Pollen grains
Yes, it is the plant version of the male reproductive cells. That is where the phrase "birds and bees" came from and how it connects to human reproduction. The birds and bees carry the pollen to the pistils of other plants. Plants cannot get up and walk over to a partner and mate them, so birds, bees, and wind carry the pollen to other plants.
Sperm cell nutures the sperm and helps protect the spermatozoa.
Male cones produce many pollen grains to enhance its reproductive rate & hence its evolutionary success
No.
A flower's sperm is contained within the pollen grains. These pollen grains are produced in the male reproductive organs of the flower, called the stamens. When the pollen grains are transferred to the female reproductive organs of another flower, they can fertilize the ovules and lead to seed development.
Matured pollen grains contained sperm cells. When Pollen grains are sticky, you have pollen. Pollen grains are contained in the pollen sac, with the purpose of helping plants reproduce.
Matured pollen grains contained sperm cells. When Pollen grains are sticky, you have pollen. Pollen grains are contained in the pollen sac, with the purpose of helping plants reproduce.
the sperm nucleus is found in pollen grains and directs the growth of the pollen tube to the ovule in the ovary, it then degenerates
. The male reproductive organ in an angiosperm is called the stamen. It contains pollen which houses the gametophytes (sperm) and are found in sacks called anthers.
Microspore mother cell after undergoing meiosis produces pollen grains, and the pollen grains during germination produce sperms by undergoing pollen mitosis.
It is the sperm of plants.The pollen cells goes to the female reproductive part of the plants through the wind,insects etc. It goes inside makes seeds the seeds mature they make new plants.
In plants they are called gametes not sperm cells. The male gametes are found in pollen grains and the female gametes in the ovules (eggs). In angiosperms they are found in the parts of the flowers. Pollen is found in the anthers (male part of the flower) which are in the centre (attached to the fillament-like stamens) of the flower, the anthers and stamens surround the stigma and style (female parts of the flower). In gymnosperms they are found in the male and female cones attached to the plant.
for humans it is sperm and for plants not sure Answer All animals and plants produce sperm cells and egg cells/ova. Some textbooks refer to the male sex cell as simply the male sex cell/gamete. It seems it should rather always be called a sperm cell as that is what it is. Angiosperms produce microspores/pollen grains which grow male gametophytes within themselves, which produce sperm cells.
Yes, it is the plant version of the male reproductive cells. That is where the phrase "birds and bees" came from and how it connects to human reproduction. The birds and bees carry the pollen to the pistils of other plants. Plants cannot get up and walk over to a partner and mate them, so birds, bees, and wind carry the pollen to other plants.
The sperm and egg are produced by the testis and ovary. In higher plants these are pollen grains and egg cells produced in the stamen and ovule.
Fungi plants have no sperm cells, so no
Meiosis is a form of cellular division where the resulting cells are haploid (n). This process is used to produce gametes - either pollen grains or ovules in plants. In humans it results in the ovum and sperm cells.