Seed
The reproductive structure that grows into the haploid generation of a plant is the gametophyte. The gametophyte produces gametes through mitosis, which then fuse to form a diploid zygote during fertilization.
yes, the gametophyte generation of a moss is haploid. While the sporophyte generation of a moss is diploid.
Pollen are produced in the anther of the stamen, which is the male part of the plant. The pollen is transferred to the ovule of the ovary (the female part of the plant). Both pollen and ovule are haploid gametes.
The cells of a fern plant that you see are diploid. Ferns have a lifecycle which alternates between a diploid sporophyte generation and a haploid gametophyte generation. The visible fern plant is the diploid sporophyte generation.
you people are ****** a'f -.-
chlorophyll
The gametes are produced by the gametophyte generation in the plant life cycle. This generation is haploid and is responsible for producing the male and female reproductive cells for sexual reproduction to occur.
sporophyte and gametophye. since plants have alternation of generation, both are multicellular (haploid and diploid)
The first haploid cell in the life cycle of a plant is the spore, which is produced by meiosis in the sporophyte generation. Spores germinate to form haploid gametophytes, which produce gametes through mitosis for fertilization.
Yes, and the structure is called a haploid structure
Human beings do exhibit an alternation of generations, but the haploid phase is extremely deemphasized while the diploid phase is overwhelmingly dominant. The haploid phase in humans that results from meiosis is restricted to only one cell, either an egg in the female or a sperm in the male. There is never a multicellular haploid structure as there usually are in plants. If such a multicellular haploid structure is required for a true alternation of generations, then humans do not exhibit alternation of generations. The human organism grows by mitosis (the diploid phase) only after fertilization. A plant sporophyte is diploid and it produces spores by meiosis. Humans, like plant sporophytes, are diploid and make haploid gametes by meiosis.
A pine tree is a diploid plant. In the life cycle of a pine tree, the sporophyte generation, which is the dominant form, is diploid, containing two sets of chromosomes. It produces haploid spores through meiosis, which develop into the gametophyte generation, but the mature pine tree itself remains diploid.