Nectar usually built up in plant glands, called nectaries, situated at the base of the petals in flowers.
in the petals of flowers
The male part that produces pollen is the Stamen, The female part with pollen receptors, is the stigma.
nectar is made up of water and sugar by the plant.
The Stamen, containing the Anther and Filament is the male part of the plant. The Anther is what produces the pollen.
plants have nectar to reproduce. When the insect or bird lands on the plant nectar gets stuck to it. The animal then goes to another plant and spreads the nectar. Then a new plant ts produced. actually, nectar is a sweet liquid produced to attract pollinators (for this example lets say bees, though there are many). The pollen (flower sperm) gets attached to the bees and when they land on another flower, the pollen goes into the stigma (female part of a flower) to produce a seed.
Bees/ Nector
a nectaring plant is a plant that produces nectar.
nectar
pollin
A female plant part does not produce sperms. It produces egg. The sperms are produced by the part of a male plant.
A Septal Nectary is tissue within a plant ovary that produces nectar. Its function is to produce nectar to attract pollinators. After pollination, if the plant continues to secrete nectar, it will attract ants who will protect the developing fruit from predators in exchange for the nectar.
a nucleus is the part which stores the information about the plant such as what flowers it produces etc
anther
the flower it produces seeds.
The ovary.
the seed pod
vascular bundle
In some plants, the flower will keep producing nectar for up to several days before it dies and the seeds begin to form. In others, the flower produces just one batch of nectar. In some plants such as lantana, flowers may stay on the plant long after they have been pollinated and stop producing nectar in order to add to the attractiveness of the plant to pollinators.