Air born pollen can land any where on a flower but effective only if land on a stigma .
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 middle of the flower holds pollen or wear it is yellow
Pollen can be found inside the anthers, which are part of the flower's stamen. Bees and other pollinators collect pollen when they land on a flower, rubbing against the anthers and picking up the pollen grains.
The pollen grain needs to land on the stigma of the plant for successful pollination to occur.
Pollen can be seen in the anther of the stamen. It is the male part of the flower.
Pollen comes from male part of the flower.
The female part -- known as pistil -- is the part of a flower that a bee rubs with another flower's pollen. The original source of the pollen for the insect in question is a flower's male part, known as anther.
stigma True, but Ill explain more... Pollen from the Stamen- (male reproductive parts of a flower) must land on the Pistil-(female reproductive parts of a flower) for fertilization to occur, and thats when the seed grows in the ovary. :)
There are two parts of a flower that produces pollen. The two parts are the stalk and the top of the flower.
Anther pollen refers to the pollen grains produced by the anther, which is the male reproductive organ of a flower. These pollen grains contain the male gametes needed for fertilization when they land on the stigma of a flower.
pollen is the male reproductive part of the flower. i guess you could call it plant sperm.
That is called the stigma.