plant reproductive system: Media

Videos

Understand the sexual and asexual reproduction from the bramble and the daffodil plant
Glimpse the varied means through which plants reproduce, from the asexual bramble...
Video: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
How do plants reproduce asexually?
Plants can reproduce asexually in a variety of ways. Learn about bulb, gemma, plantlet,...
Video: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
How different plants store their seeds
Video presentation describing the differences in seed storage between angiosperms...
Video: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
How do pine trees reproduce?
Discover how male gametophytes travel up pine trees to strobili-covered female pine...
Video: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Images

Bumblebee on teasel
A large bumblebee (Bombus species) pollinating a teasel flower head (Dipsacus...
AdstockRF
asexual reproduction
Production of new individuals along a leaf margin of Kalanchoe pinnata.
Eric Guinther
fern sporangia
In ferns, spores are contained within cases called sporangia that are located on...
© Andrzej Tokarski/stock.adobe.com
sprouted potato tuber
The “eyes” of a potato are clusters of buds in the axils of the scalelike leaves,...
© Unclesam/Fotolia
archegonium
The female reproductive organ, or archegonium, emerging from a thalloid liverwort.
© Dr. Morley Read/Shutterstock.com
moss life cycle
Life cycle of moss.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
sporophyte
Young sporophyte of tortula moss (Tortula muralis).
© Ernie Cooper/stock.adobe.com
bristly club moss
Bristly club moss (Spinulum annotinum) in a forest.
© Christian Weis/Dreamstime.com
peacock fern
Peacock fern, or Willdenow's spike moss, (Selaginella willdenowii).
Walter Dawn
fern life cycle
The life cycle of the fern. (1) Clusters (sori) of sporangia (spore cases) grow on...
© Merriam-Webster Inc.
whisk fern
Whisk fern (Psilotum nudum).
Walter Dawn
giant horsetail of Europe
Giant horsetail of Europe (Equisetum telmateia).
Rror
Karoo cycad
Female cone of a Karoo cycad (Encephalartos lehmannii).
© Harm Kruyshaar/Shutterstock.com
ginkgo seeds
Ginkgo seeds (Ginkgo biloba) have a malodourous fleshy covering.
© Hamsterman/Dreamstime.com
Wind pollination
Windblown pollen from the male cone of a lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta).
© Photoshot - NHPA/SuperStock
welwitschia
Welwitschia, or tumboa (Welwitschia mirabilis), in Namibia.
© orxy/Fotolia
angiosperm life cycle
Life cycle of a typical angiosperm. The angiosperm life cycle consists of a sporophyte...
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
tulip
A tulip (Tulipa) in flower.
© Harry Haralambou/Peter Arnold, Inc.
yarrow
Yellow corymbs, a type of inflorescence, of yarrow (Achillea aegyptiaca).
S. Rannels/Grant Heilman Photography, Inc.
flower anatomy
Diagram of the flower of a typical flowering plant (angiosperm).
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
angiosperm inflorescences
Common types of inflorescences among the angiosperms.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
sunflower
Close-up of the head of a common sunflower (Helianthus annuus).
AdstockRF
birch
Young leaves, male catkins, and (top centre) female flowers of paper birch (Betula...
© Stocksnapper/Fotolia
pollen grains
Scanning electron microscopic image of pollen from various common plants.
Dartmouth Electron Microscope Facility, Dartmouth College
how flowering plants reproduce
Reproduction in flowering plants begins with pollination, the transfer of pollen...
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
bracken fern
Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum).
Gretchen Garner/Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Marchantia
The liverwort Marchantia polymorpha.
© Tunatura—iStock/Getty Images