Pollen.
anther or stigmaThat depends on what you mean by sticking to. The anther is the part of the plant that is the male organ and it creates pollen. So there is pollen attached to the anther.If you want to know where detached pollen (from the anther) lands to fertilize the egg- then you want the stigma. The sticky pad at the top of the pistil is where the pollen lands to begin creating the pollen tube, which eventually leads to fertilization.
The stigma is the part of the pistil that is sticky and attracts pollen grains in order to facilitate pollination.
During fertilization in flowering plants, the stigma of the pistil receives the pollen. The stigma is the sticky top part of the pistil, which captures and holds the pollen grains. Once the pollen lands on the stigma, it germinates and forms a pollen tube that travels down the style to reach the ovary, where fertilization occurs.
The sticky part of the pistil is called the stigma. It is the receptive surface where pollen grains land and germinate to begin the process of fertilization.
it is the pistil
No, plants typically have a single stigma, which is the top part of the female reproductive structure (pistil) where pollen lands and germinates. Having multiple stigmas is unusual in plants.
Remember it as the sticky stigma
The reproductive part of many plants that contains a pistil and a stamen is the flower. The pistil is the female reproductive organ, while the stamen is the male reproductive organ. These parts are essential for pollination and reproduction in flowering plants.
The Pistil is the female part. The stamen is the male part.
No the stigma is the very tip of the pistil, that catches pollen.
A pistil is the female reproductive part of a flower, consisting of the stigma, style, and ovary. The pistil top typically refers to the stigma, which is the sticky tip where pollen is received during pollination.
The female sticky part of a plant is typically the stigma, which is located at the top of the pistil. The stigma is responsible for catching and holding onto pollen during the process of pollination.