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Apomixis
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=== Types in flowering plants === [[File:Agave angustifolia (Caribbean Agave) in Hyderabad W IMG 8660.jpg|thumb|right|[[Caribbean agave]] producing plantlets on the old flower stem.]] Maheshwari<ref name=Maheshwari/> used the following simple classification of types of apomixis in flowering plants: *'''Nonrecurrent apomixis''': In this type "the megaspore mother cell undergoes the usual meiotic divisions and a haploid embryo sac [[megagametophyte]] is formed. The new embryo may then arise either from the egg (haploid parthenogenesis) or from some other cell of the gametophyte (haploid apogamy)." The haploid plants have half as many [[chromosomes]] as the mother plant, and "the process is not repeated from one generation to another" (which is why it is called nonrecurrent). See also '''parthenogenesis''' and '''apogamy''' below. *'''Recurrent apomixis''', is now more often called '''gametophytic apomixis''': In this type, the megagametophyte has the same number of chromosomes as the mother plant because meiosis was not completed. It generally arises either from an [[archesporium|archesporia]]l cell or from some other part of the [[nucellus]]. *'''Adventive embryony''', also called '''sporophytic apomixis''', '''sporophytic budding''', or [[nucellar embryony]]: Here there may be a megagametophyte in the [[ovule]], but the embryos do not arise from the cells of the gametophyte; they arise from cells of nucellus or the integument. Adventive embryony is important in several species of ''[[Citrus]]'', in ''[[Garcinia]]'', ''[[Euphorbia dulcis]]'', ''[[Mangifera indica]]'' etc. *'''Vegetative apomixis''': In this type "the flowers are replaced by [[bulbils]] or other vegetative propagules which frequently germinate while still on the plant". Vegetative apomixis is important in ''[[Allium]]'', ''[[Fragaria]]'', ''[[Agave]]'', and some grasses, among others. ====Types of gametophytic apomixis==== Gametophytic apomixis in flowering plants develops in several different ways.<ref name=Nogler>Nogler, G.A. 1984. Gametophytic apomixis. In Embryology of angiosperms. Edited by B.M. Johri. Springer, Berlin, Germany. pp. 475β518.</ref> A megagametophyte develops with an egg cell within it that develops into an embryo through [[parthenogenesis]]. The central cell of the megagametophyte may require fertilization to form the [[endosperm]], '''pseudogamous gametophytic apomixis''', or in '''autonomous gametophytic apomixis''' endosperm fertilization is not required. *In '''diplospory''' (also called '''generative apospory'''), the megagametophyte arises from a cell of the [[archesporium]]. * In '''apospory''' (also called '''somatic apospory'''), the megagametophyte arises from some other (somatic) cell of the nucellus. Considerable confusion has resulted because diplospory is often defined to involve the [[megaspore mother cell]] only, but a number of plant families have a multicellular archesporium and the megagametophyte could originate from another archesporium cell. Diplospory is further subdivided according to how the megagametophyte forms: * ''[[Allium]] odorum''β''A. nutans'' type. The chromosomes double (endomitosis) and then meiosis proceeds in an unusual way, with the chromosome copies pairing up (rather than the original maternal and paternal copies pairing up). * ''[[Taraxacum]]'' type: Meiosis I fails to complete, meiosis II creates two cells, one of which degenerates; three mitotic divisions form the megagametophyte. * ''[[Ixeris]]'' type: Meiosis I fails to complete; three rounds of nuclear division occur without cell-wall formation; wall formation then occurs. * ''[[Blumea]]''β''[[Elymus (plant)|Elymus]]'' types: A mitotic division is followed by degeneration of one cell; three mitotic divisions form the megagametophyte. * ''[[Antennaria]]''β''[[Hieracium]]'' types: three mitotic divisions form the megagametophyte. * ''[[Eragrostis]]''β''[[Panicum]]'' types: Two mitotic division give a 4-nucleate megagametophyte, with cell walls to form either three or four cells.
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