reproductive cell
The male sex cells from pollen grain are called male gametes.
The male sex cell from a pollen grain is called a sperm cell. It is responsible for fertilizing the female sex cell (ovule) in plants during the process of pollination.
The male sex cell in a plant is called a pollen grain. It is produced in the anther of a flower and is responsible for fertilizing the female sex cell, located in the ovule, during the process of pollination.
A pollen tube emerges out from the pollen grain fallen on the stigma which leads the male sex cell to the ovary through style (a connection stigma & ovary.
The Male sex cell, which is in the Anther or Stamen, is called a sperm just like the male sex cell in humans.
In animals it would be called a sperm. In plants I assume the answer would be the pollen, however, the pollen is not necessarily one cell. Even if it is one cell it will have more than one nucleus (2 or 3).
Pollen.
During pollination, the male nucleus in a pollen grain is transferred to the female egg cell within the ovule of a plant. This transfer is facilitated by a pollen tube that grows from the pollen grain to the ovule. Once the pollen tube reaches the egg cell, the male nucleus fuses with the female nucleus to form a zygote, which eventually develops into a new plant embryo.
for humans it is sperm and for plants not sure Answer All animals and plants produce sperm cells and egg cells/ova. Some textbooks refer to the male sex cell as simply the male sex cell/gamete. It seems it should rather always be called a sperm cell as that is what it is. Angiosperms produce microspores/pollen grains which grow male gametophytes within themselves, which produce sperm cells.
One.
traits
fertilization