In gymnosperms and flowering plants, the megaspore is produced inside the
nucellus of the
ovule. During megasporogenesis, a diploid precursor cell, the
megasporocyte or megaspore mother cell, undergoes
meiosis to produce initially four haploid cells (
the megaspores). Angiosperms exhibit three patterns of megasporogenesis: monosporic, bisporic, and
tetrasporic, also known as the
Polygonum type, the
Alisma type, and the
Drusa type, respectively. The monosporic pattern occurs most frequently (>70% of angiosperms) and is found in many economically and biologically important groups such as Brassicaceae (e.g.,
Arabidopsis,
Capsella,
Brassica), Gramineae (e.g., maize, rice, wheat), Malvaceae (e.g., cotton), Leguminoseae (e.g., beans, soybean), and Solanaceae (e.g., pepper, tobacco, tomato, potato, petunia). This pattern is characterized by
cell plate formation after
meiosis 1 & 2, which results in four one-nucleate megaspores, of which three degenerate. The bisporic pattern is characterized by cell plate formation only after meiosis 1, and results in two two-nucleate megaspores, of which one degenerates. The tetrasporic pattern is characterized by cell plates failing to form after either meiosis 1 or 2, and results in one four-nucleate megaspore. Therefore, each pattern gives rise to a single functional megaspore which contains one, two, or four meiotic nuclei, respectively. The megaspore then undergoes megagametogenesis to give rise to the female gametophyte. ==Megagametogenesis==