one is a ovary..
No, not all plants have two kinds of flowers. Some plants have flowers that contain both male and female reproductive parts, making them "perfect" or "hermaphroditic" flowers. Other plants have separate male and female flowers on the same plant or on different plants, referred to as "imperfect" flowers.
No not all flowers have both male and female parts, and some plants have totally separate male and female flowers.Plants that have either male or female floral parts, but not both are called Dioicous ("two houses")Plants that have both male and female floral parts are called Monoicous ("one house")While many angiosperms seem to have both anthers and ovules they may not, whereas gymnosperms are very good examples of Diocious flowers.
The pumpkin flower has both male and female parts...this is called monoecious (one house). Other plants have separate male and female plants dioecious (two houses).
No, cottonwood trees typically have separate male and female flowers on the same tree, but not different types of flowers. The male flowers produce pollen, while the female flowers produce seeds.
Flowers can be male, female or both. If the flowers have male and female structures they are said to be perfect. Imperfect flowers have either male or female reproductive structures. If a plant has male and female flowers on one plant it is said to be monoecious (which means "one house"). Squash and corn plants are monoecious. If the male and female flowers are on separate plants, they are said to be dioecious (which means "two houses"). Hollies, kiwi and ginko plants are dioecious.
The two structures specialized for reproduction in seed plants are the male structure called stamen, which contains the pollen-producing anther and filament, and the female structure called carpel, which includes the stigma, style, and ovary where the ovules are located. These structures are responsible for the production and fertilization of seeds in seed plants.
Some plants have separate male and female flowers, dioecious plants have male and female flowers on separate plants, monecious plants have male and female flowers on the same plants . Holly trees and kiwi vines are diocious.
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Yes, there are. The ones that are one sex are called monoecious and the flowers that are both sexes are called dioecious. Sometimes the two sexes are found on the same plant (like corn) and sometimes the entire plant is one sex (like ginko).
Plants with two kinds of flowers, like some species of holly, have male and female reproductive structures on different flowers. Cross-pollination between the two types of flowers is needed for seed production. Pollen from male flowers must be transferred to female flowers to fertilize the ovules and initiate seed development.
it consists of two parts