Flowering plants have several different parts that are important in pollination. Flowers have male parts called stamens that produce a sticky powder called pollen.
Flowers have a female part called the pistil. The top of the pistil is called the stigma, and is often sticky.
To be pollinated, pollen must be moved from a stamen to the stigma. When pollen from a plant's stamen is transferred to that same plant's stigma, it is called self-pollination.
When pollen from a plant's stamen is transferred to a different plant's stigma, it is called cross-pollination. Cross-pollination produces stronger plants. The plants must be of the same species. For example, only pollen from a daisy can pollinate another daisy. Pollen from a rose or an apple tree would not work.
Pollination occurs in several ways. People can transfer pollen from one flower to another, but most plants are pollinated without any help from people. Usually plants rely on animals or the wind to pollinate them.
When animals such as bees, butterflies, moths, flies, and hummingbirds pollinate plants, it's accidental. They are not trying to pollinate the plant. Usually they are at the plant to get food, the sticky pollen or a sweet nectar made at the base of the petals. When feeding, the animals accidentally rub against the stamens and get pollen stuck all over themselves. When they move to another flower to feed, some of the pollen can rub off onto this new plant's stigma.
Plants that are pollinated by animals often are brightly colored and have a strong smell to attract the animal pollinators.
Another way plants are pollinated is by the wind. The wind picks up pollen from one plant and blows it onto another.
Plants that are pollinated by wind often have long stamens and pistils. Since they do not need to attract animal pollinators, they can be dully colored, unscented, and with small or no petals since no insect needs to land on them.
Pollen is transferred from the stamens to the pistil
To fertilise it.
It's a reproductive act.
It's a reproductive act.
From the stamen to the stigma which is the sticky end of the pistil (which includes the stigma, style and the ovary.
Pollen is produced in the male reproductive parts of a flower, specifically in the anthers, which are located at the tips of the stamens. The stamens are the pollen-producing structures that typically consist of a filament and an anther. When mature, the anthers release pollen grains, which can then be transferred to the female part of the flower, known as the pistil, for fertilization.
Pollination is the process of how pollen is transferred by insects, wind, or rain to the pistol of a flower. This is essential to the fertilization of a plant.
In flowering plants, stamens (the male reproductive organs) produce pollen, while the pistil (the female reproductive organ) contains the ovary, style, and stigma. During pollination, pollen from the stamens is transferred to the stigma of the pistil, leading to fertilization. After fertilization, the stamens may wither and fall away, while the pistil develops into fruit, housing the seeds. This process is crucial for the reproduction and propagation of flowering plants.
Stamens are usually yellow in color on maturity of pollen grains. To begin with stamens are green in color.
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.
STAMENS
No, stamens do not make egg cells. Stamens are the male reproductive parts of a flower that produce pollen containing male gametes, while egg cells are found in the ovules located in the female reproductive parts of the flower. The union of pollen with the egg cell in the ovule leads to fertilization in plants.