Seed

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A cut peppers - berry , the seeds are yellow recognizable
Scheme drawing: seed of a bean

A seed or seed (like Latin semen : 'seed', 'seedling', 'the dropped one', from Indo-European root sēi , 'dispatch', 'throw', and related to sowing ) is a tissue structure of the seed plants that serves to spread ( Spermatophyta), which consists of a seed coat (testa), the embryo and often a nutrient tissue ( endosperm or perisperm ). So that the seed contains all the facilities to under favorable germination conditions for a new plant to grow.

Semen are formed after an egg cell sitting in the ovule has been fertilized by a generative cell of a pollen grain. The fertilized egg cell ( zygote ) turns into a plant embryo through mitotic cell division , which does not continue to grow, but is held in a kind of temporary waiting position through partial desiccation.

There are significant differences in detail between

The gardener or farmer does not speak of seeds, but of seeds or seeds .

See also

Web links

Commons : seeds  - album with pictures, videos and audio files
Commons : seeds with scale indications  - album with pictures, videos and audio files
Wiktionary: Same  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations
Wiktionary: seeds  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Friedrich Kluge , Alfred Götze : Etymological dictionary of the German language . 20th edition. Edited by Walther Mitzka , De Gruyter, Berlin / New York 1967; Reprint (“21st unchanged edition”) ibid 1975, ISBN 3-11-005709-3 , p. 622 f.
  2. ^ The dictionary of origin (=  Der Duden in twelve volumes . Volume 7 ). 5th edition. Dudenverlag, Berlin 2014 ( p. 716 ). See also DWDS ( "seeds" ) and Friedrich Kluge: Etymological dictionary of the German language . 7th edition. Trübner, Strasbourg 1910 ( p. 384 ).
  3. ^ A b c Neil A. Campbell, Jane B. Reece: Biology. 8th edition, Pearson, Munich a. a., 2009, p. 1836.