No, a plant does not even produce sperm and egg cells.
The testes are responsible for producing sperm cells in the male reproductive system.
Sperm cells are animal cells.
Plant sperm cells are called male gametes or sperm cells. They are produced in the anther of a flower through a process called pollenation.
Sperm cells are animal cells.
germ cells
You don't want to know. ( He,he!) Sperm cells are are produced in specialised tissue called the germinal epithelium. During puberty, hormones stimulate the sperm cells to become active. The process for producing sperm cells is called spermatogenesis.
because meiosis has to do with sexual reproduction
There are more than two if you were to disect the testes. Two than come to mind are sperm cells and blood cells but there are also other tissue cells such as skin cells. Perhaps you need to rephrase the question.
Generally not, although some plant sperm do have flagella.
Plants do not have sperm cells. In plants, fertilization occurs when a pollen grain (containing sperm cells) lands on the stigma of a flower and grows a pollen tube to deliver the sperm cells to the ovule.
Cells replicate for many reasons, they replicate by a process of mitosis or meiosis. Mitosis producing two daughter cells and meiosis producing gamete cells (sperm or ovum(egg) )
Sperm cells are very different from pollen grain cells, although they do have the similarity that they are both male gametes. Sperm cells are animal cells and they are mobile, they swim in a liquid medium. Pollen grain cells are plant cells and they have no mobility, they just go where the wind, or where pollinating insects, or anything else may take them.