ABSTRACT

Plant embryology, dealing with the regularities of initiation and the first stages of development of an organism, is now flourishing because of the overall progress being made in natural sciences. Such discoveries of the 20th century as production of plants from a single somatic cell, experimental haploidy, and parasexual hybridization were of general biological significance. The combined efforts of embryologists, geneticists and molecular biologists yielded the discovery of specific genes that control meiosis, egg cell development and early stages of embryogenesis. The tendency to synthesize data of embryology and genetics has become increasingly noticeable. It is connected with the fact that the majority of problems connected with morphogenesis, such as differentiation, specialization, the evaluation of features and the definition of the notionsgene and feature andgenotype and phenotype concern embryology and genetics (embryogenetics) in one way or another. Evolutionary embryology has given rise to a new approach to the study of problems of adaptation in plants. In connection with the problem of preserving biological diversity under conditions of ecological stress, special attention is paid to ecological embryology, revealing the critical periods in early ontogenesis and plasticity and tolerance of reproductive systems at the level of species and population. The study of variability of morphogenesis and phenotype in population (life cycle variations and the diversity of reproductive systems) is the most important point in the population embryology of plants.

part One|1 pages

Plant Reproduction

chapter |36 pages

Overview

part Two|1 pages

Pollination And Breeding

chapter |32 pages

Pollination Systems

chapter |26 pages

Breeding Systems

part Three|1 pages

Seed Propagation

chapter |81 pages

Amphimixis and Apomixis

chapter |37 pages

Seed Propagation

part Four|1 pages

Vegetative Propagation

chapter |44 pages

Vegetative Propagation

part Five|1 pages

Molecular-Genetic Aspects of Reproduction

chapter |42 pages

Flower Development Genetics

part Six|1 pages

Population and Ecological Aspects of Reproduction

part Seven|1 pages

Embryological Bases of Reproductive Strategies

chapter Seven|44 pages

Embryological Bases of Reproductive Strategies