Ovaries can only be found in females.
The female gamete is present in the ovary of a flower and the male gametes are present in the anthers.
They meet in the oviduct ('tube' connecting the ovary and the uterus).
In animals, sex cells (gametes) are formed in organs called gonads. Male sex cells are formed in the male gonads, called testes (the singular is testis). Sperm found in the Testis.
Pollen is basically the male "seeds" of plants. Just like we have males and females, plants have male and female parts to reproduce. The plant equivalent to a female would be a flower (it often contains an ovary where the pollen goes).
The anther is where all of the little reproductive parts are held. Then there's the embryo, style, ovary, and ovule.
ovary
Ovaries can only be found in females.
male sex cells are formed in anther and female sex cells in the ovary
The ovaries are the female glands that produce sex hormone and they are similar to the testes in the male.
The female gamete is present in the ovary of a flower and the male gametes are present in the anthers.
No, the ovaries produce eggs that are neither male nor female. It is the father's sperm that determines whether the egg will be male or female.
No. Ovary is part of a bisexual or female flower
None that I know of. If there are any, they are the exception rather than the rule. The female flowers have the ovary part which gets fertilized by the pollen from the male flower, and this ovary then enlarges to form a fruit.
For a female is: style, ovary, ovule and stigma. For a male flower: anther and filament.
Female; stigma, style, ovary, pistil Male ;petal, anther, filament, stamen
the flowers, consisting of female stigma, style and ovary - and the male anthers and filaments
In the style