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Asexual and sexual reproductionPollination and fertilisation

Bacteria and plants can reproduce asexually to produce genetically identical individuals. Sexual reproduction, involving the fusion of gametes introduces variety into animal and plant species.

Part of ScienceInheritance

Pollination and fertilisation

is the transfer of pollen grains from an to a stigma. Pollen can be transferred by an animal or by the wind.

Fertilisation takes place inside the ovary when the nucleus of pollen grain fuses with the nucleus of an ovule to produce a zygote.

Shown below are the steps involved in pollination and fertilisation of a flowering plant.

Step one: After pollen has landed on the stigma, it grows a pollen tube down through the style to the ovary.

Plant reproduction: a pollen tube comes out of the ovary. Pollen grains are above the pollen tube.

Step two: The nucleus of the pollen grain travels down the pollen tube and fertilises the nucleus in the ovule.

The pollen grain travels down the pollen tube to fertilise the female nucleus of the ovule.

Step three: The fertilised ovule develops into a seed. The seed contains the plant embryo, which contains genetic material from both parents. The ovary develops into the fruit.

The fertilised ovule develops into a seed.

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