Biology 1 (Monarch) Unit 4: Cell Division & Reproduction
style
A column-like part of the pistil that supports the stigma of a flower.
root cutting
A cutting made from the root of a plant which develops adventitious buds and grows into a new plant.
stem cutting
A cutting of stem tissue used to grow a new plant.
ovulate or seed cone
A female cone in gymnosperms. It produces seeds.
tuber
A fleshy, enlarged stem of a rhizome or stolon. It has buds and can grow new plants.
complete flower
A flower containing a pistil, stamen, calyx, and corolla.
perfect flower
A flower having both male and female parts.
female flower
A flower that has female parts only. It has pistils, but no stamens.
male flower
A flower that has male parts only. It has stamens but no pistils.
incomplete flower
A flower that lacks one or more of the following parts: pistil, stamen, calyx, or corolla.
colony
A group of organisms attached to one another after undergoing asexual reproduction from a common parent.
sorus
A group of sporangia in ferns.
organ
A group of tissues with a specific function in a part of the body.
tissue
A group or mass of cells having a common function.
gametophyte generation
A haploid generation. Produces gametes.
rhizome
A horizontal stem at or just beneath the surface of the ground which can give rise to aerial stems, roots, or to more rhizome tissue. Rhizomes are a principal means of asexual reproduction in many plants.
multiple fission
A kind of asexual reproduction in which a single cell undergoes many mitotic divisions in the nucleus and a number of daughter cells are produced all at once.
budding
A kind of asexual reproduction involving the growth of a new individual from part of an older organism. It can also refer to uneven distribution of cells that results in one cell receiving most of cell contents. In grafting, budding involves reducing the scion to a singular bud.
incomplete metamorphosis
A kind of metamorphosis in which the change from larva to adult comes in several steps or stages. The change is not as dramatic as that of complete metamorphosis.
egg
A large gamete with stored food.
haplontic
A life cycle in which meiosis occurs shortly after fertilization, and most of the life cycle is passed as a haploid.
sporic life cycle
A life cycle in which the sporophyte is more than the zygote, and the gametophyte is more than a gamete. The gametophyte and the sporophyte alternate with one another through time.
internal fertilization
A mating pattern in which the male and female come close together and the male introduces the sperm into the body of the female where fertilization occurs.
protist
A one- or few-celled organism with chromosomes. Many have characteristics of both animals and plants.
regeneration
A phenomenon in which organisms break into two or more parts and then each part grows into a new individual.
bulb
A plant structure with enlarged leaf bases and stored food surrounding a central bit of fleshy stem tissue.
differentiation
A process changing cells or organisms from a generalized to a more specific or specialized condition. It often involves a reduction of the ability to reproduce or divide, and is usually not reversible.
cone
A reproductive organ of gymnosperms having a central axis with radiate scales and bracts. A cone can either produce pollen or ovules.
annulus
A row of specialized cells around the sporangium of most ferns. It plays a role in opening the sporangium and releasing spores.
corm
A short, solid, enlarged underground stem used for food storage and for asexual reproduction.
sperm
A small, flagellated male gamete that swims to the egg to fertilize it.
spore
A small, resistant cell that can grow into a new organism. They may be produced either by meiosis or mitosis.
conidia
A special kind of asexual spore found in many kinds of fungi.
microsporangium
A sporangium that produces microspores.
meiospore
A spore produced by meiosis.
mitospore
A spore that develops by mitosis.
sporangium
A spore-producing cell or structure in protists and plants.
filament
A stalk which supports the anther. It is part of the stamen.
stolon
A stem which grows out from a plant periodically producing new stems and leaves on one side, and roots on the other. It is a means of asexual reproduction.
ovule
A structure within the ovary of a flower that contains the female gametophyte. It develops into a seed after fertilization.
leaf cutting
A technique in horticulture using a cutting made from a leaf or leaf tissue to grow a new plant.
grafting
A technique used in horticulture in which a part of the stem or a bud is inserted into a plant with a good root system. The inserted portion of the stem or the bud then becomes the top part of the plant, and it uses the root system it was grafted into.
diplontic
A type of life cycle in which meiosis produces gametes and the bulk of the life cycle is passed as a diploid. Adults are diploid.
external fertilization
A type of mating pattern in which eggs and sperm are released into the water after the mating partners come near one another. Fertilization occurs outside the body of the female.
