Plant Biotechnology and Genetics: Principles, Techniques and Applications

(Brent) #1

&CHAPTER 2


Mendelian Genetics and Plant


Reproduction


MATTHEW D. HALFHILL
Saint Ambrose University, Department of Biology, Davenport, Iowa
SUZANNE I. WARWICK
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Eastern Cereal and Oilseeds Research Centre, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

3.0 Chapter Summary and Objectives Nicholas A. Tinker


2.0.1 Summary

Flowering plants (angiosperms) and conifers (gymnosperms) are diverse organisms that
have conquered the terrestrial world and made the planet green (Fig. 2.1). Angiosperms
are the most important crop and horticultural plants, while gymnosperms are important
in forestry. These plants have sundry methods of reproduction ranging from vegetative
propagation to sex by cross-fertilization, which sets them apart from the relatively
mundane world of animal reproduction. With the incredible diversity of reproduction
methods, plants maintain genetic variation in various ways. Gregor Mendel, the
nineteenth-century monk, was the first person to demonstrate the inheritance of genes
(even though he did not know what genes were in the molecular sense) using the garden
pea plant. His research is the basis of inheritance theory and practice.

2.0.2 Discussion Questions


  1. What is a gene, and why are there multiple viable definitions?

  2. How does the discrete nature of chromosomes impact sexual reproduction in plants?

  3. What would be the consequence of sexual reproduction if mitosis were the only form
    of cell division?

  4. How do the reproductive features of plants regulate the degree of inbreeding?


Plant Biotechnology and Genetics: Principles, Techniques, and Applications,Edited by C. Neal Stewart, Jr.
Copyright#2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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