Yes, there are. The ones that are one sex are called monoecious and the flowers that are both sexes are called dioecious. Sometimes the two sexes are found on the same plant (like corn) and sometimes the entire plant is one sex (like ginko).
Male flowers have only stamens; females have only carpels.
Well male flowers have different flower parts than females. Did you know?: Female flowers actually have ovaries in a flower kind of way
Although most flowers have both male and female elements, the noun 'flower' is a neuter noun, a word for something that has no gender.
A female flower usually has a bulb like swelling where the flower joins the stem, the male flower does not.
no they are trees
Flower have both gender male and female i.e androecium and gynoecium they are also divided in many parts
African violets are male and female flowers. They have pistils (the female part) and stamen (the male part)
Flowers that have both male and female parts are complete flowers. The male part is the pollen from the stamen. The female part is the "pistol-packing mama."
Flowers can be male, female or both. If the flowers have male and female structures they are said to be perfect. Imperfect flowers have either male or female reproductive structures. If a plant has male and female flowers on one plant it is said to be monoecious (which means "one house"). Squash and corn plants are monoecious. If the male and female flowers are on separate plants, they are said to be dioecious (which means "two houses"). Hollies, kiwi and ginko plants are dioecious.
Some plants have separate male and female flowers, dioecious plants have male and female flowers on separate plants, monecious plants have male and female flowers on the same plants . Holly trees and kiwi vines are diocious.
Gladiolus is a complete flower. The flowers have both male and female parts. There are no separate flowers for male and female. There are no separate male and female plants for gladiolus.
Dioecious,AAndroecious - Male flowersAGynoecious - Female flowers
Hydrangea have complete flowers. They do not have separate male and female flowers. They do not have separate male and female plants.
Yes, flowers can have both male and female reproductive parts. These types of flowers are called "perfect" or "hermaphroditic" flowers. They contain both the male stamen, which produces pollen, and the female pistil, which contains the ovary. This allows them to self-pollinate or be pollinated by other flowers.
Oak trees are monoecious, meaning that they have male and female flowers on the same plant. Unlike many other flowering plants, however, they have separate male and female flowers. The male flowers produce pollen, while the female flowers produce eggs that will be fertilized once the flowers are pollinated. Each oak tree is essentially both male and female, since it features both male and female flowers. The male flowers are small structures on stalk-like appendages called catkins; the catkins droop down from some of the branches. Female flowers are so small they are best identified with a magnifying glass. They are found on twigs near the base of emerging leaves, where they appear a week or so before the male flowers.
niether
yes it can!
Watermelons have both male and female flowers on the same plant. It's easy to tell the difference because the male flowers have powdery pollen-filled anthers and the female flowers have an ovary below them that looks like a tiny watermelon.