Plants — Increasing the Numbers

1. Germination — The Seed Comes Alive

A seed is a BABY PLANT wrapped in a protective coat with its own food supply. GERMINATION is the process by which a seed grows into a new plant.

'Every seed is a MIRACLE in miniature — inside the hard coat lies a tiny embryo with roots, a stem, and leaves, all waiting for the right conditions to grow.'

Conditions Needed for Germination

ConditionWhy It Is Needed
WaterSoftens the seed coat. Activates the embryo. Dissolves food for the growing plant.
Air (Oxygen)The embryo needs OXYGEN to respire and produce ENERGY for growth.
WarmthThe RIGHT temperature activates enzymes. Most seeds germinate best between 20°C and 30°C.
SunlightNOT needed for ALL seeds — some germinate in complete darkness. BUT most seedlings need light AFTER germination.

'Do NOT confuse the soaking of a seed with drowning! A seed needs MOISTURE, not a flood. Too much water ROTS the seed because it cannot get oxygen.'

The Germination Process

StageWhat Happens
Stage 1: ImbibitionThe seed absorbs water. The seed coat SWELLS and SOFTENS.
Stage 2: Root EmergenceThe RADICLE (baby root) pushes out FIRST and grows DOWNWARD — it anchors the plant and absorbs water.
Stage 3: Shoot EmergenceThe PLUMULE (baby shoot) pushes upward. It carries the cotyledons above or below the soil.
Stage 4: First LeavesThe first true leaves appear and start PHOTOSYNTHESIS — making food. The cotyledons shrink and fall off.

Parts of a Seed

PartFunction
Seed coat (Testa)Protective outer covering
MicropyleTiny pore for water entry
CotyledonsStore FOOD for the embryo — also called 'seed leaves'
EmbryoThe baby plant inside
RadicleGrows into the ROOT
PlumuleGrows into the SHOOT

2. Seed Dispersal — Plants on the Move

Plants CANNOT walk, but their seeds can TRAVEL. Seed dispersal is the movement of seeds away from the parent plant to new locations.

'Why do plants need seed dispersal? If all seeds fell right under the parent plant, they would COMPETE for sunlight, water, and minerals. Spreading out gives each seedling a BETTER chance to survive.'

Methods of Seed Dispersal

MethodSeed FeaturesExamples
WindLight, wing-like structures, or hairy parachutesMaple (wings), Dandelion (parachute), Cotton, Madar (Calotropis)
WaterFibrous coat, air pockets — float easilyCoconut, Lotus, Water lily
AnimalsSticky hooks, tasty fruitsXanthium (hooks), Cocklebur, Mango (eaten, seed thrown), Guava
Explosion (Self-dispersal)Pods dry and SNAP, flinging seeds awayBalsam (Touch-me-not), Pea pod, Castor

How Each Method Works

'Dandelion seeds have a HAIRY PARACHUTE that catches the wind and carries them for KILOMETRES. Coconuts have a THICK, FIBROUS coat that keeps them afloat in seawater for MONTHS.'

Wind dispersal: The seeds are light and have wing-like structures or pappus (hair). They can travel long distances.

Water dispersal: Seeds have waterproof, fibrous coats. Air trapped inside helps them float. Coconuts can travel across oceans!

Animal dispersal: Sticky burrs (Xanthium) cling to animal fur. Birds eat fruits and drop or pass the seeds elsewhere. Squirrels bury nuts and forget them — new trees grow.

Explosive dispersal: As the seed pod dries, tension builds. When it SPLITS, seeds fly in all directions. Balsam pods curl back suddenly — touch a ripe pod and it EXPLODES.

3. Vegetative Propagation — New Plants Without Seeds

Some plants can reproduce WITHOUT seeds — this is called VEGETATIVE PROPAGATION. A part of the plant (root, stem, or leaf) grows into a new plant.

'Vegetative propagation produces CLONES — new plants that are IDENTICAL to the parent plant. That is why all bananas in a supermarket are exactly the same!'

Types of Vegetative Propagation

Plant PartExampleHow It Works
Eyes of potatoPotatoEach 'eye' is a BUD. Plant a piece of potato with an eye, and a new potato plant grows.
Stem cuttingRose, Sugarcane, Money plantCut a stem with nodes. Plant it in soil. Roots grow from the nodes.
Leaf budsBryophyllum (Sprout-leaf plant)Leaf edges have tiny buds. Each bud can grow into a new plant.
RootsDahlia, Sweet potatoRoots store food. Adventitious buds on roots grow into new plants.
RunnersStrawberry, GrassHorizontal stems (runners) grow along the ground. Nodes touch soil and form roots.

Why Farmers Use Vegetative Propagation

AdvantageExplanation
Faster than seedsNew plants grow QUICKLY
Identical qualityAll plants have the SAME good traits as the parent
No waiting for pollinationNo flowers or seeds needed
Plants with no seedsBananas, seedless grapes — no seeds to plant!

'Farmers sometimes prefer vegetative propagation because it is RELIABLE. A cutting from a good mango tree will produce the SAME sweet mangoes as the parent.'

Key Facts to Remember

  • 'A seed needs THREE things to germinate: WATER, AIR, and WARMTH. Sunlight is NOT always required at the beginning.'
  • The root always grows DOWN (geotropism) and the shoot always grows UP (phototropism).
  • Seed dispersal prevents COMPETITION among seedlings.
  • Vegetative propagation produces IDENTICAL offspring (clones).
  • Each potato 'eye' is a bud that can grow into a new plant.

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy It Is WrongCorrect Understanding
Thinking sunlight is needed for germinationMany seeds germinate in DARK soilSunlight is needed AFTER for photosynthesis
Believing all fruits are dispersed by animalsCoconuts float on water, maple seeds flyDifferent seeds have different dispersal methods
Confusing seed coat with fruitThe seed coat is the seed's OWN coveringThe fruit is a separate structure that holds seeds
Saying potatoes are rootsPotatoes are UNDERGROUND STEMS (tubers)Potatoes have 'eyes' (buds) — roots do NOT have buds

Exam Focus (ICSE Class 5)

TopicMarks (Typical)Question Type
Conditions for germination3-4 marksList/explain conditions with reasons
Seed dispersal methods4-5 marksMatch method to example; explain adaptations
Parts of a seed2-3 marksLabel a diagram
Vegetative propagation3-4 marksExamples and how they grow
Differences (e.g., germination vs growth)2-3 marksCompare and contrast

Self-Test: 5 Questions

Q1. Name the three essential conditions for seed germination.

Q2. How is a coconut adapted for water dispersal?

Q3. Explain how a potato can grow into a new plant.

Q4. Why do plants need seed dispersal? Give two reasons.

Q5. What is the difference between the radicle and the plumule in a germinating seed?

Answers

A1. Water (activates embryo, softens seed coat), Air/Oxygen (for respiration), and Warmth (for enzyme activity).

A2. The coconut has a thick, fibrous, waterproof coat that protects it. Air trapped inside helps it float in seawater for long distances.

A3. A potato is an underground stem with 'eyes' (buds). When planted, each eye can grow into a new shoot. The stored food in the potato feeds the new plant until it can photosynthesise.

A4. (1) To prevent COMPETITION for sunlight, water, and minerals with the parent plant. (2) To COLONISE new areas and spread the species.

A5. The radicle grows DOWNWARD to form the ROOT system. The plumule grows UPWARD to form the SHOOT system (stem and leaves).

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