megaspore

(noun)

the larger spore of a heterosporous plant, typically producing a female gametophyte

Related Terms

  • microspore
  • monoecious

Examples of megaspore in the following topics:

  • Life Cycle of a Conifer

    • Like all gymnosperms, pines are heterosporous, generating two different types of spores: male microspores and female megaspores.
    • One megaspore mother cell (megasporocyte) undergoes meiosis in each ovule.
    • The gametophytes (1n), microspores and megaspores, are reduced in size.
    • This phase may take more than one year between pollination and fertilization while the pollen tube grows towards the megasporocyte (2n), which undergoes meiosis into megaspores.
    • The megaspores will mature into eggs (1n) .
  • Sexual Reproduction in Gymnosperms

    • In the female cone, megaspore mother cells are present in the megasporangium.
    • The megaspore mother cell divides by meiosis to produce four haploid megaspores.
    • One of the megaspores divides to form the multicellular female gametophyte, while the others divide to form the rest of the structure.
    • (f) Within this single ovule are the megaspore mother cell (MMC), micropyle, and a pollen grain.
  • The Life Cycle of an Angiosperm

    • Therefore, they generate microspores, which will produce pollen grains as the male gametophytes, and megaspores, which will form an ovule that contains female gametophytes.
    • Within each megasporangium, a megasporocyte undergoes meiosis, generating four megaspores: three small and one large.
    • Only the large megaspore survives; it produces the female gametophyte referred to as the embryo sac.
    • The megaspore divides three times to form an eight-cell stage.
  • Sporophytes and Gametophytes in Seedless Plants

    • The male spores are called microspores, because of their smaller size, and develop into the male gametophyte; the comparatively larger megaspores develop into the female gametophyte.
    • Heterosporous plants produce two morphologically different types of spores: microspores, which develop into the male gametophyte, and megaspores, which develop into the female gametophyte.
  • Angiosperm Flowers

    • The megaspores and the female gametophytes are produced and protected by the thick tissues of the carpel.
  • Characteristics of Gymnosperms

    • The other type of cones, the larger "ovulate" cones, make megaspores that develop into female gametophytes called ovules .
  • Sexual Reproduction in Angiosperms

    • First, in the process of megasporogenesis, a single cell in the diploid megasporangium undergoes meiosis to produce four megaspores, only one of which survives.
    • During the second phase, megagametogenesis, the surviving haploid megaspore undergoes mitosis to produce an eight-nucleate, seven-cell female gametophyte, also known as the megagametophyte, or embryo sac.
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