Pollination.
Pollination can occur from the same plant, or from other plants of the same species. The pollen can be spread by wind, animals, or insects (notably bees).
Pollen is transferred from the stamen (male reproductive organ) to the pistil (female reproductive organ) by various methods such as wind, insects, birds, or other animals. This transfer of pollen is essential for fertilization to occur and for the plant to produce seeds.
Androecium
The flower part from which pollen is disseminated is the stamen.
The male part is the stamen, which is the pollen producer, and the female is the pistil, the pollen receptor. Female: pistal, style, ovules, and stigma Male: stamen, anther, filament, pollen
The stamen is the male reproductive organ of a flower, and its main function is to produce and release pollen. Pollen contains the male gametes (sperm cells) that are necessary for fertilizing the female ovules in the flower's pistil, leading to the formation of seeds.
pollination
Pollination usually involves pollen moving from the stamen to the pistil, where the pollen grains land on the stigma and travel down the style to reach the ovary. This process enables fertilization to occur and the development of seeds.
pollination
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.
neither, it is made in the stamen
they take pollen from the stamen and move it to the pistil.
No, flowers with a pistil but no stamen cannot reproduce on their own. The stamen is needed to provide pollen for fertilization, which is essential for reproduction in flowering plants. If a flower lacks both stamen and pistil, it cannot produce seeds and ultimately reproduce.
The male part of a flower is the stamen. It consists of the anther, which produces pollen, and the filament. The stigma is the female part of the flower, located at the top of the pistil, which receives pollen during pollination.
During self pollination, pollen grains move from the stamen of a flower to its pistil. Cross pollination involves flowers from different plants.
Pollen is transferred from the stamen (male reproductive organ) to the pistil (female reproductive organ) by various methods such as wind, insects, birds, or other animals. This transfer of pollen is essential for fertilization to occur and for the plant to produce seeds.
The pistil of a flower is surrounded by the stamen, which are the male reproductive organs of the flower. The pistil contains the female reproductive parts such as the stigma, style, and ovary where fertilization occurs. The stamen produces pollen that is transferred to the stigma for fertilization to take place.
The stamen is the male reproductive system of a flower while the pistil is the female reproductive system.These parts help the pistil's ovary to produce seeds.If the pistil and stamen are not present in a flower,then the reproduction will not take place.