endosperm
endosperm The inner part of cereal grains; in wheat it comprises about 83% of the grain. Mainly starch, it is the source of semolina. Contains only about 10% of the vitamin B1, 35% of the vitamin B2, 40% of the niacin, and 50% of the vitamin B6 and pantothenic acid of the whole grain. See also flour, extraction rate.
endosperm
endosperm
1. A triploid structure found in many seeds of angiosperms: it frequently stores food materials which are broken down during germination.
2. See EMBRYO SAC and DOUBLE FERTILIZATION.
1. A triploid structure found in many seeds of angiosperms: it frequently stores food materials which are broken down during germination.
2. See EMBRYO SAC and DOUBLE FERTILIZATION.
endosperm
endosperm A nutritive tissue, characteristic of flowering plants, that surrounds the developing embryo in a seed. It develops from nuclei in the embryo sac and its cells are triploid. In endospermic seeds it remains and increases in size; in nonendospermic seeds it disappears as the food is absorbed by the embryo, particularly the cotyledons. Many plants with endospermic seeds, such as cereals and oil crops, are cultivated for the rich food reserves in the endosperm.
endosperm
endosperm Tissue that surrounds the developing embryo of a seed and provides food for growth. It is triploid (each cell has three sets of chromosomes), being derived from the fusion of one of the male gametes from the germinated pollen grain and two of the haploid nuclei in the embryo sac. See also alternation of generations
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endosperm