape of Alsomitra macrocarpa's seeds allow them to use wind for dispersal.
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- Sometimes, however, seed banks are lost through accidents; there is no way to replace them.
- In 2008, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault began storing seeds from around the world as a backup system to the regional seed banks .
- If a regional seed bank stores varieties in Svalbard, losses can be replaced from those stored here.
- The seed vault is located deep into the rock of an arctic island.
- The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is a protected storage facility in the arctic for seeds of earth's diverse crops.
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- Seed ferns gave rise to the gymnosperms during the Devonian Period, allowing them to adapt to dry conditions.
- The fossil plant Elkinsia polymorpha, a "seed fern" from the Devonian period (about 400 million years ago) is considered the earliest seed plant known to date.
- Seed ferns produced their seeds along their branches without specialized structures .
- What makes them the first true seed plants is that they developed structures called cupules to enclose and protect the ovule (the female gametophyte and associated tissues) which develops into a seed upon fertilization.
- This gave a reproductive edge to seed plants, which are better adapted to survive dry spells.
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- Land plants, or embryophytes, are classified by the presence or absence of vascular tissue and how they reproduce (with or without seeds).
- Lycophytes and pterophytes are both referred to as seedless vascular plants because they do not produce any seeds.
- The seed producing plants, or spermatophytes, form the largest group of all existing plants, dominating the landscape.
- Seed-producing plants include gymnosperms, most notably conifers, which produce "naked seeds," and the most successful of all modern-day plants, angiosperms, which are the flowering plants.
- Land plants are categorized by presence or absence of vascular tissue and their reproduction with or without the use of seeds.
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- Gymnosperms are seed plants that have evolved cones to carry their reproductive structures.
- Gymnosperms are seed plants adapted to life on land; thus, they are autotrophic, photosynthetic organisms that tend to conserve water.
- The name gymnosperm means "naked seed," which is the major distinguishing factor between gymnosperms and angiosperms, the two distinct subgroups of seed plants.
- This term comes from the fact that the ovules and seeds of gymnosperms develop on the scales of cones rather than in enclosed chambers called ovaries.
- It is important to note that the seeds of gymnosperms are not enclosed in their final state upon the cone.
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- Seed plants are cultivated for their beauty and smells, as well as their importance in the development of medicines.
- Staple crops are not the only food derived from seed plants.
- Fibers of seed plants, such as cotton, flax, and hemp, are woven into cloth.
- Lastly, it is more difficult to quantify the benefits of ornamental seed plants.
- Seed plants have a large influence on day-to-day human life.
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- Seedless vascular plants, which reproduce and spread through spores, are plants that contain vascular tissue, but do not flower or seed.
- Seedless vascular plants are plants that contain vascular tissue, but do not produce flowers or seeds.
- In seedless vascular plants, such as ferns and horsetails, the plants reproduce using haploid, unicellular spores instead of seeds.
- The spores are very lightweight (unlike many seeds), which allows for their easy dispersion in the wind and for the plants to spread to new habitats.