Basic Rose Facts:
Roses are plants and the type of plant is called a flower.
The flowers of rose plants have sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils.
The rose flower is termed "complete" because all four structures are present.
The rose flower is termed "perfect" because it has both male (stamen) and female (pistil) reproductive parts.
Also:
Perfect flowers also termed bisexual whether they have sepals or petals.
Bisexual flowers are also said to be hermaphroditic.
All complete flowers are therefore perfect and bisexual and hermaphroditic.
Naturally evolved roses generally have five sepals, five petals and many spirally arranged stamens.
Domestic roses have additional petals that were bred from the stamens and may number over 50.
Roses have several to many pistils.
A rose is a woody perennial of the genus Rosa, within the family Rosaceae.
Rose flowers are actinomorphic (i.e. radially symmetrical) and almost always hermaphroditic.
In roses, the bases of the sepals, petals, and stamens are fused together to form a characteristic cup-like structure called hypanthium.
Short:
A complete flower has all four components: petals, sepals, pistil and stamen.
A perfect flower has both male (stamen) and female (pistil) reproductive parts. Therefore all complete flowers are perfect, but not all perfect flowers are complete.
More and Better:
A flower having sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils is complete; lacking one or more of such structures, it is said to be incomplete.
Stamens and pistils are not present together in all flowers. When both are present the flower is said to be perfect, or bisexual, regardless of a lack of any other part that renders it incomplete.
Bisexual or perfect flowers have both male (androecium) and female (gynoecium) reproductive units, including stamens, carpels, and an ovary.
Flowers that contain both androecium and gynoecium are called androgynous or hermaphroditic.
Examples of plants with perfect or bisexual flowers include the lily, rose, and most plants with large showy flowers, though perfect flower does not have to have petals or sepals.
A complete flower is a perfect flower with petals and sepals.
A flower is termed unisexual flower if it is either functionally male or functionally female, but not both. A whole plant may be of only one type or a plant may have both male and female flowers
Some plants have bisexual flowers but the pollen is produced before the stigma of the same flower is receptive of pollen, these are described as protandrous flowers.
Short:
A complete flower has all four components: petals, sepals, pistil and stamen.
A perfect flower has both male (stamen) and female (pistil) reproductive parts. Therefore all complete flowers are perfect, but not all perfect flowers are complete.
More and Better:
A flower having sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils is complete; lacking one or more of such structures, it is said to be incomplete.
Stamens and pistils are not present together in all flowers. When both are present the flower is said to be perfect, or bisexual, regardless of a lack of any other part that renders it incomplete.
Bisexual or perfect flowers have both male (androecium) and female (gynoecium) reproductive units, including stamens, carpels, and an ovary.
Flowers that contain both androecium and gynoecium are called androgynous or hermaphroditic.
Examples of plants with perfect or bisexual flowers include the lily, rose, and most plants with large showy flowers, though perfect flower does not have to have petals or sepals.
A complete flower is a perfect flower with petals and sepals.
A flower is termed unisexual flower if it is either functionally male or functionally female, but not both. A whole plant may be of only one type or a plant may have both male and female flowers
Some plants have bisexual flowers but the pollen is produced before the stigma of the same flower is receptive of pollen, these are described as protandrous flowers.
Short:
A complete flower has all four components: petals, sepals, pistil and stamen.
A perfect flower has both male (stamen) and female (pistil) reproductive parts. Therefore all complete flowers are perfect, but not all perfect flowers are complete.
More and Better:
A flower having sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils is complete; lacking one or more of such structures, it is said to be incomplete.
Stamens and pistils are not present together in all flowers. When both are present the flower is said to be perfect, or bisexual, regardless of a lack of any other part that renders it incomplete.
Bisexual or perfect flowers have both male (androecium) and female (gynoecium) reproductive units, including stamens, carpels, and an ovary.
Flowers that contain both androecium and gynoecium are called androgynous or hermaphroditic.
