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Sexual
Both pollen and sperm are male components responsible for reproduction when joined to their female counterparts.
The answer is no. The anther contains pollen which contains sperm cells. Mainly through pollination, the pollen from the anther travels down the pistil, and meets the egg where it fertilizes the egg.
Sperm cells(from male) fertilizes the egg cell(from female)
In plants, the male sex cells are called sperm (like in animals). These are produced from pollen, originating in the anther.
In the style
In the style
it is the process in which pollen, the male reproductive cells, comes off the anther, the male reproductive organ of a connifer ex: pine tree or flower ex: tulip. this is caused usually in connifers by wind blowing pollen to the female cones (later becoming pinecones) and in flowering plants by animals drinking nectar, and touching the anther. once the pollen of a flowering plant is on the animal, the animal goes to another flower to eat more nectar, and it touches the Pistil, the female reproductive organ, causing the pollen to stick to it. once the pollen is on, it creates a tube down to a chamber of unfertile egg cells, the female reprodictive cells. the tubes carry sperm to the eggs, which fertilizes them and they develop into seeds, the egg containing chamberbecomes a fruit, such as a Pepper, Tomato, Eggplant, Apple, any edible part of a plant containing seeds.Adric Ritze
male flowers produce pollen. the females take it in it's reproductive system.
It is the sperm of plants.The pollen cells goes to the female reproductive part of the plants through the wind,insects etc. It goes inside makes seeds the seeds mature they make new plants.
The female sex cells of a plant are eggs or ova, depending on your preference. The male sex cells are sperm that are contained within the pollen.
The male and female reproductive cells of the plant are called the sperm cells and egg cells, respectively. Typically, in flowering plants, or angiosperms, the sperm nuclei develop within a pollen grain and, upon germination of the pollen grain, the sperm nuclei proceed to travel to the haploid, multi-celled, female gametophyte within the ovary. The female gametophyte harbors the egg cell. One sperm nucleus fertilizes the egg cell to give rise to the embryo, and, typically, a second sperm nucleus fertilizes another cell, referred to as a central cell, to create an endosperm, which produces a nutritive storehouse for the developing embryo.