Stamens are usually more numerous in flowers; there is usually only one pistil.
The plant known as the Christmas cactus as it can be grown to flower around Christmas is Schlumbergia , it was called Zygocactus until recently.A Christmas Cactus....Zygocactus - The Red is beautiful and quite festive.
succulent, spiny, shiny, bulbous, prickly,
the staminate also known as the androecium is composed of the organs of the male reproductive system (flower). these are the anther and filament. the pistillate on the other hand (gynoecium) is composed of the organs of the female reproductive system. these are the pistil, style and ovary.
She won once, for her first and only nomination as Best Supporting Actress in Cactus Flower (1969).
Fruit will only divelop from female parts of the flower but many plants can be both male and female.
Neither, or both depending on how you view the answer. Seeds are the combination of the male and female gametes and are basically a new (hybrid) individual. To possibly confuse it more, a plant (once grown from the seed) can bear both sex organs at the same time in the form of a flower with both male and female parts; or a plant can be single sexed and produce only male flowers or female flowers.
Yes, but only if the flower contains the male anthers. Some plants have separate male and female flowers.
Flowers have sex organs called stamens and pistils. These are not the petals. The petals are neither male nor female. Many flowers have both pistil and stamen and are called perfect flowers. Some flowers have only stamens and are males, some have only pistils and are female.
The mammary glands are an external female reproductive organ.
No they do not. Women get their periods because we have internal female organs (ovaries, fallopian tubes, etc). When a male to female transexual gets an operation, there are no internal female organs that are built. The only thing that is built is a vagina that you can see from the outside. So since they do not have ovaries, etc. they cannot get their periods.
Cactus are native to the Americas, ranging from Patagonia in the south to parts of western Canada in the north. They are often found in drought-ridden areas. Spines and areoles give rise to flowers, which are usually tubular and multi-petaled. Cactus flowers usually have many stamens, but only a single style, which may branch at the end into more than one stigma.