complete metamorphosis
A type of metamorphosis in which the change from larva to adult occurs in one dramatic step. The larva and adult do not appear to be the same.
tadpole
A young frog or toad in the larval stage of development.
heteromorphic alternation of generations
Alternation of generations in which the sporophyte and gametophyte generations have a different size, shape, or appearance.
conjugation
An act of fertilization involving the transfer of cell contents to another cell. Conjugation usually occurs in simpler organisms.
embryo
An early stage in the development of an animal or plant.
archegonium
An organ in lower vascular plants, gymnosperms, mosses, and liverworts which produces an egg cell.
antheridium
An organ in simpler plants that produces sperm cells.
gametangium
An organ of lower plants, some protists and some fungi that produces gametes.
motile
Capable of independent movement.
gymnosperm
Cone-bearing plant. Often called evergreen.
gonad
Gamete producing organs in animals
isogamete
Gametes that are the same in size and shape.
oogamous
Having gametes of different size and shape. Usually oogamous organisms have eggs and sperm.
immotile
Incapable of independent movement.
flagellum
Long, whip-like structure extending from a cell used for locomotion.
unicellular
One-celled.
vascular plant
Plant which has true conductive tissues within it. It usually has true roots, stems, and leaves.
homosporous
Producing spores that are all the same in size and shape.
heterosporous
Producing spores that are different in size and shape.
adult
Refers to grown or mature animals or plants.
adventitious
Refers to the appearance of buds or roots from tissue which is not bud or root tissue. Adventitious roots appear from stem or leaf tissue, and adventitious buds appear in root tissue.
aquatic
Something which lives in or pertains to water. An aquatic organism lives in water.
terrestrial
Something which occurs on the land or refers to the land.
yolk
Stored food material in the eggs of many animals.
propagation
The act of propagating or establishing and growing new plants.
central disk
The central portion of a starfish. The arms of a starfish radiate from the central disk.
corolla
The collective term for the petals of a flower.
calyx
The collective term for the sepals.
oogamy
The condition of being oogamous.
anisogamy
The condition of having anisogametes.
anisogamete
The condition of having gametes similar in shape, but different in size.
pupa
The developmental stage between larva and adult in insects undergoing complete metamorphosis. It is usually a resistant stage with a thick layer of material protecting the insect from drying out or being harmed by outside influences or forces of various kinds.
sporophyte generation
The diploid generation. One that produces spores by meiosis
ovum
The egg cell; a female gamete.
ovary
The female gonad in animals. It produces eggs. Also, in plants it is the lower portion of the pistil that contains ovules and develops into fruit.
pistil
The female part of the flower.
juvenile
The first or earliest period of life in a young animal.
prothallium
The gametophyte generation of a fern.
life cycle
The idea that organisms reproduce from adult, to gametes, and back to adult again in a cycle or cyclical pattern.
alternation of generations
The idea that the sporophyte generation and the gametophyte generations follow one another in alternating fashion.
larva
The juvenile stage or phase of life of an organism which undergoes metamorphosis.
testis
The male gonad in animals. It produces sperm.
stamen
The male organ of plants. It produces pollen.
anther
The part of the stamen of a flower that bears the pollen.
scion
The portion of a plant with buds, that is placed into the stock by grafting or budding.
root stock
The portion of a plant with the root system used in grafting.
zygote
The result of fertilization in which two gametes have fused together. Often simply called a fertilized egg.
anaphase
The stage of mitosis when the chromosomes move to opposite ends of the cell.
stigma
The sticky, terminal end of the pistil where pollen is caught in pollination.
environment
The surroundings of an organism.
layering
The technique of developing roots on a stem of a plant while that stem is still attached to the parent plant. After a new root system is established the new plant is cut away from the parent plant and planted.
metamorphosis
The transformation of a larva to an adult. It occurs only in animals having great differences in form between the larva and adult.
pollen tube
The tube that grows from the pollen grain to penetrate the ovule for fertilization.
pollination
Transfer of pollen from male to female cones in gymnosperms, or from anther to stigma in flowering plants.
binary fission
asexual reproduction in which a single cell divides into two with no exchange of genetic material; reproduction method of bacteria
Sexual reproduction
occurs when two cells come together and fuse in the act of fertilization to produce a new individual.