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Dehiscence is the spontaneous opening at maturity of a plant structure, such as a fruit, anther, or sporangium, to release its contents. Fruit stall in Barcelona, Catalonia. ...
Flower of the spider tree (Crateva religiosa) with its numerous conspicuous stamens The stamen is the male organ of a flower. ...
A sporangium (pl. ...
Anther dehiscence
This is the final function of the anther that causes the release of pollen grains. The anther wall breaks at a specific site that runs the length of the anther. This site is observed as an indentation between the locules of each theca. Amaryllis style and stigmas A carpel is the female reproductive organ of a flower; the basic unit of the gynoecium. ...
Strawberry anther with parallel thecae In botany, the theca (plural thecae) of an angiosperm is half of the anther. ...
The stomium, and septum are two specialised cell types present at this site. The degeneration of the stomium and septum cells is part of a developmentally timed cell-death program. Initially the septum degenerates thereby establishing the stomium as the future site of anther wall breakage and pollen release. Expansion of the endothecial layer and lignification of the endothecial cell walls are required for dehiscence. Endothecium is a type of tissue found in the walls of anthers and in moss capsules. ...
The process of anther dehiscence is coordinated precisely with pollen differentiation, floral development, and flower opening.
Fruit dehiscence Typically a fruit develops from a gynoecium composed of fused carpels, which, upon fertilization, grow to become a silique that contains the developing seeds. After seed maturation, dehiscence takes place, and valves detach from the central septum freeing the seeds. This is also known as shattering and can be important as a seed dispersal mechanism. Amaryllis style and stigmas A carpel is the female reproductive organ of a flower; the basic unit of the gynoecium. ...
Amaryllis style and stigmas A carpel is the female reproductive organ of a flower; the basic unit of the gynoecium. ...
A silique is a fruit (seed pod) of 2 fused carpels that separate when ripe, leaving a peristant partition. ...
A ripe red jalapeno cut open to show the seeds For other uses, see Seed (disambiguation). ...
Biological dispersal refers to those processes by which a species maintains or expands the distribution of a population. ...
This process is similar to anther dehiscence and the region that breaks (dehiscence zone) runs the entire length of the fruit between the valves and the replum (external septum). At maturity, the dehiscence zone is effectively a non-lignified layer between a region of lignified cells in the valve and the replum. Shattering occurs due to the combination of cell wall loosening in the dehiscence zone and the tensions established by the differential mechanical properties of the drying cells in the silique.
Association with crop breeding Manipulation of dehiscence can improve crop yield since a trait that causes seed dispersal is a disadvantage for farmers whose goal is to collect the seed. Many of the agronomically important plants have been bred for reduced shattering. In biology, a trait or character is a genetically inherited feature of an organism. ...
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