It will form an Ovum.... or an egg....
mature ovary forms the pistil
The fruit, such as the part we eat, apples oranges, you name it.
It doesn't. It is fertilised outside of the ovary.
It doesn't. It is fertilised outside of the ovary.
Flowers don't mature into anything. The ovary matures into the fruit when (and if) the flower is pollinated and the ovules fertilised. The fertilised ovules become the seed and the ovary becomes the fruit.
The ovary walls thicken to form a fruit that encloses the developing seeds.
No, there are not any oogonia in a mature female ovary. They are only present during a female's in utero development.
The mature female sex cell is released from the ovary into the fallopian tube for possible fertilization.
A mature ripened ovary of a plant is called a fruit. It develops from the ovary after pollination and fertilization, typically containing seeds. Some examples of fruits are apples, oranges, and tomatoes.
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ovum
It enters the oviduct