Crash Course Biology - Season 1 Episode 38 The Plants & The Bees: Plant Reproduction
Hank gets into the dirty details about vascular plant reproduction: they use the basic alternation of generations developed by nonvascular plants 470 million years ago, but they've tricked it out so that it works a whole lot differently compared to the way it did back in the Ordovician swamps where it got its start. Here's how the vascular plants (ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms) do it.
Year: 2024
Genre: Documentary
Country: United States of America
Studio: YouTube
Director:
Cast: Samuel Ramsey
Crew:
First Air Date: Jan 30, 2012
Last Air date: Apr 30, 2024
Season: 2 Season
Episode: 81 Episode
Runtime: 15 minutes
IMDb: 1.50/10 by 2.00 users
Popularity: 8.934
Language: English
Episode
That's Why Carbon Is A Tramp
Water - Liquid Awesome
Biological Molecules - You Are What You Eat
Eukaryopolis - The City of Animal Cells
In Da Club - Membranes & Transport
Plant Cells
ATP & Respiration
Photosynthesis
Heredity
DNA Structure and Replication
DNA, Hot Pockets, & The Longest Word Ever
Mitosis: Splitting Up is Complicated
Meiosis: Where the Sex Starts
Natural Selection
Speciation: Of Ligers & Men
Animal Development: We're Just Tubes
Evolutionary Development: Chicken Teeth
Population Genetics: When Darwin Met Mendel
Taxonomy: Life's Filing System
Evolution: It's a Thing
Comparative Anatomy: What Makes Us Animals
Simple Animals: Sponges, Jellies, & Octopuses
Complex Animals: Annelids & Arthropods
Chordates
Animal Behavior
The Nervous System
Circulatory & Respiratory Systems
The Digestive System
The Excretory System: From Your Heart to the Toilet
The Skeletal System: It's ALIVE!
Big Guns: The Muscular System
Your Immune System: Natural Born Killer
Great Glands - Your Endocrine System
The Reproductive System: How Gonads Go
Old & Odd: Archaea, Bacteria & Protists
The Sex Lives of Nonvascular Plants: Alternation of Generations
Vascular Plants = Winning!
The Plants & The Bees: Plant Reproduction
Fungi: Death Becomes Them
Ecology - Rules for Living on Earth