When the pollen grains reach the ovary.
When pollen is transferred for the stamen to the pistil, the pollen helps the pistil create a fruit, which contains the seeds a plant needs to be grown from.
The stamen and pistol are the male and female parts of the plant, located in the flower. They are very obvious in some flowers (ex = hibiscus), and very tough to spot in others. The stamen have the pollen. When the pollen from the stamen get onto the pistol, cells combine, travel down the pistol, and eventually form seeds inside the fruit of the plant.
The stamen and pistol are the male and female parts of the plant, located in the flower. They are very obvious in some flowers (ex = hibiscus), and very tough to spot in others. The stamen have the pollen. When the pollen from the stamen get onto the pistol, cells combine, travel down the pistol, and eventually form seeds inside the fruit of the plant.
Yes, as long as the flower has the pistil and compatible pollen grains are available through pollenation
The stamen in the flowers (the little things that poke out of the middle of the petals) have pollen on them and when bees come along they collect that pollen and as they fly along to different plants and flowers it drops the pollen which is what fertilizes the flowers.
The ovary of the flower develops into a fruit.
The fruit is the ripened ovary of a flower.
No, the reproductive process of a plant that produces fruit requires a flowering and pollination period. The flowers contain the necessary sexual organs needed to produce the fruit. If you watch, say, a tomato plant, you will see how the flower wilts and dies, and a fruit will begin to develop in the same spot.
Once the flower has been polinated, it eventually turns into a fruit. This happens in the female part of the flower.
Seeds are made at the flower. Fruit is generated at the flower. Fruit contains seeds.
The flower is pollinated and the fruit develops to produce the seed.
The Ovary of the flower becomes the fruit after fertilization by pollen