Examples of plants with perfect or bisexual flowers include the lily, rose, and most plants with large showy flowers, though perfect flower does not have to have petals or sepals.
A complete flower is a perfect flower with petals and sepals.
A flower is termed unisexual flower if it is either functionally male or functionally female, but not both. A whole plant may be of only one type or a plant may have both male and female flowers
Some plants have bisexual flowers but the pollen is produced before the stigma of the same flower is receptive of pollen. These are described as protandrous flowers.
Having all of the parts on a plant will help contribute to having a complete flower. Complete flowers have petals, pollens, and a scent.
A perfect flower contains both male and female reproductive parts. if a perfect has petals and sepals , it is also then a complete flower
A complete flower has calyx, corolla, androecium & gynoecium.
If it has both female and male reproductive structures, then it is a perfect flower.Pistil and Stamen=Perfect Flower.7th grade Life Science Teacher
LILY IS A complete flower BECAUSE IT CONTAIN ALL FOUR: sepals,petals,pistil,and a stamen
Yes
Dandelions are incomplete because they have bracts instead of sepals.
Short Answer:Chili plants are bisexual.The chili plants are in the genus Capsicum, a genus of flowering plants in the nightshade family Solanaceae.There are 20 or 30 different species of this plant.It appears that all species in this genus are "perfect" and "complete" and can self pollinate.One would have to review all the species to see if there is an exception.More Information:Perfect flowers are also called bisexual flowers.A perfect flower has both male (androecium) and female (gynoecium) reproductive units.A "complete flower" and a "perfect flower" are different.A flower having sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils is complete.If a flower lacks one or more of such structures, it is said to be incomplete.All complete flowers are therefore perfect and bisexual.An incomplete flower that lacks petals may then be perfect if it still contains both male (androecium) and female (gynoecium) reproductive units.Bisexual does not mean self fertilizing. Some bisexual flowers are self fertilizing and some not and some both. Mother nature has made a variety of arrangements for flowers. Self fertilization keeps the genetic information of the parent flower in the seeds.Cross pollinating is outbreeding and means the pollen of one plant connects with another plant to produce seeds. Some plants are made by Nature in a way that they are incapable of self pollination and are said to be self incompatible.Flowers that contain both androecium and gynoecium are called androgynous or hermaphroditic.Thus, perfect flowers are both bisexual and hermaphroditic.Mother nature makes some plants so that individuals of the same species are either male or female, not both.These flowers are "imperfect."This requires cross pollination to produce seeds. If a plant population has separate male and female plants, it is dioecious. This is relatively rare and only about 6% of plants have this form of reproduction.
for platoweb its D complete
A complete flower has all four whorls: petals, sepals, pistil and stamen. A perfect flower has both male(stamen) and female(pistil) reproductive parts. Therefore all complete flowers are perfect, but not all perfect flowers are complete.
The gumamela is a complete, as well as a perfect flower. It has all the sterile parts such as the sepal and petal. It also has the fertile parts of a flower namely the androecium and gynoecium.
Incomplete flower One which lacks any one or more of these parts; calyx, corolla, stamens, and pistils. And Complete flowers contain both the male and female parts (stamen and pistil) as well as sepals and petals. Hope it helps
complete flower
perfect flower
A complete flower has all four parts: sepal, petals, stamen (male) and pistil (female).A perfect flower just has the male and female parts.The cornflower (Bachelor's-button) is a perfect flower.As a member of the family Asterales, it has multiple flowers making up a flowerhead (capitula).There are 5 stamens (male reproductive part)There is a 2 carpel fused pistil with style (female reproductive part)The floret does not have petals and rarely has sepals.
its a imperfect flower when its done growing and a perfect flower is a full gorwn flower
Yes , a cucumber flower is also a very complete flower .
The camia flower has all the parts of a flower so it is a complete flower.
complete flower
No, Anemone flower is perfect.