The New Childrens Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
PLANT REPRODUCTION

91

O Flowers attract insects, birds, and mammals, which come
to feed on nectar. Bees also collect pollen. Once a plant is
fertilized, the flower is no longer needed. The petals die and fall off.

PLANT REPRODUCTION

SEED DISPERSAL

VEGETATIVE REPRODUCTION

 POLLINATION When a
bee visits a flower to drink
nectar, it picks up pollen from
the flower’s anthers.


 FERTILIZATION The bee
visits a second sunflower and
transfers the pollen to the
stigmas. This fertilizes the plant.

 SEEDS The pollen grows down
the style to the ovary, where it
fertilizes an egg cell. A new plant
starts to form. This is the seed.

 DISPERSAL In order to grow,
seeds need to leave the plant.
Birds eat the tasty seeds and pass
them through, dispersing them.

O Many plants produce fruit that


encourage animals to eat and


disperse their seeds, but not all...


 HITCHING A RIDE Burrs
become hooked onto animal fur.
Their host carries them away,
then they fall off to the ground.


 FORCE When the seeds are
ready, Himalayan balsam flowers
burst open. The force sends the
seeds flying out.

 WATER Coconut palms use
the sea to disperse their seeds.
Coconuts have been known to
drift for huge distances.

 WIND Dandelion seeds are
light and fluffy. Like tiny
parachutes, they catch the wind
to disperse far and wide.

O Some flowering plants don’t only reproduce through
seeds. Instead, they form plantlets that are genetically
identical to the parent plant.

 STOLONS Strawberries have
stolons—stems that grow along
the ground. New plants grow
from leaf nodes along the stolon.


 TUBERS such as Jerusalem
artichokes store food for the
parent plant, but they can also
sprout and grow into new plants.

 RHIZOMES Irises spread
through underground stems
called rhizomes. The rhizome
divides and forms new plants.

 BULB Onions and tulips
grow from bulbs, which are buds
that are surrounded by very
swollen leaves.

Stigma

Style Ovary

LIVING WORLD
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