What is the significance of apomixis?
Hybrids are cultivated these days on a large scale as they have superior traits. But the traits of hybrid plants are lost in successive generations as the hybrid plants produce seeds through sexual reproduction which involves meiosis and fertilisation. To retain the characters of hybrids, the seeds have to be produced every year which is very expensive.
But by the mechanism of apomixis, seeds are produced without fertilisation (sexual reproduction) from the single parent and hence there is no segregation of characters in the progeny.
Hence the characteristics of hybrids are preserved in future generations by apomixis and also this method of producing seeds is not expensive.
In contrast to sexual seed formation, apomixis can occur by various mechanisms that share three common developmental components:
(i) a bypass of meiosis during embryo sac formation (apomeiosis)
(ii) development of an embryo independent of fertilization (a process known as parthenogenesis)
(iii) formation of viable endosperm either via fertilisation-independent means or following fertilisation with a sperm cell. So although it bypasses meiosis during embryo development, in some plants fertilisation may be needed to induce or start it.