No, taking out the anther won't make a flower convert into a fruit. In order to pollinate and fertilize the ovules (eggs) inside the flower's ovary, pollen must be produced and released by the reproductive organ known as the anther. A flower cannot turn into a fruit without effective fertilization and pollination.
the ovule becomes a fruit
The flower buds turn into fruit
The ovules are turn into fruit after they have been fertilized.The ovules are located in the ovary.
The ovary of a flower develops into a fruit after fertilization. The ovules inside the ovary become seeds, while the ovary itself transforms into the fruit that surrounds and protects the seeds.
In the normal flowers of the seed bearing plants known as magnoliophyta (magnoliopsida for broad leaved and liliopsida for narrow leaved like the grasses), The male part of a flower is the stamen made up of two main parts, the filament which in turn, holds the anther. The anther is made up of several parts but usually differentiates into two sacks which bear pollen. Pollen is made of of several cells but one is the haploid cell which will fertilise the female parts of the flower or, more commonly, another female flower.Other plants, such as cycadophyta and coniferophyta, also have pollen but they do not have true flowers.
The main function of the flower within the plant is to attract insects or pollination and to turn into fruit. This helps to reproduce the plant.
you may have a male plant. in which case it will not produce fruit but it will flower
The ovary is located at the bottom near the stem. The ovary contains ovules that when fertilized by pollen in will turn into a seed. The ovary will then turn into a fruit or shell.
yes every kind of fruit starts out as a flower including apples
The ovary of a flower typically develops into a fruit after fertilization. The ovary walls thicken and mature into the fruit, which contains seeds formed from the fertilized ovules.
Flowers produce pollen in their male reproductive organs called anthers. Pollen is typically dispersed from the anthers by wind, insects, birds, or other animals and may land on the stigma of the same flower (self-pollination) or on the stigma of a different flower (cross-pollination) to fertilize the ovules and produce seeds.
Flowers.... Fruiting trees and bushes produce flowers - the flowers are pollinated by insects - and the fertilised flowers turn into buds, from which the fruit grows.