Sporophyte
gale
views updated May 11 2018Sporophyte
Sporophyte, which literally means "spore-bearing" plant, is the diploid multicellular phase of an organism that displays alternation of generations. The sporophyte phase develops from the fertilized egg, or zygote, by simplecell division and subsequent differentiation. Sporophytes occur in a few algae and aquatic fungi, and are universal in true plants. They differ greatly in size and level of complexity. In bryophytes the sporophyte is short-lived and permanently attached to the female parent, upon which it is nutritionally dependent. In all other plants, the sporophyte becomes independent of the female parent soon after embryological development is completed and remains as the dominant, photosynthetic stage of the plant. In the simplest case, a sporophyte can consist of only a capsule, or sporangium, as in the liverwort Riccia, but usually it will also possess one or more vegetative organs. For example, in mosses the sporophyte consists of a foot; a green, stemlike seta ; and a single complex sporangium, while in pines it is a highly branched tree with roots, stems, leaves and thousands of sporangia. Within the sporangia, which are the reproductive organs of the sporophyte, haploid spores are produced by meiosis . Germination of these spores marks the beginning of the haploid, sexual phase of the life cycle.
see also Bryophytes; Gametophyte; Reproduction, Alternation of Generations and; Reproduction, Asexual; Reproduction; Sexual.
Barbara Crandall-Stotler
Bibliography
Graham, Linda. "The Origin of the Life Cycle of Land Plants." American Scientist 73 (1985): 178-86.
Plant Sciences Crandall-Stotler, Barbara
sporophyte
oxford
views updated May 23 2018sporophyte Diploid stage in the life cycle of a plant or alga. Usually, the sporophyte gives rise to
haploid spores which germinate to produce a haploid generation (the
gametophyte stage) that will produce the
gametes. In
ferns,
horsetails,
conifers and
angiosperms, the diploid sporophyte is the dominant phase of the life cycle, the plant body we usually see. In mosses and liverworts, the main plant body is the gametophyte. See also
alternation of generations World Encyclopedia
sporophyte
oxford
views updated May 17 2018sporophyte The
spore-producing
diploid generation in the life cycle of plants. In higher plants, such as
angiosperms and
gymnosperms, the sporophyte is the dominant generation, forming the conspicuous plant. In lower plants, such as
mosses,
liverworts,
ferns, and
fungi, the
gametophyte is the dominant and conspicuous generation. See also
ALTERNATION OF GENERATIONS.
A Dictionary of Plant Sciences MICHAEL ALLABY
sporophyte
oxford
views updated May 18 2018spo·ro·phyte / ˈspôrəˌfīt/ •
n. Bot. (in the life cycle of plants with alternating generations) the asexual and usually diploid phase, producing spores from which the gametophyte arises. It is the dominant form in vascular plants, e.g., the frond of a fern.DERIVATIVES: spo·ro·phyt·ic / ˌspôrəˈfitik/ adj.
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
sporophyte
oxford
views updated Jun 27 2018sporophyte The generation in the life cycle of a plant that produces spores. The sporophyte is
diploid but its spores are
haploid. It is either completely or partially dependent on the
gametophyte generation in mosses and liverworts, but is the dominant plant in the life cycle of clubmosses, horsetails, ferns, and seed plants. See also
alternation of generations.
A Dictionary of Biology
sporophyte
oxford
views updated Jun 11 2018sporophyte The
spore-producingdiploid generation in the life cycle of plants. In higher plants, such as angiosperms and gymnosperms, the sporophyte is the dominant generation, forming the conspicuous plant. In lower plants, such as mosses, liverworts, and ferns, the
gametophyte is the dominant and conspicuous generation. See also
alternation of generations.
A Dictionary of Ecology MICHAEL ALLABY