Add to collection
  • + Create new collection
  • Not every plant grows from a seed. Some plants, like ferns and mosses, grow from spores. Other plants use asexual vegetative reproduction and grow new plants from rhizomes or tubers. We can also use techniques like grafting or take cuttings to make new plants.

    Plants that reproduce from spores

    Ferns are very common in New Zealand. If you turn over a fern frond (leaf), you might see some unusual structures called sporangia. The sporangia produce very tiny spores. Spores are different to seeds. They do not contain plant embryos or food stores. When the sporangia break open, the spores are released and dispersed by the wind. If the spore lands in a suitable environment, it can grow into a tiny plant called a gametophyte.

    The gametophyte looks like a little, thin green plate. It does not have roots, stems or leaves. The gametophyte is a short-lived plant that has both male and female reproductive organs. These produce male and female gametes that combine in fertilisation to produce an embryo. Once fertilisation takes place, a new fern plant starts to grow into the plant we recognise as a fern. Ferns are the only land plant that has these two separate independent living stages.

    Ferns are not the only plants to reproduce from spores. Mosses, liverworts and green algae also have spores.

    Plants that reproduce from asexual vegetative reproduction

    New plants are sometimes made by asexual vegetative reproduction. These new plants have exactly the same genes as the parent. Some plants – like strawberries – have stems called stolons that grow out sideways above the soil, and new plants grow up along them. Other plants send out underground stems called rhizomes, which form new plants at a distance from the parent. Tubers (for example, potatoes) and bulbs (for example, onions) are also special underground structures that can grow into new plants.

    People also make new plants using asexual reproduction. Gardeners grow plants from cuttings. They do this by snipping a young shoot off a plant, dipping it in rooting hormone and placing the cutting in a mixture of sand and potting mix. The cutting soon grows roots and can be transferred outdoors.

    Grafting

    Grafting and budding are two ways to make new plants. This video, Grafting and budding, demonstrates these two techniques.

    Fruit tree breeders often use grafting to make new plants. Grafting allows them to have large plantings of the same fruit variety with exactly the same genetic material. Grafting uses the rootstock of a plant that grows well in the soil and joins it to the plant the breeder wishes to produce.

    Nature of science

    Although we think of science as always advancing at a steady pace, techniques like cutting and grafting have been around for thousands of years. Science has helped us understand how these techniques work and improve them with advances like rooting hormones and breeding new plant cultivars.

    Activity idea

    In this video clip, Parts of a fern, Dr Patrick Brownsey from Te Papa Museum shows us the different parts of a fern. As the language used may be too complex for younger students, consider muting the audio and providing your own simpler narration.

      Published 2 February 2014 Referencing Hub articles
          Go to full glossary
          Download all