Plants that reproduce sexually also produce gametes. However, since plants have a life cycle involving
alternation of diploid and haploid generations some differences from animal life cycles exist. Plants use
meiosis to produce spores that develop into
multicellular haploid
gametophytes which produce gametes by mitosis. In animals there is no corresponding multicellular haploid phase. The sperm of plants that reproduce using spores are formed by mitosis in an organ of the gametophyte known as the
antheridium and the egg cells by mitosis in a flask-shaped organ called the
archegonium. Plant sperm cells are their only motile cells, often described as flagellate, but more correctly as ciliate. Bryophytes have 2 flagella, horsetails have up to 200 and the mature spermatozoa of the
cycad Zamia pumila has up to 50,000 flagella. Cycads and
Ginkgo biloba are the only gymnosperms with motile sperm. In the
flowering plants, the female gametophyte is produced inside the
ovule within the
ovary of the flower. When mature, the haploid gametophyte produces female gametes which are ready for fertilization. The male gametophyte is produced inside a
pollen grain within the
anther and is non-motile, but can be distributed by wind, water or animal vectors. When a pollen grain lands on a mature
stigma of a flower it germinates to form a
pollen tube that grows down the style into the ovary of the flower and then into the ovule. The pollen then produces non-motile sperm nuclei by mitosis that are transported down the pollen tube to the ovule where they are released for fertilization of the egg cell. == See also ==