What parts of the plant are invovled with pollination?
yes, but it is the anther to the stigma of a different plant self pollination is the transfer of pollen from the anther to the stigma of the same plant
self -pollination occurs within the same flower or same plant
cross pollination
a) wind pollination (wind) b) insect pollination (insect) c) self pollination (the flower pollinates itself)
pollination; if it from the same plant (self-fertilization; self-pollination); pollen from one plant to the stigma of another plant (cross-pollination; cross-fertilization)
The feet
The process of pollination begins the reproductive cycle of all flowering plants. Which flower part(s) is/are involved in pollination? anther and stigma
That pollination may involve female and male parts located on different plants is a reason why many pollinators have wings. Scientists term it self-pollination when both parts are found on the same plant and cross-pollination -- which requires pollinating organisms and winds -- when the parts are distanced.
This transferring process is called pollination.
Pollination is a sticky thing on the plant. Animals drink that from the plant that reproduces the plant
yes, but it is the anther to the stigma of a different plant self pollination is the transfer of pollen from the anther to the stigma of the same plant
Self-pollination of a plant is where a plant's pollen (from the anthers) lands on the same plant's stigma, causing it to pollinate itself. This is contrasted with cross-pollination which is where one plant's pollen lands on another plant's stigma. Plants often do specific things to avoid self-pollination if they can.
self -pollination occurs within the same flower or same plant
the part of the plant that attracts insects for pollination is the petals through their attractive colours
cross pollination
a) wind pollination (wind) b) insect pollination (insect) c) self pollination (the flower pollinates itself)
pollination; if it from the same plant (self-fertilization; self-pollination); pollen from one plant to the stigma of another plant (cross-pollination; cross-fertilization)