The male part of a flower (the stamen) produces pollen, which are the sperm cells.
The male reproductive part of the flower
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.
Pollen is male part of the flower and stigma is the uppermost part of the gynoecium (which is female part). Thus stigma does not produce pollen, rather pollen land on stigma after pollination to fertilize the egg inside the ovary of the flower.
The male part of a flower is the stamen. The female part of a flower is a pistil.
gynoecium is the female part of the flower
The male part of the flower is called the Stamen.
Pollen comes from male part of the flower.
Like most flowers, dandelions reproduce with the help of insects who pollinate the flower, transferring pollen from the male part of the flower to the female part of the flower. The flower is then able to produce seeds to make new flowers.
The anther produces pollen grains which would be transferred to other plant's stigma which will receive the pollen grains when an insect fly pass it then the pollen grains will be stuck on its wings.
the female is the stem, and the male is the leaf. Above is right but if u want more detail inside the stem is the female which will help the male grow and when that happens the male is the middle part of the flower which were bees get the nectar.
It its ankle holster, usually. The Pistil (female part of the flower that receives pollen), however, is in the center of the petals, surrounded by the Stamen (the male part of the flower that produce pollen).
The flower part that is similar to the male testes is the anther, which is part of the stamen. The anther produces and contains pollen, which is analogous to sperm in animals. Just as testes produce sperm for reproduction, the anthers release pollen for fertilization in plants.