1- The male androecium are the numerous stamens; there are always several stamento each pistil.
2- The stamen has two parts and is never compound. Anthers are the end bobbles that generate pollen grains (male gametophyte) in antheridia. The stamen has a vascular stalk called a filament that elevates and provides nutrients for the pollen producing anther.
3- The pollen grains are released.
1- A flower may have one or more pistils.
2- The female gynoecium is a pistil with three distinct portions and it can be compound in structure. Pistils are the female reproductive organs, including the ovary. Stigmas are the tips that accept the pollen. The style extends between the stigma and the ovary. A compound or segmented gynoecium is made up of carpels. Compound pistils have radially segmented stigma/style/ovary making them polycarpellate. Apples are pentacarpellate.
3- The ovary generates the ovule (female gamatophyte) that is never released but remains inside the enclosing ovary. Inside the ovule is the gametophyte's archegonium that produces ova (eggs).
4- the ovary, once the ova inside the ovules are fertilized, matures to become a fruit.
The pistil is the female reproductive structure of a flower. It consists of three parts: the stigma, the style, and the ovary. Inside the ovary is a small cavity that contains the ovule that, when fertilized, eventually becomes a seed.
Three of the many organs in the female reproductive system include the uterus, ovaries, and vagina.
The female organ of a flower is called the pistil. It three main parts are the stigma, style and the ovary.
The lungs and kidneys are examples of organs for which there are two in the body. Generally, each organ is different and has different functions.
Penis, Clitoris, Nipples
Root, stem, leaf, flower, fruit and seeds etc.
Pistil or the female reproduction structure is the innermost whorl, located in the center of the flower. Often vase-shaped, the pistil consists of three parts: the stigma, the style and the ovary.
The female reproductive structure is called the pistil and is comprised of three main parts; the stigma, style and ovary.
The pistil is the female reproductive structure of a flower. It consists of three parts: the stigma, the style, and the ovary. Inside the ovary is a small cavity that contains the ovule that, when fertilized, eventually becomes a seed.
All worms have both male reproductive organs and female reproductive organs. This means that they are hermaphrodites. The female organs of a worm include the egg sacs and ovaries. The male organs are two pairs of testes, three pairs of seminal vesicles and sperm funnels. Despite the fact that worms have both male and female organs; it must mate with another worm in order to reproduce its own kind.
Flower petals, tiling, art
Some plants have separate plants for males and females. Others have flowers that have male and female parts. A good memory aid is "pistil packing mama."