female
No, the carpel is the female reproductive part of a flower. It contains the ovary, style, and stigma where the ovules are produced and fertilized. The male reproductive part of a flower is called the stamen, which consists of the anther and filament that produce and release pollen.
The Female part of the flower is Called The Pistil or The Carpel.
The Female part of the flower is Called The Pistil or The Carpel.
The pollen grains from the stamen (male part) of the flower are transferred to the carpel (female part) of another flower to pollinate (fertilize) that flower.
Androecium is also known as the male reproductive part of a flower, and gynoecium is also referred to as the female reproductive part of a flower.
pistil[carpel] [grynoceium]
The carpel is the female part of flower: a female reproductive organ in a flower, enclosing the fertilized ovules that are developing into seeds. It consists of the stigma and usually a style.
The male sex organ parts create the pollen. The carpal is the female part of the flower. Inside the carpel is the ovary where the seed forms.
In the female part of the flower called the Carpel. The seed grows out of the ovary.
The main flower parts are the male part called the stamen and the female part called the pistil.
The male part of a flower is the stamen. The female part of a flower is a pistil.
Yes, the chrysanthemum flower has both the carpel, which is the female reproductive organ, and the stigma, which is part of the carpel and where pollen grains land during pollination.