gametophyte
It is called gametophytic phase
How are gametes formed?
The Male Gametes are formed in the testicles.
Yes, the sex organs in which gametes are produced are formed on gametophytes in plants. Gametophytes are the haploid phase of the plant life cycle, and they give rise to the male and female gametes through processes like mitosis and meiosis in specialized structures called gametangia.
Four unique gametes are formed during the meiosis stage of an organism's life cycle, specifically during meiosis I when homologous chromosomes separate to create four haploid cells with unique genetic combinations. This genetic diversity ensures variation among offspring during sexual reproduction.
I got this from someone off of yahoo. I think the answer has something to do with how the gametes are formed. In animals, the gametes are formed from through spermatogenesis in males and oogenesis in females. The process the cells undergo is meiosis. In plants however, the formation of gametes have a few more steps. The spore phase, gametophyte phase and finally gametes. So the basic differences that exists between the life cycles of higher plants and higher animals is how the gametes are formed. Higher animals have "one" basic step to forming gametes while higher plants have several.
With Hh genotype, two types of gametes can be formed: H gametes and h gametes. This is because each parent can pass on either the dominant allele (H) or the recessive allele (h) to their offspring.
they were formed in the late phase
Chromosomes
gametangia
gametangia
No gametes are formed in asexual reproduction because they are only formed in sexual reproduction. Many cells can come from one cell in asexual reproduction which is really a cloning process, but not gametes.
gametangia