no, the anther produces pollen
Pollen is male part of the flower and stigma is the uppermost part of the gynoecium (which is female part). Thus stigma does not produce pollen, rather pollen land on stigma after pollination to fertilize the egg inside the ovary of the flower.
The stigma on a flower is responsible for receiving pollen during fertilization. It is the receptive surface where pollen grains adhere and germinate to produce a pollen tube that delivers sperm to the ovules. This process is essential for sexual reproduction in plants.
The stigma catches pollen and the pollen grain germinate on the stigma. The stigma is sticky to catch and trap pollen with various hairs or flaps.
Pollination is the union of the pollen and the stigma.
The stamens which are the male parts produce pollen. It creates in the anther. For an even better answer if the pollen from a stamen travels to the stigma in the same flower it will be know a self pollination. For cross pollination the anther must produce pollen and travel to a different flower's stigma. It is basically self pollination with two flowers.
The anther produces pollen grains which would be transferred to other plant's stigma which will receive the pollen grains when an insect fly pass it then the pollen grains will be stuck on its wings.
Pollen is collected in the stigma.
stigma
The transfer of pollen to the stigma of a flower is called pollination. The transfer of pollen is called pollenation.
In a flower carpel, the stigma is the terminal portion that has no epidermis and is fitted to receive pollen.
pollination-it's that simple :)
No, stigma does not produce a sugary substance. In botanical terms, the stigma is the part of a flower that receives pollen during fertilization. While some plants may have sugary nectar to attract pollinators, this nectar is produced by glandular structures, not the stigma itself.