it is stick so therefore it holds the pollen in place.
The stigma, which is covered with a sticky substance, catches the pollen.
The part of the flower that receives pollen is the stigma, which is the upper part of the pistil. The stigma is typically sticky or feathery, allowing it to effectively capture pollen grains transferred from the anthers of the same or other flowers. After pollen lands on the stigma, it can germinate and grow down the style to fertilize the ovules in the ovary.
The knob at the top of a flower is called the stigma. It is part of the flower's reproductive system and is the structure that receives pollen during fertilization. The stigma is usually sticky to help capture pollen grains, facilitating the process of pollination.
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 pollen grains cannot fertilize the flower
The part of the flower that has a sugary substance for receiving pollen grains is the stigma. It is located at the top of the pistil, which is the female reproductive part of the flower. The sticky or sugary surface of the stigma helps to capture and hold pollen grains during pollination, facilitating fertilization.
stamen is the broad term; the individual parts are called anthers. actually i think he means the stigmata
I'd say pollen
The structure where pollen grains land and stick is the stigma of a flower. The stigma is the uppermost part of the pistil, and its sticky surface helps to capture and hold pollen grains for fertilization.
in the gumamela flower
stigma
when pollen grain are transferred from the stigma the ovule of the flower , whats takes place