There isn't a female and male corn.
Each corn plant, however, does have a male and female part.
The male part of the plant is at the very top and is called the tassel. The silk on the corn is the Female part.
~tobeornottobe55
root
the both of them male and feamale
If you want to have baby corns your female corn need to hibernate. Reason is simple, female corns have big job(to bring babys to the world). Anyway you can put your male to hibernate too.
poop
yes...
Usually, the female is the larger of the two.
if you would like baby corn snakes then yes
Individual corn (maize) stalks have both female and male plant parts, so there is no such thing as "male corn stalk".
A female has to be 300 g and a male has to be 250 g
I have both males and females in my vast reptiles collection.
Corn bearing unisexual flowers pollinate by wind. The male flowers are produced at the top of the plant and the female flowers in leaf axil, somewhere at midlength of the plant. Male flowers of the plant mature first followed by female flowers. Thus cross pollination is ensured.
Corn, birch, pine trees and most fig species.
Corn is monoecious (mon-ee-shuss) which means that there are both male and female flowers on each corn plant. In some monoecious plants, male and female parts are in the same flower. In corn, male and female flowers are in different locations - the male flowers form a tassel which is at the top of the plant. The female flower is located at the junction of leaves and stem. It consists of a collection of hairs (silks) enclosed in the husks of what will become the ears. These silks are pollen-receiving tubes. Wind-blown pollen from the male flowers (tassel) falls on the silks below. Each silk leads to a kernel, and pollen must land on all silks for the ear to fill out completely with kernels. Kernel "skips" (ears only partly filled out with kernels) often are the result of poor pollination.